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  • Hub You - When Selling Do Not Confuse Objections and Conditions

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    dless. The prepared, knowledgeable and confident sales person will have an answer for each objection and be able to re-direct the presentation back toward a successful closing. Buyers make decisions to buy or not buy based on a variety of emotions, motivations and needs. Very often the stated objection to making a purchase, is 180 degrees opposite of the potential purchasers real situation. I have had buyer’s claim that their budget was exhausted for that particular quarter. No new purchase orders coul
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    California has just passed a law that’s designed to lower the amount of greenhouse gas pollution the state puts out. The idea is to stop, or at least slow down, the effects of global warming. It’s a little complicated, but here are the details as I see them: --Businesses in the state need to cut their greenhouse gas emissions back to 1990 levels by 2020. --Industries that are traditionally heavy-polluters, like refineries, power plants, and cement makers, will be required to report on their progress in lowering emissions. --A state agency, the Ca
    My first sales manager, a grizzled old veteran with a no excuses allowed attitude used to tell me, “there are no lousy products, just lousy salesmen”. As a rookie salesman I thought the comment surely a strange one. Of course, there are bad products I thought. I know a bad product when I see one.

    I was wrong. The point is I can see bad products because someone is selling them. They are on the market. It takes a real salesman to sell an obviously deficient product. I have sold luxury goods, services, foodstuffs, mass-market lines, and internationally. Each category requires an adjustment based on the customer, their needs and the benefits the product can offer.

    The biggest reason for wildly varying sales performance is the inability of salespeople to recognize and handle objections. Most under-performing sales people do not understand the difference between objections and conditions. An objection is a stated negative to a part, or all of the proposed benefits of a product. Objections can, and must be overcome. A condition is a hard barrier. Imminent death, bankruptcy, possibly a looming divorce, are a few, and there are very few, conditions that would probably stop any attempt at closing a sale.

    A condition is a fact that is so overwhelming that it makes no sense to pursue a sales opportunity. Trying to sell a Rolex watch, or life insurance, to a late stage cancer patient is probably not going to produce a mutually beneficial outcome for either party. A bankrupt is not a great candidate for a $25,000 kitchen remodel. Nevertheless, there are very few absolute conditions that sales people will ever run into. They too often want to position objections as conditions, an excuse mechanism.

    Not so with objections! Objections come at sales people endlessly and they really are little more than phony excuses that can, and must, be overcome. Price, style, size, portability, too many features, too few features, the purported list of reasons a buyer might offer as a reason not to buy is endless. The prepared, knowledgeable and confident sales person will have an answer for each objection and be able to re-direct the presentation back toward a successful closing. Buyers make decisions to buy or not buy based on a variety of emotions, motivations and needs. Very often the stated objection to making a purchase, is 180 degrees opposite of the potential purchasers real situation. I have had buyer’s claim that their budget was exhausted for that particular quarter. No new purchase orders could

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    es, foodstuffs, mass-market lines, and internationally. Each category requires an adjustment based on the customer, their needs and the benefits the product can offer.

    The biggest reason for wildly varying sales performance is the inability of salespeople to recognize and handle objections. Most under-performing sales people do not understand the difference between objections and conditions. An objection is a stated negative to a part, or all of the proposed benefits of a product. Objections can, and must be overcome. A condition is a hard barrier. Imminent death, bankruptcy, possibly a looming divorce, are a few, and there are very few, conditions that would probably stop any attempt at closing a sale.

    A condition is a fact that is so overwhelming that it makes no sense to pursue a sales opportunity. Trying to sell a Rolex watch, or life insurance, to a late stage cancer patient is probably not going to produce a mutually beneficial outcome for either party. A bankrupt is not a great candidate for a $25,000 kitchen remodel. Nevertheless, there are very few absolute conditions that sales people will ever run into. They too often want to position objections as conditions, an excuse mechanism.

