
One Sales Technique: the Pushy Version vs. the Non-Pushy Version
Just before he shows his pricing, he asks the prospect,"OTHER THAN PRICE, IS THERE ANY OTHER REASON WHY YOU WOULDN'T WANT TO GO AHEAD....NOW?"
The purpose of asking this, he says, is to bring out any objections. And if the prospect brings up a reason not to buy right now, the objection gets rebutted, and the salesperson then asks the same question again.
The idea is to get the prospect to cite his objections so that they can be overcome and stripped away, until no objection remains to the sale.
Now, I do understand this works... sometimes. I've done it myself back in the day.
But now I say this technique has seen better days. As people have increasingly grown to not tolerate these kinds of sales techniques which had worked in the past, this kind of closing technique now can turn people off to buying from you.
Why? Because it comes from an angle where the sales person looks like they're painting the prospect into a corner to box them into making the purchase. Look at the language used in it:
"IS THERE ANY OTHER REASON WHY YOU WOULDN'T WANT TO GO AHEAD....NOW?"
It's basically telling the prospect that this line of questioning is for the sole purpose of making this sale now.
And that's a message which is more about what's good for the sales person.
Sure, the product or service you sell is good for the prospect too. But the problem is, this kind of a close doesn't honor that.
And that's the point. It comes off as pushy. Pushing for the sale. It comes off as:
'Got a reason not to buy? OK, what is it? Is zat so? Well here's what we can do about that. OK? Reason gone. So then, if there's nothing else stopping you from buying today, just press real hard 'cause you're making three copies.'
These days, more than ever, being pushy can kill sales.
He knows what you're doing. And he resents it.
And on top of it all, it asks the prospect to think of, and articulate, all the reasons why he wouldn't want to buy.
And do so right at the point where you'd actually like him to instead think about all the reasons he'd love to buy your stuff.
Compare it to its cousin version, if you will, which I prefer using:
"Except for prices, did I cover all your concerns?"
By comparison, what do those words connotate?
- Does it connote care for the prospect to make sure the prospect's concerns are addressed?
- Does asking this question prompt the prospect to object to the sale?
- Or instead does it help bring out any questions that need to be answered before the prospect can buy in?
- Does it do that in a way that seems pushy? Or does it instead come across as helpful?
- What's the mental process of how someone buys? Do they buy if they have reasons not to buy or being pushed into it - or do they buy if they're crystal clear on the information they need and it all makes sense to them?
- So do you think addressing any lingering concerns the prospect may have at this point, in this helpful manner, rather than asking for the prospect to give you reasons he doesn't want to go ahead, in a pushy way, may just be the difference it takes that helps cement the prospect's buying decision?
you cant hold no groove if you ain't got no pocket.
you cant hold no groove if you ain't got no pocket.
What if they're not stars? What if they are holes poked in the top of a container so we can breath?
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What if they're not stars? What if they are holes poked in the top of a container so we can breath?