By
Trey Ryder
If
you spend most of the interview telling
prospects about your services, you're going
about it all wrong. Your prospect's first
priority is to understand his problem.
Successful
lawyers spend up to 70 percent of interview time
educating prospects about the magnitude of their
problem and the risks of allowing it to persist.
You win more new clients when you focus on their
problems and follow these 17 steps:
Step
#1: Give your prospect your undivided
attention. This means no interruptions of any
kind. If you can't give your prospect your full
attention, then delay the appointment until you
can. You must be a good listener and make your
prospect feel as if he is the most important
person in the world.
Step
#2: Build rapport with your prospect.
Try to sense your prospect's mood and respond in
a helpful, caring manner. This lowers your
prospect's resistance and forms an emotional
bond that brings you closer together. One of my
clients begins his interviews by saying,
"Tell me about yourself." This gets
the prospect talking and takes the focus off the
attorney.
Step
#3: Put yourself in your prospect's
position. The best way to understand what your
prospect feels is to imagine yourself in his
shoes. Then make your presentation from your
prospect's point of view.
Step
#4: Identify the result your prospect
wants. Ask what problem he wants to solve or
what goal he wants to achieve. Then ask
questions to determine the specific service you
can offer. Listen carefully so you know which
points your prospect considers most important.
Step
#5: Educate your prospect about the
seriousness of his problem. The more your
prospect understands about the gravity of his
dilemma, the more likely he is to hire you to
correct it. Use supporting documents and
articles as proof. At this point, however, don't
offer solutions because your prospect first
needs a clear understanding of his problem.
Tell
your entire story in words your prospect
understands. And don't fall into the trap of
hitting only the high points of your
presentation. Remember, this information is new
to your prospect so explain everything slowly
and clearly. You must present information so you
cannot be misunderstood because many prospects
won't admit they don't understand.
Step
#6: Answer common questions before
your prospect asks them. If your prospect raises
a number of concerns, your discussion could seem
adversarial. After you answer the questions, ask
for your prospect's agreement to make sure he
understood what you said. This way, he won't
likely raise the concern again later.
Step
#7: Emphasize the reasons your
prospect should hire you. Explain how your
knowledge, skill, judgment and experience give
you special insights that you'll use to bring
your prospect the results he wants. Talk about
your education and qualifications. Give examples
of other people you've helped in similar
situations. Give your prospect copies of
newspaper articles in which you were the
featured expert. Show your prospect testimonial
letters that prove how pleased clients are with
your services. (Make sure you check your local
bar's ethics rules relating to testimonials
because some jurisdictions do not allow their
use by lawyers.)
Step
#8: Check for understanding after
each point in your discussion. Watch for red
flags that identify something your prospect
didn't grasp. Remember, prospects won't buy what
they don't understand. Make sure your prospect
understands what you tell him.
Step
#9: Offer specific solutions and
discuss the pros and cons of each. If you offer
only one solution, your prospect's choice is
either yes or no. But when you present three
positive options, he can select from three yes
choices before he gets to no.
Step
#10: Provide both logical and
emotional reasons to hire you. Often, prospects
retain your services for emotional reasons, such
as whether they like you and whether they feel
you truly want to help them. Then they use logic
to defend their decision to their spouses and
colleagues. When you provide both, you help your
prospect justify his decision to engage your
services.
Step
#11: Quote a fee for each service.
Use the contrast principle so your prospect
views your fee in the proper perspective. Before
quoting your fee, mention a larger number; then
by contrast your fee won't seem so high. After
you quote your fee, restate one or two major
benefits your prospect will gain from hiring
you.
For
example: "Right now, Mr. Jones, your estate
tax liability is over $200,000. After I set up
your asset protection plan, your tax liability
will be zero. My fee to draft your plan is just
$7,500. When your plan is in place, it will save
your family over $200,000 in estate taxes,
eliminate at least $25,000 in probate costs and
prevent lengthy court proceedings."
Step
#12: Recommend a solution from your
prospect's point of view. Your prospect is more
receptive to your direction when you speak from
your prospect's position. Instead of saying
"This is what you should do", explain
"If I were in your place, I would (take
whatever action) because (why)".
Step
#13: Invite any remaining questions.
Acknowledge each question as a "good
point" or "valid concern." Don't
view the question as an objection. Your prospect
may simply want you to repeat something you
discussed earlier. Or he may want more
information. Offer your explanation calmly and
with confidence. Your prospect wants you to
assure him that hiring you is the right
decision.
Step
#14: Summarize the risks and
benefits. Point out to your prospect the risks
of allowing the problem to continue (what he may
lose) -- and the benefits of solving the problem
now (what he will gain).
Step
#15: Tell your prospect how much you
want to help him. Use collective words like
"we" and "let's" to show
that you and your prospect are working together.
Step
#16: Allow your prospect to make his
own decision without pressure from you. If you
push your prospect, he will resist. So, instead,
remind your prospect that the choice is his --
and that you will gladly answer his questions
and provide whatever information he needs to
make an informed decision.
If
your prospect hires you, reassure him that he
has made a wise choice. If your prospect is not
ready to proceed, make sure he knows you're
ready and willing to help him whenever he thinks
the time is right.
Step
#17: Follow up with a letter. If your
prospect hired your services, thank him and
reassure him in writing that he made a wise
decision. If your prospect is not yet ready to
proceed, encourage prompt action, point out the
risks of waiting, and offer to answer any
questions, now and in the future.

Trey
Ryder is a law-firm consultant who specializes
in education-based marketing for attorneys. He
offers lawyers three free articles by e-mail: 13
Marketing Misconceptions that Cost Lawyers a
Fortune, 11 Brochure Mistakes Lawyers Make, and
7 Secrets of Dignified Marketing. Send your name
and e-mail address to trey@treyryder.com and ask
for his e-mail packet of articles.
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