| Breaking Through The Catch-22 |
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| Written by Bernadette Doyle | |
| Wednesday, 07 February 2007 | |
![]() Bernadette Doyle A reader asks, 'I have now been seeking free lance assignments for the past eight months. I have been meeting HR/Training managers in a one-on-one discussion and it's painfully long till they decide to give the assignment. A client whom I approached recently wanted to know the names and contact details of clients with whom I had worked earlier. She did this even without evaluating me and the programs that I conduct. Is there a way a client should be evaluating a Trainer/consultant? Is there a way one can influence the evaluating process the client adopts? For those of us who are starting with such assignments, we may not have many references to give.' Bernadette replies: What you're encountering isn't all that unusual. It's
pretty standard for a training manager to want to know about your credentials
and track record before they even engage in a dialogue with you. Think about it
from their point of view. You are trying to sell to time pressed people who are
bombarded with approaches by others just like you. At this point in time, they
are calling all the shots. Clients are completely entitled to evaluate
prospective vendors in whatever way they see fit. Trying to tell them that they
'should' be evaluating you differently is a waste of your time and theirs. In
this situation you have two choices 1. complain that its not fair or 2. learn
the rules of the game and start playing by them. I know it's tough when you're just starting out. I have been there, and I can
tell you from experience that the situation you're in won't last forever. A friend of mine approached local businesses and offered to do a free 1 1/2
hour 'taster' session with their sales team. He had brilliant rapport skills and
once people got a sense of what he had to offer, they wanted more. He did
£100,000 worth of business in his first year as a freelance trainer, and this
was his main selling technique. These are three suggestions, but the key is YOU have to be creative and
determined and find a way to get the references and experience you need. It is
possible, and plenty of people have done it before you. However tough it seems today, you must remember that even as you are reading this, there are companies out there who do need what you have to offer, and business contracts are being signed today for services you can provide. To get in on the action and start diverting some of these contracts your way, you need to start talking about what you can offer in language that makes sense to companies and describes what you're offering in terms of problems that they have that you can solve and goals they desire. Companies don't want more freelance trainers, but they will welcome problem solvers. So whether you can boost morale, reduce absenteeism, increase sales, improve customer retention,(or all of the above!), you need to start perceiving and presenting yourself as a valuable problem solver rather than just another trainer. © 2007 Bernadette Doyle Bernadette Doyle publishes her weekly Client Magnets newsletter for trainers, coaches, consultants, complementary therapists and solo professionals. If you want to get clients calling you instead of you calling them, then get your free tips now at www.clientmagnets.com |
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| Last Updated ( Wednesday, 12 December 2007 ) |
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