The first time I learned that experience was the best confidence builder was my first real assignment for Barry. I had to make 300 cold calls and try to get them interested in having Barry speak at their organization. To say that I was terrified is an understatement. I had no idea what to say (having had zero experience in sales), and I was uncomfortable with the idea phoning strangers. I was afraid of being chewed up and spit out by those with experience who would be able to tell that I was a rookie. There were scenarios in my head eerily reminiscent of the hazing rumors that floated around my college campus, only in a business setting. (I’ve never lacked for imagination or a sense of melodrama.)
I stared at the list for nearly a full day before I built up the courage to pick up the phone. My first call went to voicemail, and I was unbelievably relieved. For some reason it had never occurred to me that I would get someone’s voicemail. With each subsequent call I would pray that it would go to voicemail, making myself progressively more nervous. At one point I was so nervous that I tripped over my words and then burst out laughing on another person’s voicemail before I repeated my message (although I think they might have been one of my callbacks). After that I started loosening up, but I hung up the phone red faced and stammering.
Every day I would increase the number of phone calls I made as I became more comfortable with the prospect of speaking to total strangers and making Barry look good at the same time. Three hundred phone calls later and I could do it in my sleep. Occasionally I still stumble over my words, but it’s no longer the "I have to take 10 minutes and wallow in humiliation" ordeal that it used to be.
The important lesson learned: if you don’t bite the bullet and just do it, you’re going to be uncertain, nervous, or afraid whenever a similar situation arises. There is no substitute for experience.
~Katherine
so true, those first few calls are always terrible so the sooner you get them out of the way the better.
Great, this really is exactly what my wife and I needed to learn