SalesGuru

A white lie here, a fib thereโ€ฆ Just how honest is your prospect being with you? We uncovered the top 5 lies favoured by your prospect. Theyโ€™re naughty, but hereโ€™s how to play the lying game the professional way…

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Lie 5: We donโ€™t have the budget

Almost never true, lie 7 really means โ€œwe have budget, but itโ€™s been assigned to other projects with higher priority.โ€

Your move:ย  Ask questions to find out where money is currently being spent.ย  Once youโ€™ve discovered whatโ€™s funded and why, reposition your offering and the value it provides so that it becomes higher priority than budget items that are currently funded.

 

Lie 4: I make all the buying decisions

NEVER does ONE executive make all the buying decisions. There is always consultation with others, or a decision-making process that needs to be followed.

Your move: Ask about the specific reporting structure and gently probe to find out the โ€œstakeholdersโ€ who โ€œinfluenceโ€ the decision.ย  Read between the lines and youโ€™ll probably be able to figure out which people actually have to be sold in order for a deal to go through.

 

Lie 3: Your competition is cheaper OR We always get a discount

This may be true, or it may not be true. Either way, donโ€™t fall for this popular tactic โ€“ itโ€™s simply meant to entice you to drop your prices.

Your move: Position your offering, and the privilege of working with you and your company, as being of much higher value than working with your competitor. If theyโ€™re demanding a discount, theyโ€™re testing to see whether they โ€˜got the best dealโ€™. If you do indeed drop the price, youโ€™ll lose credibility and end up cutting a non-profitable deal. Both loses, and no wins (for you).

 

Lie 2: Iโ€™m sorry I missed our meeting

If they miss a meeting more than once, then thereโ€™s no way that theyโ€™re telling the truth. Fact is, they may want to blow you off and they donโ€™t have the courage to say so.

Your move: Once youโ€™ve calmed down, reassess the viability of meeting with the client again and try to schedule another rendez-vous if you think itโ€™s worth it (itโ€™s almost ALWAYS worth it).

 

Lie 1: Sheโ€™s not in the office right now

If youโ€™re cold calling, this is almost undoubtedly a lie โ€“ fed to you by the PA or receptionist or similar gate keeper.

But the gate keeper is just doing their job: keeping you away from the decision-maker.

Your move: Pretend that itโ€™s true, always, and remain calm.ย Ask when would be a good time to call.ย  You may need to sell the gate keeper on the idea that your call is important enough to put through.

 

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