When you hire a salesperson, you’re looking for a specific set of skills: a mix of communication skills, the ability to understand and articulate the value of your product to the customer, the capability to build and maintain relationships, and, of course, the ability to strike the right deal. Yet, all too often, we expect our sales reps to fulfill many other roles to which they might not be ideally suited.
Appointment setting is one of those roles sales reps are often expected to do, even if they don’t excel at it. Yes, there are overlapping skills, but appointment setting requires a different skill set than face-to-face sales. Today, we will look at why appointment setting is so crucial to your sales strategy and the steps you can take to hire yourself the perfect appointment setter.
What does an appointment setter do?
Appointment setters are the sales team members responsible for reaching out to potential new customers to arrange meetings for your sales representatives. Appointment setter duties include:
- Searching for prospects
- Making first contact via calls and emails
- Following up on interested prospects
- Scheduling appointments for the sales team
The role is critical to the sales process. However, because of the organizational skills required, it is a different role from the traditional jobs of sales reps who tend to focus on closing deals and selling the product.
What are the benefits of hiring an appointment setter
Hiring appointment setters can benefit you and your sales team, dramatically improving your team’s efficiency by increasing the amount of high-quality leads and, ultimately, driving sales.
Increased efficiency and focus for sales teams
The first benefit of hiring a dedicated appointment setter is allowing the rest of your sales team to concentrate on closing sales rather than finding leads, which can considerably affect your team’s efficiency.
Traditionally, prospecting has always been part of the sales rep’s role. However, this can lead to 2 main problems:
- Many sales representatives struggle to balance prospecting for new clients with maintaining existing relationships. This balancing act can become a real challenge and mean that either customer service or client growth suffers.
- Without someone to coordinate the booking of appointments, there is often overlap when chasing down prospects, with multiple reps investing time into the same customers.
Hiring an appointment setter changes all that. It improves the efficiency of your existing team by reducing overlaps and increases job satisfaction as it allows sales representatives the time they need to cultivate relations and do their job well.
Higher conversion rates due to prequalified leads
Appointment setters are responsible for filtering leads, ensuring that only qualified prospects are scheduled for meetings. By using implicit data from website behavior, email engagement stats, and purchase intent, appointment setters can also help to initially evaluate leads and pass those most likely to convert on to your sales representatives.
This means that your sales team can concentrate their energy on the prospects with the highest sales potential, boosting their conversion rates.
Source: leadsquared.com
Enhanced customer experience through professional first contact
Professional appointment setters also ensure that potential clients’ first interactions are positive. This lays the groundwork for successful sales relationships by providing reps with the information they need to hit the ground running.
Scalability of sales operations
Finally, with appointment setters, you can more easily scale your sales operations to meet demand without overburdening existing staff. This is especially true if you wish to outsource your appointment setting.
How to hire an appointment setter
Hiring an appointment setter can greatly improve your sales team’s efficiency. However, finding the right person with the right skills is crucial, especially as the role is central to your sales team and involves communicating with and coordinating multiple team members.
The ideal candidate should possess unique skills to identify and engage potential clients, filling your sales pipeline with high-quality leads. Here’s what to look for:
Strong communication and interpersonal skills
The ability to communicate clearly and persuasively is fundamental to any sales role. That goes double for appointment setters, though, as they are responsible for lead generation and, therefore, will be the first point of contact for new customers. They should be adept at initiating conversations, understanding customer needs, and maintaining positive interactions.
A person’s communication and interpersonal skills should come across naturally in an interview. However, by asking interview questions such as “Describe a time when you faced objection and how you addressed it,” you’ll be able to make more substantive comparisons between candidates.
On top of that, you should also try to select candidates that have sales experience as well as other experiences of working with people, such as volunteering or event organizing.
Experience with CRM and appointment scheduling software
Familiarity with customer relationship management (CRM) and appointment setting software is crucial for tracking interactions and managing appointments. This ensures that no-shows are recorded and calls aren’t missed or duplicated.
Of course, you will always need to provide training with your specific CRM software. But it can be a good idea to ask candidates to specify what experience they have with these tools in the initial application process.