be in front of qualified leads/prospects when they are ready to make a decision not when you need to fill a vacancy
positioning and timing
1. people commit to things for their reason not yours or mine
2. people don't want to be sold but they do want to buy
3. the decision to commit is and emotional response to the perceived benefits compared to the perceived price and cost
draw diagram
nich: people who are eligible to join your branch
Target segments: applicants with and without military experience
wall of apathy and resistance: separates the recruiter from the target segments
1. never skip a step
2: don't go to the next step until you have exhausted the previous step
3: make sure you and your applicant are on the same step at the same time
a singular concentration on the Applicants needs and wants
needs:
-above the surface
-fact orientd
wants:
-below rhe surface
-emotion base
1. yourself
2. your branch of service
3. your recruiting opportunity
4. the applicant
happens when recruiters become so focused on what they want to happen that they lose sight of what the applicant wants to have happen.
accession
to make goal
to win an award
hassle free process
straight answers
to avoid making a bad decision
to gather sufficient information about your zone, target segments, and the individual leads or prospects within them to enable you to make the best presentation.
1. the better you are at finding qualified leads/prospects, the higher your closing average will be
2. your future success in recruiting is indirect proportion to the quality inn breadth of your current lead file
3. the recruiter to ask enough of the right questions of the right people in the right places will always have plenty of leads/prospects
how people perceive your role, and ability to have a positive impact on their professional and personal lives.
PCA
1. perception: what people think of your organization you and the way you conduct business
2. choice: people have other options besides yours
3. awareness: do people know you exist
- career counselor
- advocate
- military expert
- successful testimonial
- right articles for newspapers, magazines, or newsletters
- host COI's
- become a recruiting expert
- study your competition
-acting too desperate to gain the commitment
-talking too fast
-benefits dumping
-selling jobs before qualifying the lead/prospect
the process of identifying and getting in front of highly qualified leads/prospects and applicants
1. They have a need and are aware of it
2. they have the authority to make a decision and the ability to qualify for the recruiting opportunity
3. they have a relative sense of urgency about the decision
4. the recruiter has or can develop trust with the person
5. the person is willing to listen to rhe recruiter
1. Proactive
2. reactive
a recruiter strategies for selling and prospecting can be consistent of inconsistent. if either the prospect strategy are selling strategy is not consistent, the recruiters will not be fully successful. high performance results are only achieved when the strategies for both prospecting and selling are consistent. this is called perfect alignment.
the purpose of the prospecting Parthenon is to help recruiters organize their prospecting activities. the roof contains the Target segment. The columns contain their prospecting strategies that can generate leads. below the part that on are the tasks the recruiter must accomplish to make each strategy work
a direct value statement briefly communicates the reason for your positioning existence and it explains your role in how you and your branch of service can have an impact on a person's personal and professional lives.
1. Who are you
2. what do you represent
3. wahts in it for me
4. whats it going to cost me
1. what prompt you to look into the AFR?
2. what have you seen or heard that's appealing to you?
3. what factors will influence your decision about joining the AFR?
4. where are you in your decision making process?
5. who other than you is involved in this decision?
6. what kind of time frame do you have in mind?
1. what do I need to know?
2. where can I look for the information?
• your competition
• your limitations
• the questions they might ask
• school newspapers
• separation rosters
• ASVAB Rosters
• Other Recruiters
• Buffer: stands between you and your lead/prospect
• Internal Advocate: your ally in the recruiting process
• Lead/Prospect/Applicant: the person you are trying to recruit
• Decision Maker: the person who can say "yes" or "no"
• Confirm your appointment
• mentally prepare yourself
• physical prepare yourself and your meeting location
- Dominance
- Influence
- Steadiness
- Compliance
- Directing & Dominating - Tale charge person
- Exudes Power, authority and confidence
- Very competitive and naturally aggressive
- Quick impulsive, always pushing for time
- Enthusiastic, popular, easy to talk to
- stylish snd trendy
- Positive and optimistic
- Fears conflict
- accepts others slowly
- indirect, prefers to suggest
- under pressure - slows down
- fears charge
- thanks before acting
- prefers data, facts and order
- under pressure, becomes critical
- fears making a mistake
Dominance
• not reacting quickly
Influence
• Not displaying a sense of urgency
Steadiness
• Being possessive of information
Compliance
• overselling
build enough trust to set the face-to-face sales process and motion
1. you only have a small window of opportunity (roughly 19-34 seconds) to establish your credibility and convince a lead/prospect that the time spent with you will be valuable.
