Showing posts with label Objection Handling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Objection Handling. Show all posts

Friday, May 23, 2008

Resistance Breakers 4

Paul J. McDonald:
One of my clients died last year, but you know, I never saw his accountant at the funeral service.
It was his accountant who advised Paul's client not to buy any life insurance. He told him that he (client) doesn't need one. The client's wife later had difficulties to pay for all the bills / debts owed by him and she couldn't afford to pay for his funeral fees. :(

Styles and Techniques
What constitute an effective response to the various objections is a subject of many great debates among trainers and sales professionals. Many styles and techniques have evolved over the years. And only one thing emerged certain--no agents can stake an irrefutable claim that his is the only right method.

As a case in point, many top producers while differing in philosophy and ways of approaching the issue, had each remained equally successful in the business. There exist a dictum amongst the sales fraternity, "if you spit at prospects and they buy, keep doing it!". Of course, this overstatement should not be taken literally. It is merely an extreme citation to stress that we should not be rigid. If your methods were effective, carry on employing them no matter how weird or unconventional they may appear to be. The fact is, sales resistance can be dealt with in a diversity of equally effective ways. Each can be handled in differing ways depending on the agent's individual experience, personality, degree of creativity and the circumstance surrounding the sale.

However, I do not mean there are no preferential methods. Over the years, some methods have been proven to be consistently more effective than others when dealing with specific objection under a particular situation. The intention of this sharing is to explore some of these techniques and to help equip new agents with a blueprint of dealing with prospects' objections effectively. Many examples of commonly faced objections and practical responses to them are cited here.

It is the author's contention that new agents should get a good hang of these methods prior to developing their own unique sets to confront the day to day challenges of dealing with objections. Once an agent is coversant with these techniques, he is in a more befitting position to bevolve new ones that are compatible to his style and personality.

Take the process of learning music as an illustration of this point. We can observe that even creative and talented musician such as:-
Vanessa Mae - The daring and somewhat controversial child prodigy whose techno-acoustic fusion album, The Violin Playin sold over a million copies!--has to master the basics of violin playing and music first. Only after that can she create her own unique brand of music.

Likewise creative agent can only truly exercise his creativity after mastering the basics of objection handling and building on these skills continually.


Thursday, April 10, 2008

Resistance Breakers 1

In the coming posts, I'll be sharing with you what I've read, understand and learnt from a book written by Lim Yuen Seong. I'll be copying from his book to this blog to share with my readers here. The following contents in this and the coming posts in italics are solely from Mr Lim and not from me. Kindly take note.

James E. Halket:
Life Insurance Is Like A Parachute: If you ever need it and don't have it, you will never need it again.

Introducing the Concept of Objection Handling

Lim Yuen Seong:
Don't handle the customer, handle his concerns.
Have you ever been wedged by the customer's objection during a sale? The answer will likely be a yes, especially if you are raw to the selling game.

Resistance, in the form of sales objections, is as natural to selling as water is to fishes. Genuine customer's objection merit a sound response from the agent. The obvious reason is that when they are removed, it could lead to a sale. And it precisely because it can make or break a sale that the ability to deal with them skillfully is so crucial in selling.

So, from this first topic, do you get to understand something that you never knew?