Podcast: Play in new window | Embed
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music | Pandora | iHeartRadio | Email | RSS
Jeb Blount explores strategies and techniques for effectively skipping past the 4 types of sales objections.
On this episode, I have a conversation with Chris McDonough. He’s a talented and successful sales leader at ZoomInfo.
Chris and I talk about why it’s stupid to avoid objections, how to reduce buyer resistance, how to manage your disruptive emotions in the face of objections, and techniques for skipping past objections.
There’s four key types of objections that we run into in sales. And they’re not what you normally think about. So typically when we think about objections, we think about objections like, “I’m not interested,” or “It costs too much,” or “I’ve got to go talk to my boss.” Those are the things we typically fixate on.
But if you think about sales as a process, all the way from prospecting into getting a deal closed, There are four places where you get objections in the deal.
The first are prospecting objections. They typically become the most harsh objections. They’re the reason why people don’t prospect, because these objections can be tough. They can be difficult.
And because you’re interrupting a stranger, they happen really, really fast, and you have to be good on your feet when you’re dealing with these objections.
Then there are red herring objections, and these are not necessarily objections.
They are things that prospects typically say at the beginning of a sales call that have a tendency to derail salespeople inside of a sales call.
So for example, a rep is doing a demo and at the very beginning of the process gets interrupted, then off to the races, the rep goes, getting off of process, chasing down that red herring.
Then you end up burning up the 30 minutes you had for the demo chasing something that didn’t really matter that much. So red herring objections are much more about getting control of the call.
Then there are a micro commitment and next step objections. And these are the objections that reps get when they’re trying to advance a deal through the pipeline.
So where reps really mess up is, and you’ve probably seen this as a sales manager, you’ve got deals in the pipeline that are stalled. Almost every deal in your pipeline that is stalled is because the rep didn’t get and secure a next step.
And the next step is something that’s on the prospect’s calendar and on your calendar. So next step objections happen when you ask the person, “Hey, let’s set up this,” or “Let’s do a pilot,” or “Let’s talk to your boss,” or what have you. Whatever the next step is, you get those.
And then finally there are buying commitment objections, and these are the objections that we traditionally get. These are the sexy objections, if you want to call them that.
Usually they’re the objections that, when I ask for the deal, when I’m trying to close the deal, the person says, “Whoa, Whoa, Whoa, Whoa. I need to go think about it,” or “This costs too much.”
Jeb Blount
Jeb Blount is one of the most sought-after and transformative speakers in the world…
Join more than 360,000 professionals who get our weekly newsletter.
Self-paced courses from the
world's top sales experts
Live, interactive instruction in small
groups with master trainers
One-to-one personalized coaching
focused on your unique situation