    Not so with objections! Objections come at sales people endlessly and they really are little more than phony excuses that can, and must, be overcome. Price, style, size, portability, too many features, too few features, the purported list of reasons a buyer might offer as a reason not to buy is endless. The prepared, knowledgeable and confident sales person will have an answer for each objection and be able to re-direct the presentation back toward a successful closing. Buyers make decisions to buy or not buy based on a variety of emotions, motivations and needs. Very often the stated objection to making a purchase, is 180 degrees opposite of the potential purchasers real situation. I have had buyer’s claim that their budget was exhausted for that particular quarter. No new purchase orders coul

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    nd must be overcome. A condition is a hard barrier. Imminent death, bankruptcy, possibly a looming divorce, are a few, and there are very few, conditions that would probably stop any attempt at closing a sale.

    A condition is a fact that is so overwhelming that it makes no sense to pursue a sales opportunity. Trying to sell a Rolex watch, or life insurance, to a late stage cancer patient is probably not going to produce a mutually beneficial outcome for either party. A bankrupt is not a great candidate for a $25,000 kitchen remodel. Nevertheless, there are very few absolute conditions that sales people will ever run into. They too often want to position objections as conditions, an excuse mechanism.

    Not so with objections! Objections come at sales people endlessly and they really are little more than phony excuses that can, and must, be overcome. Price, style, size, portability, too many features, too few features, the purported list of reasons a buyer might offer as a reason not to buy is endless. The prepared, knowledgeable and confident sales person will have an answer for each objection and be able to re-direct the presentation back toward a successful closing. Buyers make decisions to buy or not buy based on a variety of emotions, motivations and needs. Very often the stated objection to making a purchase, is 180 degrees opposite of the potential purchasers real situation. I have had buyer’s claim that their budget was exhausted for that particular quarter. No new purchase orders coul

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    ate for a $25,000 kitchen remodel. Nevertheless, there are very few absolute conditions that sales people will ever run into. They too often want to position objections as conditions, an excuse mechanism.

    Not so with objections! Objections come at sales people endlessly and they really are little more than phony excuses that can, and must, be overcome. Price, style, size, portability, too many features, too few features, the purported list of reasons a buyer might offer as a reason not to buy is endless. The prepared, knowledgeable and confident sales person will have an answer for each objection and be able to re-direct the presentation back toward a successful closing. Buyers make decisions to buy or not buy based on a variety of emotions, motivations and needs. Very often the stated objection to making a purchase, is 180 degrees opposite of the potential purchasers real situation. I have had buyer’s claim that their budget was exhausted for that particular quarter. No new purchase orders coul

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    dless. The prepared, knowledgeable and confident sales person will have an answer for each objection and be able to re-direct the presentation back toward a successful closing. Buyers make decisions to buy or not buy based on a variety of emotions, motivations and needs. Very often the stated objection to making a purchase, is 180 degrees opposite of the potential purchasers real situation. I have had buyer’s claim that their budget was exhausted for that particular quarter. No new purchase orders could be written by order of the boss.

    A bit of probing usually reveals the real reason for the objection, often a competitor is overstocked with a slow turning inventory. This is easily handled, “Mike, my merchandise is turning nicely, you just do not carry enough inventory. Don’t penalize, my company, your customers and your company’s bottom line by penalizing all of us because Brand X is overstocked.”

    Objections are often proposed as a testing mechanism. The test is for you, the sales person, to be able to handle the objection and prove the validity of the opportunity you are presenting. If you cannot, many experienced buyers will walk away from the product simply based on the perceived reality that you do not have the features and benefits that will compel them to change vendors.

    Never assume that an objection is anything more than a speed bump to be handled with care and diligence, but not a threat to derail a confident, knowledgeable sales person from achieving their ultimate goal, the sale. If you believe, and have passion, that your product, service or opportunity needs and deserves to be available to the widest possible audience then you will succeed at overcoming objections.

    An objection is simply an opportunity for you to prove the utility and importance of your product. Successful sales people welcome objections. They recognize handling objections as confirmation of their mastery of the product. The competent buyer will, likewise, treat the sales person’s ability to tackle the minefield of objections as proof that this opportunity must be seriously considered for purchase.

    Conditions are rare and insurmountable. Objections are frequent and used by weak sales persons and buyers to justify not taking action. There is no excuse for any sales person to not handle every objection proffered. It is commercial suicide to lack the competence to turn every objection into a closing opportunity.

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