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This
past weekend, those of us
living here in Columbus,
Ohio enjoyed our first Saturday
of real spring weather.
This also meant that if
you went outside that morning,
the familiar sound of lawnmowers
could be heard on every
block—unless you were
within an earshot of my
house.
Instead,
what you would have heard
was Jacob, my 16-year-old
son pulling the lawnmower
cord...and of an engine
that wouldn’t start.
While I didn’t count
how many times he had pulled
that cord, I would say he
stayed at it for a good
five minutes. Then he called
me.
I went
out, and checked the oil,
gas and fuel pump (as Jacob
said “I already did
all that…” in
a frustrated tone). I took
the handle of the pull cord,
and gave it my best shot.
It turned right over and
started up (as I proceeded
to act unsurprised). After
a few brief coughs—not
untypical for the first
engine start of the season—my
20-year-old Craftsman lawnmower
was purring like a kitten.
Fast
forward to Monday afternoon,
in the Dublin, Ohio offices
of Principal Financial Group.
I’m sitting at my
desk writing up some notes
from a meeting when I overhear
Ray, one of our newer agents
tell a more senior colleague:
“I’m having
a hard time getting these
people to call me back.”
One of
the things I have admired
so much about Ray has been
his tenacity with the telephone.
It’s what also compelled
me to go up to him, gently
put my hand on his shoulder,
and say: “Accept it,
dude. She’s not gonna
call.” Someone had
to break it to him.
To be
fair, I’m not sure
if Ray was making cold calls
or warm calls, but it really
did not matter. Ninety-five
percent of the time the
prospect will NOT call you
back—even if they
have a genuine interest
in meeting with you. The
ball will always remain
in your court.
Yet, most
of the time sales professionals
don’t get appointments
because they give up too
quickly. After two or three
messages, they quit and
move on. I will say here
as I have said before…follow
up until. Learn the
art of gentle persistence.
This
leads us back to the lawnmower.
Recall that my son Jacob
(who is the high school
jock that I never was!)
tried for a good five minutes
and several attempts at
the pull cord to get that
lawnmower started. He tried
and tried, with no success.
Before long, he calls out
his old man to give it a
shot. I start it up with
a single pull.
Does this
mean that this 42-year-old
heart attack survivor is
stronger than his weight-lifting
16-year-old son (who excels
in both football and baseball)?
That’s a question
I would prefer to leave
rhetorical. Rather, what
it does mean is that if
Jacob had, instead of calling
me out, attempted just
one more try, and not
given up, he would have
started the lawnmower on
his own.
When I
came out and made that single
pull, most of the work had
been done for me. With every
pull of that cord, Jacob
had brought the engine one
step closer to turning
over. All it would have
taken was a little more
tenacity—a little
more faith.
And
so it goes with the phone
and setting appointments,
and anything else
for that matter. Accepting
that “she’s
not gonna call,” is
not a lack of faith—it
is simply an acceptance
that it is your
responsibility not to give
up—if you truly believe
in what you offer.
And
it is also realizing that
true faith pays off when
it is placed first within
yourself.

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