Outsourcing Your Telemarketing Program May Not Be A Viable Solution
Posted on April 6th, 2008 at 9:19 pm by admin
Tip! What some people do not realize is that even though they are getting far less calls from telemarketers during dinner time these days, that about 230,000 Americans lost their jobs when these new telemarketing jobs took place. Many had lost their jobs as telemarketing fell out of favor prior to the actual implementation of the Telemarketing Rule.

Telemarketers: You can’t live with them, and you can’t kill them!

Seriously, starting and running an effective telemarketing unit is costly, more time and effort consuming than you ever imagined, and a grind, even when you’re getting positive results.

And when you’re failing, and it feels you’re pouring resources down a widening sinkhole, it is like a near-death experience, each and every shift.

To put a stop to the madness, management often thinks outsourcing is the answer, and on paper, it looks pretty good. First, these workers are never on your books, so you don’t run afoul of a lot of labor laws if they’re hired and fired in record time, which happens frequently in this field.

Tip! We need new practices, because traditional telemarketing, which utilizes a command-and-control communication style is inherently offensive, inefficient, and out of date.

You don’t have to put up with the cultural clash that tele-people bring to an otherwise staid and starched environment. (See my article: “Having Telemarketers Aboard Will Create CULTURE SHOCK!”)

And usually, you’re quoted an all-in-one fee for their services, ranging from about $25 per hour, and up, providing you sign a minimal pilot program contract. Compared to your own costs of hiring, training, supervising, compensating, and housing these folks, the dollars seem to match up very well.

So, what’s the downside?

That’s easy: In my experience, most telemarketing outsource companies are barely capable of making “dumb calls.” And they’re almost all incompetent to make smart ones.

A dumb call is one aimed at preliminary lead development, in which the caller asks for some basic intelligence, such as “Who is the person who buys your office supplies?” or “What kind of sales software are you currently using?”

It could also be a call to residences that asks: “Are you thinking of selling your home, refinancing, or buying a new home in the next 6 months?”

Tip! If you are calling numbers that are listed in the Do Not Call Registry you are wasting your time and you are likely to get reported to one or both of the federal agencies that enforce telemarketing laws.

These calls are then harvested for more experienced people to re-contact.

A smart call, typically, is business-to-business, that would sell consulting services via appointment. So, the phone rep has to (1) Get through screening or voice mail; (2) Determine and arouse needs in the decision maker; and (3) Get that person to agree to a meeting at a definite time; one that will not cancel.

Smart calls take linguistic, thinking, and persuasive capabilities, and most people who work for these outsource firms just don’t have these things going for them.

One of my former trainees at Xerox, who has developed outsource tele-units in the United States, India, and elsewhere, agrees with me. “They’re fine for some basic calls, but they just can’t do others,” he says.

Tip! The federal government has taken some initiatives to prevent telemarketing fraud, to improve telemarketing practices, and ultimately to eliminate unnecessary aggravation to consumers.

So, take a hard look at what you need, and be realistic. Who do you really need to have working for you, to get the job done, and done right?

Dr. Gary S. Goodman, President of Customersatisfaction.com, is a popular keynote speaker, management consultant, and seminar leader and the best-selling author of 12 books, including Reach Out & Sell Someone

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