Cover Image: Wise Me Up to Cold Calling

Wise Me Up to Cold Calling

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Member Reviews

Due to a passing in the family a few years ago and my subsequent health issues stemming from that, I was unable to download this book in time to review it before it was archived as I did not visit this site for years after the bereavement. Thank you for the opportunity.

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This book has alot of great tips and advive to anyone who is considering a career in sales. The book is simply written, systematic and well organised which makes it an easy read.


Thank you to NetGalley, Troubador Publishing Limited and Shea Heer for providing an eARC in exchange for an honest review.

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A concise, faultless plan for cold calling.

All the tips contained within this book are useful and I loved the writer’s tone, use of language and honesty.
As someone who has worked in sales for 15years, I found some really useful tips and refreshers. A relatively quick read that gets back to basics and consolidates learning.
The book would be equally (if not more) useful to someone just starting out in sales / cold calling AND perhaps even more importantly, Call Centre & Sales Managers who tell other people how to work / script their calls.

No “new ideas”, but a well put together, easy to understand structure and solutions to make cold calling less daunting and more productive!

(Also reviewed on Twitter & Amazon UK)

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Wise Me Up to Cold Calling is a book I picked up in my 2019 goal to kick ass at my job. Although I don't cold call exactly, my calls are usually unexpected, so getting past those initial worries and hesitations on the phone is key. A lot of the advice in Wise Me Up to Cold Calling was interesting and relevant, although perhaps more useful to someone who is still very new at it. I was interested in seeing just how important tone and having a clear goal in mind is.

Overall I do think the book could do with some editing. Some sentences run very long, to the point where the kind of lose meaning. Preventing large chunks of text might make it easier for a reader to follow the point of a paragraph and allow for smoother reading.

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I am currently working on a small project on sales, the first ever I did and I am shyly half through it, therefore I picked up this book for 100% professional reasons.

Wise Me Up to Cold Calling by Shea Heer helps the beginner and mid-level sales professional to learn how to do sales right by approaching potential customers using the right message and attitude. Although cold calling might be considered obsolete in the era of Internet and social media, approaching someone on the phone it is still a doable alternative, based on the very human urge to communicate and connect.

Personally, my biggest issue when started this small project was that I will really turn into a big joke, by fear of not having anything really interesting to say and sometimes not really interested in saying it. However, everything changed when I considered taking every potential contact as a way to connect, not necessarily to sell something but to offer something valuable in exchange. Of course that my PR and communication background helped me to really create some stand alone attractive offer in only a couple of words and a couple of seconds, but before sending my message, those couple of seconds before actually making the call were sometimes painful and Shea Heer is addressing this fear. The fear is usually the result of lack of confidence in what you are about to say. As 'being prepared is half the battle', figuring out what your project or company stands for is very important and must be clarify way before starting the conversation.

Talking about communication, it is equally very important to make everything as plain and simple as possible, especially by avoiding the heavy jargon language. When you send a communication via email, the words are there to be seen and eventually someone can do his or her own Internet research for checking your wording, but when you only have a couple of minutes, firing a conversation loaded with difficult words is a loss at first sight.

The book is simply written, systematic and well organised which makes it an easy read, eventually at the beginning of starting your week of cold calling. I would have expect also a little bit of more writing about how to organised the call calling schedule, for instance by including a follow-up etc. Nowadays there are very efficient management systems that help coping with a big range of calls, such as amocrm.com, not mentioned in the book.

Strongly recommended to anyone curious about sales, or considering to begin a career in this domain.

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