Pre-set appointments sound like the perfect lead. Someone else does the calling, qualifies the prospect, and schedules a specific time for you to talk. All you have to do is show up and close.
In practice, it's rarely that simple. Pre-set appointments come with hidden costs and frustrations that often make them less effective than they appear — especially when compared to true inbound calls.
How Pre-Set Appointments Work
The pre-set appointment model typically works like this:
- A lead generation company acquires prospect data — from form fills, purchased lists, or other sources
- A call center dials those prospects and attempts to reach them
- When they reach someone, they ask qualifying questions and gauge interest
- If the prospect seems interested, they schedule an appointment time
- You receive the appointment details and call at the scheduled time
The appeal is obvious: you don't have to dial through lists, you don't have to deal with voicemails and callbacks, and theoretically every call you make is with someone who agreed to talk to you.
The No-Show Problem
Here's the reality that every agent who's worked pre-set appointments knows: people don't show up.
No-show rates on pre-set appointments can run anywhere from 20% to 50% or higher. You call at the scheduled time, and the person doesn't answer. Or they answer and don't remember scheduling anything. Or they say "now isn't a good time" even though they supposedly agreed to this exact time.
Why does this happen?
- Time delay: The appointment was set hours or days ago. Interest fades. Life happens. By the time you call, they've moved on.
- Pressure tactics: Some call centers push hard to book appointments. The prospect agreed just to get off the phone, with no real intention of following through.
- Misunderstanding: The prospect didn't fully understand what they were agreeing to. They thought it was something else, or didn't realize they'd committed to a specific time.
- No skin in the game: The prospect didn't take any action to reach you. They were called, agreed to something, and that's it. There's no investment on their part.
Every no-show is an appointment you paid for but never actually had. If you're paying $50-100 per appointment and 30% don't show, your real cost per conversation is much higher than the sticker price.
You're paying for appointments, not conversations. The provider gets paid whether the prospect shows up or not. Their incentive is to book appointments, not to ensure those appointments actually happen.
The Engagement Gap
Even when prospects do show up, there's often an engagement gap compared to inbound calls.
Think about the psychology. With a pre-set appointment, someone called the prospect and talked them into agreeing to a future conversation. The prospect was passive — they received a call, answered some questions, and said "sure, call me Thursday at 2."
With an inbound call, the prospect saw an advertisement, decided they were interested, picked up their phone, dialed a number, and waited to be connected. Every step required active effort. By the time they're talking to you, they've demonstrated real intent through their actions.
This difference shows up in the quality of conversations. Inbound callers are typically more engaged, more informed about what they're calling about, and more ready to have a real discussion. Pre-set appointments often start with you re-explaining who you are and why you're calling — even though they supposedly agreed to this conversation.
The Quality Control Problem
With pre-set appointments, you have limited visibility into how the appointment was set.
What did the call center agent say to get the prospect to agree? Did they accurately represent what the call would be about? Did they pressure the prospect or use misleading language? Did they actually confirm interest, or just book anyone who didn't hang up?
These questions matter because the quality of the appointment-setting conversation directly affects your results. A carefully set appointment with a genuinely interested prospect is valuable. An appointment that was booked through pressure or confusion is a waste of everyone's time.
But you usually can't see the difference until you're on the call — at which point you've already paid.
The Timing Issue
Inbound calls happen in the moment. The prospect is interested right now, so they're calling right now. You catch them at peak intent.
Pre-set appointments have a built-in delay. The appointment might be set for tomorrow, or two days from now, or next week. During that time:
- The prospect's situation might change
- They might talk to a competitor
- They might lose interest or change their mind
- They might simply forget
Even when the prospect does show up, they're not necessarily at the same level of interest they had when the appointment was booked. The moment has passed. Now you're trying to rekindle something instead of capturing it at its peak.
The Economics
Let's compare the economics:
Pre-Set Appointments at $75 each:
- You buy 10 appointments for $750
- 3 don't show (30% no-show rate)
- You have 7 actual conversations
- Real cost per conversation: $107
- Of those 7, maybe 1-2 are genuinely engaged
Inbound Calls at $45 each:
- You take 10 calls for $450
- All 10 are actual conversations (they called you)
- Cost per conversation: $45
- Of those 10, 7-8 know why they're calling and are ready to talk
The inbound calls cost less per conversation and deliver more engaged prospects. The math usually favors the direct model.
When Pre-Set Appointments Work
Pre-set appointments aren't always bad. They can work well when:
- You're doing in-person sales: If you're driving to appointments, having a scheduled time makes sense. You can't just show up whenever.
- You have a trusted provider: If you know exactly how the appointments are being set and trust the process, the quality can be consistent.
- The product requires preparation: Some complex products benefit from giving the prospect time to gather information before the call.
- You can't take real-time calls: If your schedule doesn't allow for on-demand calls, scheduled appointments might be your only option.
But for most phone-based final expense sales, the direct model of inbound calls typically outperforms pre-set appointments.
What to Look For
If you're considering pre-set appointments, ask:
- What's the typical no-show rate?
- How are appointments set? Can I hear example calls?
- What happens if a prospect no-shows? Is there any credit or guarantee?
- How far in advance are appointments typically scheduled?
- What do prospects think they're agreeing to?
If you're considering inbound calls, ask:
- What advertising generates these calls?
- What do prospects see before they call?
- What's the typical conversion rate?
The inbound questions are about source quality. The appointment questions are about process quality. Different models, different concerns.
The Bottom Line
Pre-set appointments solve one problem (you don't have to dial) while creating others (no-shows, disengaged prospects, time delays, hidden quality issues).
Inbound calls are simpler. The prospect is interested, so they call. You answer. You talk. No intermediary scheduling, no hoping they remember, no wondering what they were told to get them to agree to the appointment.
For most phone-based final expense agents, inbound calls deliver better engagement, better conversion rates, and better economics. The person on the other end actually wanted to call you — and that makes all the difference.
Ready for Calls, Not Appointments?
Final Expense TV delivers live inbound calls from television and streaming video advertising. No scheduling, no no-shows — just live conversations with people who picked up the phone and called.
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