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If a prospect is hesitant to book a meeting and asks for information first, secure a tentative commitment. Propose sending a calendar "hold" for a future date that they can easily cancel. This creates a clear next step and prevents the lead from going cold.

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To prevent ghosting, don't wait until the end of a meeting to suggest a next step. At the very beginning of the call, explicitly state that the final five minutes will be used to plan the next phase. This normalizes the action, demonstrates professionalism, and secures commitment from the prospect.

On a cold call, prospects aren't ready to buy. Don't sell your product; sell the value of a future meeting. Frame the meeting as a low-stakes 'test drive' for when they might be interested later. This lowers resistance and makes it easier to get a 'yes' to the next step.

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.

In the last five minutes, qualify intent before booking another meeting. Use a three-question drill to validate the problem is worth solving (Do you want to buy?), establish a timeline (When?), and define the process (How?). This prevents ghosting and wasting time on unqualified prospects.

Jason Bay's data shows the most effective call to action isn't "want to meet?" but an "offer of value." Sell the meeting as a "blind date" where the prospect gains value (e.g., a free plan audit, industry benchmarks) even if they don't buy. This overcomes buyer hesitation from past bad sales calls.

In your opening script, explicitly state you're calling to see if it’s relevant to schedule a separate, future conversation. This immediately signals you respect their time and aren't trying to force a lengthy discussion now. It reframes the interaction as a joint assessment, making prospects more open to a two-way dialogue.

Instead of chasing prospects with vague "follow-up" calls, adopt the "BAMFAM" (Book A Meeting From A Meeting) method. Never end an interaction without scheduling the next one on both calendars. This converts a sales process into a series of committed appointments rather than a chase.

Prospects often decline meetings to avoid another bad sales experience. Counter this by explicitly stating the value they'll receive (e.g., free ideas, best practices) even if they don't purchase, making the meeting a low-risk proposition for them.

To reduce no-shows, schedule initial meetings within two days of the initial contact. Booking further out gives prospects too much time to lose context, de-prioritize the meeting, or forget the initial value proposition that prompted them to agree.

To combat no-shows, don't end a call after booking a meeting. Ask the prospect to find and accept the calendar invitation while you are still on the line. This simple step ensures the event is actually on their calendar and bypasses issues where invites get lost in email.

Overcome Prospect Indecision by Proposing a No-Obligation Calendar Hold | RiffOn