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Utilize the 'investment principle': prospects are more likely to see a deal through if they've invested significant time and effort. Instead of providing a proposal after one meeting, structure a multi-step process that requires their participation. This makes the deal more meaningful and weeds out unserious buyers who are unwilling to commit their own resources.

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Instead of waiting until the end to close, establish the meeting's potential outcomes upfront. Get the prospect's permission to deliver a 'no' if it's not a fit, and pre-agree on a specific next step if neither party says 'no'. This eliminates the buyer's power to stall later on.

To gauge a deal's urgency and qualify it, ask where the problem sits on their priority list. This forces them to state its importance out loud. It's psychologically difficult for someone to deprioritize something after they have verbally committed that it is a top priority.

Eliminate the "send me a proposal" stall by defining the next step as a valuable, paid engagement, like a diagnostic or workshop. By charging for this, you force the money conversation early, filter for serious buyers, and avoid creating free documentation that can be shopped around.

Adopt the mindset that the meeting's purpose is for you to determine if the prospect qualifies to be your customer, not for you to convince them to buy. This posture shifts control, positions you as the prize, and forces the prospect to prove they are a serious potential partner.

At the end of a call, ask to briefly review the 3-5 core problems discussed. This crystallizes the conversation and reminds the prospect of the seriousness of their issues right before you ask for a commitment. This makes them more likely to agree to a concrete next step because the value of solving their problem is top-of-mind.

If you've successfully established buyer pull in the first call, the selling is over. Your role then shifts from salesperson to project manager. Your job is to help the buyer navigate their internal hurdles (procurement, security, etc.) to get the deal done, not to keep convincing them.

Before investing time to create a perfect offer, secure a conditional commitment by asking, 'If I can deliver on these specific things we've discussed, do we have a deal?' This tactic prevents the prospect from backing out to 'think about it' and ensures your efforts are aligned with a committed buyer.

The fastest way to determine if a prospect is a serious buyer is to ask for their commitment at every stage. Request a second meeting, ask to include another stakeholder, or ask for internal data. Their willingness to say 'yes' signals genuine engagement, while hesitation or refusal indicates they are likely just seeking information and not a viable opportunity.

Prospects often express interest to gather information but lack a commitment to solve the problem. Sellers must differentiate by probing for concrete timelines and stakeholder involvement to avoid chasing deals that won't close, rather than hoping to convert interest into commitment on the call.

Asking "Would you buy this?" is too easy. A true signal of interest comes when a potential customer commits something of value: time as a design partner, an introduction to investors, or signing a letter of intent. These actions have a cost, making their "yes" meaningful.

Increase Prospect Commitment by Making Them Work for the Proposal | RiffOn