The Sales Training Series: Stopping Objections Before They Start
"Your price is too high." "We're loyal to our current supplier."
"I prefer your competitor's product."
Classic objections such as those are very hard to overcome when
they pop up near the end of your sales call after you have
presented your company and your product, and after you have
expended most of your sales ammunition. But objections are far
easier to handle if you uncover them earlier in the process.
An objection is the customer's response to an unasked question.
Action Selling defines objections as the customer's response to
questions you failed to ask earlier in the sales call. If you
can ask all the right questions before making your formal
product presentation, you will uncover every potential objection
that otherwise would come back to bite you and you can modify
your sales presentation accordingly.
Here are those three classic objections again, with questions
that could have exposed them before they arose:
"Your price is too high." (Q: How much do you currently pay?)
"We're loyal to our current supplier." (Q: What do you like
about your current supplier? What would you like to see them
improve?)
"I prefer your competitor's product." (Q: What are the
capabilities of the product you're using now? What would you
like to see added?
Does this sound obvious? Then why aren't you doing it? Probably
because, like 19 out of 20 salespeople, you don't plan to do it
and you don't prepare good questions prior to a sales call.
But suppose you do ask excellent questions and an unforeseen
objection surfaces anyway? In that case, just follow the same
rule: Ask questions to understand the objection, try to quantify
it, and look for possible solutions.
Objections are the customer's response to unasked questions. Ask
The Best Sales Questions early in the sales call, and customize
your sales presentation so that you'll hear far fewer objections
later. If you do hear an objection late in the call, figure out
the question you should have asked-and ask it now.
In The Field:
"We had never prepared questions in advance of a sales call
before," says Brent Bearden, Manager of National Sales at Summit
Biotechnology. Now, thanks to the Action Selling sales training
program, Bearden says, "we uncover the information we need to
gear our presentations in a way that prevents sales objections
from arising."
In one case, good questioning delivered an even greater benefit.
Summit, a division of billion-dollar agricultural giant Monfort
Inc., sells animal sera and related products to pharmaceutical
companies. Questions designed to uncover and thoroughly
understand one customer's resistance to a particular product led
Summit to develop an extremely successful new product that
anticipated and overcame the objection. "We would have missed
out on a multi-million-dollar opportunity without Action
Selling," Bearden said.
The best way to deal with objections is to ask good questions
early in the sales call; questions that reveal and quantify
potential objections, allowing you to search for solutions.