When faced with pushback like 'we already do that,' use the Ledge, Disrupt, and Ask (LDA) technique. Start by agreeing with them ('That's perfect, because...') to lower tension. This disarms them, allowing you to disrupt their assumption and then ask for the meeting without arguing.
Instead of directly challenging an objection, reframe it by suggesting there's a deeper context. Using phrases like 'it sounds like there's a story behind that' encourages the prospect to volunteer the real root cause of their hesitation, transforming a confrontation into a collaborative discovery process.
When a prospect gives a nasty or absurd objection (e.g., "I'm in a meeting"), don't be defensive. Counter with a ridiculously hilarious response that breaks the tension, calls out the absurdity, and reveals the human behind the phone.
Instead of attacking a prospect's current approach (status quo), acknowledge its "redeeming reasons." This prevents an offense-defense dynamic where they feel compelled to protect their past decisions. It lowers their guard and makes them more receptive to hearing about negative consequences they hadn't considered.
Instead of immediately countering an objection, validate it to make the prospect feel heard. This creates a 'sigh of relief,' moving them from a reactive state to a conversational one, which makes them more receptive to your next question.
In tense executive meetings, this simple verbal tool can de-escalate conflict. By starting with two points of agreement ("I like...") before posing a question ("I wonder if..."), you validate the other person, lower defensiveness, and create space for alternative ideas.
Instead of countering an objection, diffuse the conflict by relating to the underlying emotion. For a price objection, say, 'It sounds like you make really good decisions with money.' This shows empathy without agreeing their price is too high, lowering their defenses and making them more collaborative.
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.
A prospect's initial objection is a gut reaction to being interrupted, not a reasoned argument. Instead of addressing the objection's content (e.g., finding budget), focus on defusing the emotional reaction first. Handling the feeling opens the door to a real conversation.
Executives are inherently skeptical of salespeople and product demos. To disarm them, frame the initial group meeting as a collaborative "problem discussion" rather than a solution pitch. The goal is to get the buying group to agree that a problem is worth solving *now*, before you ever present your solution. This shifts the dynamic from a sales pitch to a strategic conversation.
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.