1. Listen Fully to the Objection
Your first reaction when you hear an objection may be to jump right in and respond immediately. Resist this temptation. When you react too quickly, you risk making assumptions about the objection. Take the time to listen to the objection fully.
Do not react defensively. Train yourself to ignore any negative emotions you may be feeling, and stay focused on what the buyer is saying and the business problem you are helping to solve. Listen with the intent of fully understanding the buyer's concerns without bias or anticipation, and allow your body language and verbal confirmations to communicate to the buyer that you are listening intently.
Many objections hide underlying issues that the buyer can't or isn't ready to articulate. Often the true issue isn't what the buyer first tells you. It's your job to get to the heart of the objection, and then fully understand it and its true source.
To do this, you must ask permission from the buyer to understand and explore the issue. Once explored, restate the concern as you understand it. Sometimes when you restate the objection, the buyer sees the issue more fully, and you get closer to the true source of the objection as a result. Even after the buyer confirms you understand perfectly, ask "What else?" and "Why" questions for clarification. Often it is the answer to that last "What else?" that contains the biggest barrier to moving the sale forward.
After you're confident you've uncovered all objections, address the most important objection first. Once you work through the greatest barrier to moving forward, other concerns may no longer matter or feel as important to the buyer.
You should do your best to resolve their issue right away. The more you can resolve issues in real time, the greater chance you have of moving the sale forward. If you need more information to resolve a specific concern, you may have to look something up. Don't wing it—buyers can sense that and it creates distrust. Long-winded responses can seem insincere, so keep your responses clear and to the point.
Once you've responded to the buyer's objections, check if you've satisfied all of their concerns. Just because they nodded during your response doesn't mean they agreed with everything you said. Ask if the buyer is happy with your solution and explain your solution further if necessary. Some objections require a process to overcome, not just a quick answer.
If the client isn't ready, don't try to force a commitment. Be sure not to accept a lukewarm "yes" for an answer though, either. Many buyers will accept a solution in the moment, but once you're out of sight or off the phone, the objection still remains.
-Jake Weaver
When working in Sales, you can't wait until your phone rings to get in the mindset of closing. Your morning mindset will determine how your day goes, so start off on the right foot. Every morning you should be hoping that your phone is about to ring and it's someone ready to sign up. Does this happen every morning? NO, but this doesn't mean you shouldn't be ready! If you already have a morning routine of working out or getting ready for the day, awesome! That will make this easier. But if not that's okay.
The first thing is you need to do is wake up early. I would say 7:30 am at the latest. Get your cup of coffee and watch a little TV to wake your mind up. Then, go over your leads and interactions from the day before and throw on a sales podcast or audiobook while you're doing this. If you looking for a good book I suggest Sell or Be Sold by Grant Cardon. This man is a sales genius (another article will be coming soon with more suggestions). Look at your leads and calendar so you can plan out your day.
Hopefully, someone will call first thing in the morning looking for info, and instead of rolling out of bed into a slow, tired, forgetful, pitch and losing a sale, you can roll right into your fired up ready-to-go pitch and start your day off with a close!
-Jake Weaver
Setting goals is more than just hitting a certain number of sales within a day week or month...
I'm working on not only growing my bank account but growing my mindset on everyday life. You cant achieve all goals by just changing one thing in your routine.
SCHEDULE YOUR FOLLOW-UPS BEFORE THE WEEKEND... This way you can have easy conversations set up in between new leads (initial contacts) and possibly close 2 or 3 closes in one day.
STAY ON TOP OF NEW LEADS... If this weather continues people are going to be sitting around wishing they were on the water and this when they have time to talk.
KEEP IT SIMPLE... Know your process and keep it simple. People want it they can afford it, we have the best product, we have the best price and you're the best one to give it to them.
PUSH FOR THE CLOSE... Be a little push to lock people in this weekend and get them out on the water as soon as next week.
BELIEVE IN YOURSELF... Take a breathe you can do it and you're going to do great.
-Jake Weaver
I challenge you to think about one of the deals you've signup and break down where it is that you started to close them.
Know your close that way you know when you get to that part of your flow they're going to get closed. Over time we're going to develop multiple closes for all different styles of people but you need to know the close. Otherwise, we're going to get a NO most of the time.
Easy deals will come but you should know what closed them.
So think today and start to time yourselves and write down what you're saying so you know how long and what you said to close a prospect! Have a great day team this year is ours!
-Jake Weaver