Eight Objections
There are only eight real objections, and when one is raised, it is likely to fall within the following categories:
1) Lack of perceived value
in a product or service
2) Lack of perceived urgency
in purchasing the offering
3) Perception of inferiority
to a competitor or in-house offering
4) Internal political issue
between parties/ departments
5) Lack of budget
6) A personal issue
with the decision-maker
7) An initiative
underway with an external party
8) Perception that “it is safer
to do nothing”
Your prospect’s objections are likely to be one or a combination of these eight categories. When your prospect does express their concerns, try and expand on them to get enough detail to then focus on what your countering strategy will be.
Once faced with these objections you then have a fantastic opportunity to qualify further your prospect on their needs, with ready prepared answers directly tailored to their concerns.
Follow this simple technique:
“I Keep six honest serving-men: (They taught me all I knew) their names are What and Where and When, How and Why and Who.” Rudyard Kipling.
1. What
are you looking to achieve?
2. Where
else have you looked?
3. When
are you looking to install?
4. How
have you decided your budget?
5. Why
are you looking to purchase?
6. Who
makes the purchase decision?
Countering Objections
During any sales process, you must consider these objections at each stage of the sales cycle. Have a practised set of questions and a reasoned argument for each written down with your agenda and meeting preparation.
For example;
1) Lack of perceived VALUE in a product or service
What are you looking to achieve? Where else have you looked? – this can lead to a competitor review and you can show how you outperform against your direct competitors.
5) Lack of BUDGET
When are you looking to install? How have you decided your budget? Who makes the purchase decision? – a simple chat re-budget could lead to an insight into a better time to sell, or lead to frustrations with the decision process being shared leading to a better understanding and relationship footing
8) Perception that “it is SAFER to do nothing”
What are you looking to achieve? Where else have you looked? An understanding and chat about the aspirations and goals of the prospect will remind them that they do ultimately want growth and success, and then you will be associated with that in their minds.
A helpful tip is to build a
sales tool around anticipated objections and qualifying questions along with the opposing arguments to be shared amongst the team for use in all meetings.
Understanding the real objections and being able to qualify these further and counter them
will get you one step closer to where you want to be. Whether this is advancing to the next stage in the sales process with your current prospect, or deciding to invest your time elsewhere.
Listen don’t dismiss
HOWEVER, do not ignore objections
when you are presented with them, there is nothing shrewd about hoping that the prospect will not remember their concerns. They do not go away because you ignore them. It will come up again and can destroy hours of effort. Worse than that, they could actually place an order and raise these concerns post order creating a lot of unnecessary stress and work for all concerned.
Sales Objections are a natural step in the selling process, so a prospect with no objections at all is unusual, he may have them but not be sharing them with you, so consider all and any objections as a necessary vital step towards gaining new customers, and with careful listening and targeting then the successful countering of a no and official start of the sales process should be the start of a great relationship.
Thanks for reading,
Paul Lloyd, Sellerly.
MSP/ VAR Sales Problem Solver, Sales Management Mentor
P.S Did you know I’m a passionate bee enthusiast and keeper? Here’s your bee fact of the day;
B-Lines are an imaginative and beautiful solution to the problem of the loss of flowers and pollinators. The B-Lines are a series of ‘insect pathways’ running through our countryside and towns. They link existing wildlife areas together, creating a network, like a railway, that will weave across the British landscape.