2. without trust you can only sell questionable options. with trust you can sell the value of opportunity
3. if you have positioned yourself and the AFR well before your first appointment, and if you have adequately conducted pre-appointment planning, your trust Factor will be higher from the outset
Trust: a person's belief that you and the branch of service are creditable and will deliver on every promise/commitment
Rapport: matching the pace, tone, and behavior and actions of another person so they are comfortable and confident that you see the world in the same way they do
Being liked: doing all in your power to gain approval
- approach in neutral
- remember names
- maintain eye contact
- avoid unsolicited small talk
- dominating the conversation
- interrupting the other person
the statement of intention explains the reason for the Face to Face meeting and may also describe how the meeting will be conducted.
the bonding statement lets the applicant know the recruiter will be working on behalf of the applicant to help them get what they want
1. do you mind if I ask you if you questions
2. do you mind if I take notes
To have your applicants verbalize their needs and identify problems they want to resolve.
1. the best way to serve your own interest is to put the needs and wants of your applicants first
2. to deliver value to your applicants, you must see yourself as a value resource for them
3. to be a value resource, you must first discover what your applicants perceive as value
• Asking
• Listening
- focus on what the applicant is saying
- Focus your body language
- don't overreact to anything and applicant says
- place Stars next to important points
• don't ask questions in offensive or insensitive way
• focus on the applicants dominant buying motive
• don't be afraid of silence
• always prepare additional questions
by asking certain questions in the probe step that deal with the most common objections or concerns raised by applicants, a recruiter can uncover and prevent potential objections that might be voiced later in the sales process.
Example: what have you heard about the lifestyle of BMT?
- issue a summary statement based on your understanding of what the applicant has told you
- ask the applicant to rank order your findings in order of importance
- if the applicant does not agree with your findings, stay in the probe step into you reach an agreement. issue another summary statement and ask the applicant again to prioritize your findings
usually begin with words like "what, where, why or how," and they allow the applicant to explain their thoughts and detail.
usually begin with words like "do, is, or, would, or who," and they are effective in narrowing choices are clearly defining an option or interest
best used when following a closed-ended question to provide additional information not provided in the closed-ended answer
a series of questions designed to bring out the applicant's emotions. the problem question confirms the problem or need. the agitation question brings the applicants emotional response to the surface. the solution question plants the idea of the applicant finding a solution to the problem or need
designed to discover whether the applicant has a need for any of the features of the recruiting opportunity
designed to help you explain to the applicants how they could use the benefits offered by your branch of service
best used when recruiters come across unique situations with applicants that call for a gentler approach to asking a difficult question
a technique designed to demonstrate sincere interest in the applicant and allow the recruiter to get to the core of the issue
to show your applicants precisely how the recruiting opportunity addresses their specific needs
1. to an applicant, any commitment is too demanding until he or she understands the value of the application of the commitment to solve their biggest problems or fulfill their particular needs
2. in the absence of value interpretation, every negotiation will be reduced to a question of cost. for every military recruiting organization, this cost is communicated in terms of required commitment.
• application based selling is recommending a customized solution to the Africans individual needs
• demonstration based selling is a generic product or service presentation that features loaded and takes a one side fits all approach
A: PERCEIVED BENEFIT: the advantage are benefit that a particular feature of the recruiting opportunity offers toward fulfilling the applicant's needs
B: PERCEIVED PRICE: represents The "upfront" commitment all applicants must make when joining
C: PERCEIVED EMOTIONAL COST: represents the emotional cost assorted with fulfilling the commitment
- recommend the right solution
- don't overwhelm your applicant
- give them a show they will never forget
- show how your opportunity is unique
- benefit stacking is the process of "sandwiching" the commitment between the benefits to the increase the value and reduce the perception of commitment
- the recruiter explains some benefits the applicant will receive. next, he or she presents the commitment. lastly, the recruiter explains some more benefits the applicant will receive
- avoid making the commitment and issue
- don't put modifiers on the commitment
- Target only the key benefits in which the applicant is interested
- get the applicant involved in the process
- they let you know if your presentation is on Target
- they enable applicants to admit to themselves how they feel and give you a sense on how they will act
-they enable recruiters to reinforce positive feelings and clear up any misconceptions
- if the recommendation is off target, return to the probe step and I asked the applicant open-ended questions about their concern
- determine if there is more than one concern. if so, deal with each concern one at a time.
- overcome objections by:
• treating each one seriously
• identifying the source of inaccurate information
• overcoming the objective with accurate information
• confirming agreement
let the applicant know you can back up any claims made about the recruiting opportunity
to ask the applicant to commit, clarify the agreement, finalize the sale and cement the commitment
1. finalizing the agreement and gaining the commitment is a natural outgrowth of correctly conducting the first five steps of the IMPACT selling system
2. finalizing the transaction is not about how many ways to close the sale you can memorize. it is learning one single method in mastering it
1. you have to ask applicants to commit
2. tie up loose ends
• open negotiations on a positive note
• get all conditions are objections on the table
• make sure everyone understands the conditions under which the applicant will commit
• answer questions; offer to work out any problems
• ask a question: "what day would you like to enlist?"
• make a statement: "let's get your enlistment paperwork started."
• compliment the applicant on the decision to commit
• I sure the applicant of satisfaction and guarantee they will get it