Contrary to much advice, sales is not just a pure numbers game, the quality of the numbers make more difference than the numbers themselves.
Throw the net widely to attract prospects, the more the better, is the common mantra. It implies anyone who shows the slightest interest is automatically in the net, and so becomes a consumer of resources as efforts are made to lead them down the ‘funnel’ to a transaction.
Sound about right?
What nonsense.
If you had 1,000 people and a 1% conversion rate, you would make 10 sales. if you had 100 good prospects and converted 10%, you would make 10 sales. The transaction numbers are the same, but the latter would be far superior, as rather than spend resources chasing the 990 that would not convert, you have cut down to 90, leaving a lot of sales resource to be off doing something useful.
You do need to fish where the fish are, but it helps to make sure that the species around is what you are looking for, and that the bait is right, otherwise, you will just catch a cold.
The lesson is to focus your efforts on your ideal customer, where you will get the most leverage for your resources. This means you do some work up front to identify the characteristics of your ideal customer, then qualify early and hard to husband sales resources and direct them to the point of greatest impact.
Yes, sales is a numbers game, but the quality of the numbers makes the difference between productive and broke.
It reminds me of the legendary copywriter Gary Halbert’s advice when he’d ask an audience for the best way to sell a hamburger.
At seminars, Gary would throw out that question and people would respond:
… Make the juiciest burger…
… Have the best location…
… Provide the quickest service…
… Create a killer sauce…
And so on.
Gary would then give the correct answer, which was…
Find a starving crowd!
When you need a sounding board to find your starving crowd, give me a call, I’ve been finding them for 40 years..