When Salespeople Create Objections to More Sales
Stop Getting In Your Own Way When Selling
Stop Creating The Obstacles to More Sales
Objections are a part of selling. Every salesperson can readily admit theyve come face to face with objections throughout their sales career. Interestingly, salespeople define the word, objection a variety of different ways.
In a seminar I delivered last week, I asked the audience what the word, objection meant to them. Heres what I heard in response:
1. It means No.
2. Its an excuse.
3. Its a smokescreen.
4. Its a concern.
5. Its a sign of interest.
6. It means Get out. Im not interested.
While Im a firm believer of the fourth and fifth definition above, salespeople still continually fall into the trap of creating objections themselves; the very obstacles they are looking to avoid in the first place. After all, if the prospect is not saying flat out No (and theyre being honest and upfront), then theres a concern that you have not addressed and defused in a way that provides them with the confidence and peace of mind to move ahead and buy from you.
Salesopedia just published one or my articles on this very subject entitled, Stop Creating The Objections that Kill Your Sales
You can read the article here.
So, in the end, developing a greater sensitivity around the obstacles and objections that you create during your selling process will assist you in eliminating certain roadblocks that shouldnt be there in the first place.
However, what about the valid concerns that you hear from your customers and prospects? You know, the objections that sound like, Your price is too high, I need to shop around, Let me think about it, Nows not the right time, Its not in the budget, Were happy with our current vender, service provider, etc. and so on. How adept are you in responding and actually defusing these common obstacles to the sale?
Heres an exercise I would encourage you to do. List all of the objections you typically hear. Then, write down how you respond to each of them. If you find that your rebuttals are not effective enough to defuse these objections and create new possibilities for a sale, then its time to give them an overhaul. Take the time to create a more effective response for each objection you hear.
Remember, salespeople dont overcome objections, your customers and prospects do. (After all, when was the last time you actually convinced someone to do something that they really didnt want to do?) So, your response to each objection will contain questions to better understand exactly where the prospect stands, rather than a defensive statement that simply creates an adversarial posture between you and the prospect.
Once youve developed the appropriate language to handle each objection, take them out for a test drive and gauge your results. Remember, if you dont define it, you cant refine it. How else can you determine what works and what doesnt? Put your shotgun away. Shooting from the hip is a dead strategy. Developing a conscious process for handling each objection gives you the power to continually reinforce best practices that have been proven to work which will ultimately lead to more sales.