Joe Girard, a car salesman, is in the Guinness Book of World
Records for being the #1Retail Salesperson. How did he get this title? He sold
more cars than any other car salesman.
What was his secret?
Early in his car selling career, he attended a Catholic funeral.
The funeral director was passing out Mass cards to all those in attendance.
“How do you know how many Mass cards to have printed?” Joe
asked the man.
“I print up about 250 each time since that’s
usually how many people show up for a funeral,” he answered.
Soon after that, Joe
sold a car to a Protestant funeral director. When he asked how many people
attended his funerals, he got the same answer “About 250.” He soon learned from
another minister that about 250 people usually attended the weddings in his
church.
From this informal
research, Joe developed his “Rule of 250.” The basic principle is
that most people have about 250 people in their lives that will show up at
their funeral or wedding. There are exceptions, of course. Some have more, some
have less. But the average seems to be 250.
How did he use this
information?
·
He realized that if he did a great job selling a
car to one person, he could potentially gain 250 more customers
importance of one |
·
But, if he did a crummy job, he could possibly lose
250 customers.
Joe sold cars. You, on the other hand, are selling a legal
service, not a product a client can touch like a car or a toaster, but a vital
service they need but may not be pleased about purchasing. The concept,
however, is the same.
Each time your service produces a satisfied or accepting client;
you could potentially gain 250 more clients. How does that happen? With
referral and repeat business. Satisfied clients come back for more work and
refer others to you.
Some referral related
tactics include:
Follow up with
your clients. You can do this with a thank-you card, a call to see how things
are going, ask if they have any questions and, if all is well, ask them to
remember you when their friends ask ‘if they know a good lawyer.’ If there is a
problem, attempt to fix it.
Use CRM software or keep
a file on each client listing personal information such as names of
children, what they did for a living, birthdays, etc. You can use this
information when you talk to them.
Stop by their
business or take them out to lunch. Your goal is to keep and maintain a
relationship with this client.
Make sure they know
every service your firm offers. Ask for their e-mail address and get
permission to send them the firm newsletter or occasional updates.
Send cards for
holidays and thank-you notes for referrals. Send information they can use, not
a sales pitch. They will need legal work someday and they will turn to you. And
refer you to one or two of the 250 people they know.
Remember the Rule
Of 250 every time you meet new
people, whether at an event or standing in line at the coffee shop line. (I
once acquired a great client standing in line at Target.) Every person you meet
could be a potential client. And they could bring in 250 more. Keep this in
mind and soon you have a thriving business.
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