Getting Prospecting into First Gear

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A list of Dan Richards’ previous articles appears at the end of this article.

 

“A year ago, all kinds of new clients were coming on board - I was firing on all cylinders” a veteran advisor told me recently. “Today, I’m having trouble getting prospecting into first gear. I feel like I’m stuck in a rut and I’m not sure how to get out.”

We spent a few minutes sketching out a plan for two low cost prospecting lunches, with six simple steps taking ten to twelve hours per lunch.

The advisor got a good response to the initial lunches - since then, he’s held six similar sessions.

The core idea is to run informal lunches at your office for clients - to which you invite selected prospects.  These lunches achieve the dual purposes of giving clients the chance to have their questions answered and getting in front of prospects.

If you share this advisor’s struggles in getting prospecting into first gear, here’s an overview of how the lunch program works.  At the bottom of this article, you’ll find a link to a step-by-step guide with scripts, templates and more details on how to make these lunches happen.

Step One:  Getting started

The first step is to book your boardroom for two lunches - the first in three to four weeks, the other in about six weeks. Your boardroom should ideally have ten chairs - one for you, six for clients and three for prospects.

While you’ve got your calendar out, block off the time required to make the lunches happen:

This week:  Schedule two ninety-minute time slots in the next two or three days to extend invitations.

Next week: Book another two-hour slot in the middle of next week to follow up with people who are attending and begin preparing your remarks.

The week before the lunch: Block off two hours to practice your talk and an hour to attend to final details.

The week of the lunch:  Block off two hours for the lunch itself and an hour on the day after the lunch to follow up with people who attended.

That’s eleven hours in total - add in one more as a contingency and you can make the first lunch happen with a time commitment of twelve hours. Future lunches will take less time.