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Getting From
No to Yes
It's less difficult to get from "no"
to "yes" than it is to get from "maybe" to "yes". In this
edition I'll explain why that is and what to do about it.
When a prospect says "no" to you,
there are a number of things you can do;
(1) You can thank them and go away -
bail out - if you're afraid of upsetting the prospect;
(2) You can thank them for their
honesty and ask them why they said "no" - an opportunity for you to
fix what went wrong and start selling again;
(3) You can resort to what never
works and restate your product or service's features and benefits -
sounds like the hard sell to your prospect - and increase the
prospect's resistance;
(4) If you're selling the Baseline
Selling way and you've used the Inoffensive Close and somehow
managed to get a "no" you can move to the Rule of Triple
Elimination.
The point is that you have a number
of things you can do, even though only two of the above options will
work.
On the other hand, where can you go
if you get a "maybe"? You can't ask why because they didn't
say "no" yet. You can't bail out - you haven't reached closure
yet. You could use option 3 but you'll still have a "maybe".
You can move to the Rule of Triple Elimination. The major
problem with a "maybe" is that you don't have anything to work with
and "maybe's" don't often turn into "yeses".
There are only two sure things you
can do when you get a "maybe"; You can use the Rule of Triple
Elimination to find out what's in the way or you can ask them to say
"no" so that you can find out why they said "no".
Let me walk you though an example on
how to turn a no into a yes. Read it through a couple of times
because in real life, you can do this in about 30 seconds. Let's
assume that the prospect said "no" and when asked why, replied that
they didn't believe there was value in the $5,000
license/product/service/proposal.
Ask if there would be value without
the license and the prospect still says "no". If they don't
see the value, restating features and benefits won't do it.
You should then confirm that the problem is really that the prospect
is skeptical. Let the prospect say yes to that because you can
work with a prospect who is skeptical more easily than you can work
with a prospect who fails to see value. When the prospect
confirms that they are skeptical, you can confirm that there isn't
anything you can say that will make them feel any less skeptical.
Let them agree to that because they'll think you can't sell them
anything at this point, keeping their resistance low. Finally,
state that you assume that talking with some customers/clients
wouldn't make them feel any less skeptical either. That should
cause them to disagree, that talking to a customer/client would in
fact help. Then, ask where you would be if they hear what they
need to from the reference. If they'd be ready to purchase,
you can give out the reference. If there would still be a
barrier to doing business, deal with that barrier prior to providing
any references. Finally, when all the barriers have been dealt
with, put them in touch with the references and close the sale.
The previous example includes three
simple statements to get from no to yes.
Review Baseline Selling for more
examples.
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