To avoid being overwhelmed, reps should dedicate each week to mastering a single common objection. This focused, incremental approach allows a new seller to become proficient at handling the 12 most common objections within a single quarter.
When a deal faces uncertainty or objections, a prospect's emotions often spike. A top salesperson doesn't panic or mirror this anxiety. Instead, they use it as a moment to lead by slowing down, asking questions, and providing a steady, reassuring voice. This control over the process inspires confidence and guides the deal forward.
After addressing a prospect's concern, don't assume you've solved it. Explicitly ask if your explanation was sufficient by asking, "Was that enough to satisfy your concern?" This simple check ensures the issue is truly resolved and prevents it from resurfacing later to kill your deal. Most reps answer and move on, which is a critical mistake.
Effective call planning goes beyond setting a goal; it involves scenario planning for failure. A powerful question for managers to ask reps is, "If this call were to go sideways, what would be the most likely way that it does?" This forces reps to anticipate and prepare for common objections or derailments.
View objections not as personal attacks but as impersonal feedback, like bowling pins left standing. They reveal flaws in your approach's angle or force. This shift allows you to analyze the situation objectively, adjust your strategy, and try again with a different approach rather than becoming emotionally derailed.
Don't view objection handling as a debate to be won. Its real purpose is to provide a logical, non-annoying pretext to re-ask for the sale. By addressing the concern, you earn the right to make another closing attempt without alienating the prospect.
By proactively asking about potential deal-killers like budget or partner approval early in the sales process, you transform them from adversarial objections into collaborative obstacles. This disarms the buyer's defensiveness and makes them easier to solve together, preventing them from being used as excuses later.
Instead of offering generic bonuses, design them specifically to address the primary reason a customer might hesitate. For instance, if they're worried about implementation time, offer a bonus of free, hands-on team training to eliminate that specific objection and close the deal.
Most sales objections are triggered by the salesperson's own questions and statements. Instead of mastering rebuttals, focus on a discovery process that prevents objections from forming in the first place, leading to a smoother sales cycle with less conflict.
Instead of fighting an objection, agree with it ("Equinox is a great gym..."). This removes pressure and disarms the prospect, making them more open to a follow-up question. This "Mr. Miyagi" method absorbs the objection's momentum, allowing you to redirect the conversation and uncover the real issue.
The instinctive reaction to an objection is to panic and immediately offer features, benefits, or discounts. A more effective first step is for the salesperson to take a deep breath and regulate their own emotional state. This prevents a defensive reaction and allows for a more thoughtful, strategic response to uncover the true issue.