How To Follow Up A Consulting Proposal
©2002 by Paul Bednar
After submitting a proposal, many consultants wait a short
period
of time--maybe a few days or one week, before contacting the
potential client. The purpose is to find out if the proposal
has
been accepted, rejected, or if modifications are necessary.
Contacting the potential client once is professional and
acceptable. However, if your phone call or email is not
returned, you will be tempted to repeatedly contact the potential
client for an answer.
Resist this temptation. Hounding the potential client for
an
answer does not improve the situation. Don't take it personally.
After making your one inquiry about the proposal's status,
forget
about it and move on. Begin searching for the next potential
client.
This practice of submit-follow up-move on defies conventional
sales methodology where people are trained to continuously
follow
up with prospects in order to get sales. However, this method
works for these reasons:
1. You have no idea what has happened at the company and
why your
proposal hasn't yet been accepted. Perhaps the entire project
got cancelled? Maybe quarterly earnings were disappointing
and a
layoff is now in the works? The possibilities are endless
and
constant speculation for an answer can drive you crazy!
2. The potential client knows how to contact you. Once you've
submitted the proposal and followed up, you've done your part.
Let them make the effort to contact you to discuss proposal
changes and clarifications. When they do, it demonstrates
their
interest and you are one step closer to being retained.
3. Getting clients is a numbers game. You have to submit
a
certain number of proposals just to get retained. By moving
on
to search for the next client, you increase the odds that
your
next prospect will become a client.
Contacting the potential client more than once to ascertain
the
proposal's status is counterproductive. Also, it forces you
to
spend time and energy on what is now in the past. Keep your
energies and thoughts focused on identifying the next client.
Besides, when a proposal is finally accepted, you can be amazed
at your good fortune!
About the Author:
Paul Bednar helps people cut the corporate chains and become
an independent consultant. Visit his web site for other articles,
answers to common questions, and lessons learned. Subscribe
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