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We’ve all had the experience where
everything seems to be going well during a cold call, and suddenly
the person we’re talking to “hits the brakes.”
They raise an objection and we start to panic, thinking
we’re about to lose the sale.
We then fall back into the old traditional
cold calling approach. We try to overcome objections and keep
things moving forward. The
notion is that if we’re persistent enough, we’ll make the
sale.
How
to Stop Your Cold Calls From Losing Steam
Keep
pushing?
In this old traditional cold calling mindset,
we keep pushing. We
try to present more information until we “close” the sale.
We try to bypass people’s objections and concerns because
we’ve already decided for them that they should buy what we have
to offer.
However, in the new cold calling mindset, we
know that sales pressure is always a recipe for disaster.
Instead, we respond to objections by first trying to
understand whether they’re genuine concerns or resistance to
sales pressure. Until
we do this, we have no way of responding appropriately to
someone’s objections. We especially have no way of tackling the underlying cause of
resistance, which is a reaction to sales pressure.
Genuine
concern is about the product or service.
Resistance is about a person’s mindset.
The old cold calling approach doesn’t
distinguish between “genuine concerns” about what you’re
selling, versus “resistance” to how you’re selling it.
Nevertheless, this is crucial. If a potential client is
genuinely concerned with something about your product or service,
then you address it thoughtfully and directly.
However, if they’re resisting the process
itself, then they’ve felt sales pressure in some way.
Resistance is almost always a negative response to
perceived sales pressure. We therefore need to consider how
we’ve introduced that pressure, or how we can reassure them
we’re only focused on helping them solve their problems.
Different
responses
When potential clients raise objections about
what you’re selling (pricing, delivery, quality, etc.), these
are genuine concerns. They’re
rooted in the client’s world.
Therefore, you must take them seriously rather than
overriding or ignoring them.
When someone is resistant to the conversation
itself, then you’re dealing with a reaction to sales pressure. This needs addressing, but in a different way.
This is what I would call real “resistance,” because
clients are resisting the whole cold calling process.
They think that you’re trying to ‘sell’ them.
A
tricky distinction
What gets tricky is when people raise
objections that sound
like genuine concerns. But what they’re actually doing is
resisting perceived sales pressure.
On the surface, comments like these sound as
if they’re about your product or service,
Don’t they?
• Send me more information.
• Sounds good. Let me think about it.
• Your price is too high.
• Great. Let me talk it over with my
co-workers.
They may actually be code words for “I’m
feeling pressured by how you’re selling.”
Your potential client probably isn’t going
to tell you the truth. After
all, when was the last time someone said, “You know, I feel as
if you’re really focused on getting the sale here and that’s
making me feel pressured. It’s
creating a slight tension in my stomach. Therefore, at this point,
I don’t trust you.”
Fortunately, you can figure out whether
potential clients are raising genuine concerns or covering up
their discomfort. Just do these two simple things:
1. Assume pressure is always present, even
when you’re doing everything you can to create a pressure-free
environment. People
expect sales pressure, and we can’t always immediately diffuse
that expectation 100%.
2. Trust your intuition and instincts.
Over time, you’ll learn to be able to tell whether
potential clients are telling you the truth. You’ll start
picking up signals that they’re feeling pressured, such as
giving you short answers.
As you learn to distinguish between genuine
concerns and resistance, you’re likely to hear fewer and fewer
“objections.” You’ll stop triggering evasive responses or
false concerns when you stay focused on what’s actually being
communicated. You will also get far better reactions to your cold
calling efforts.
Ari Galper, founder of Unlock The Cold Calling Game, makes cold calling
painless and simple. Learn his cold calling secrets even the sales
gurus don't know. To receive your 10 free audio mini-lessons visit
http://www.Unlock-The-Cold-Calling-Game.com |