There’s always something to howl about.

For Originators – A Weak Baseball Analogy

Here is an email I recently sent to our sales team in regards to the leads that they receive and work on a daily basis. My company uses internet leads to generate new business on top of our referral and repeat business (which makes up about 1/3 of our monthly volume). I received some good response to it from our folks so I thought I’d pass it along here to any new originators who read this blog for advice.

My email:

I love baseball and used to play it (poorly) for the better part of my youth. I was watching some highlights last night and it got me thinking about what we do here.

When I used to play I would really look forward to the 3 or 4 at-bats I would get each game. I knew that I would only have 3 or 4 chances to get a hit and improve my average. In baseball before you are “up” you are “on deck. I remember vividly being on deck going through the following checklist:

Who’s pitching and what have they been throwing lately? What pitches are their favorite? How have they gotten people out before me? What did people who already have hits against this guy do to be successful against him? How many outs are there? What’s the game situation? Who’s on base?

The big question I was asking myself was “What am I trying to do in this at bat?” Was it move a runner over? Was it get on base no matter what? Was it try to get in scoring position? And so on. I KNEW the answer every time I stepped in the batter’s box.

Here you may only get 3 or 4 at bats a day with your leads. Sometimes you’ll get less than that. Do you know what you’re trying to do with each and every at bat you get? What did you think about on deck before you picked up the phone? What were you trying to specifically accomplish with each at bat?

Hint: the answer is not “get a hit/take an app” That is the generic (wrong) answer; there should be a specific thought process unique to every lead based on its characteristics that you undertake before calling each of your leads.

Bottom line: CHERISH YOUR AT BATS – know what you want to do with them ahead of time.