p>Your credibility.
Unless they've purchased your products or services before, prospects need to know that you can be trusted to deliver.
The value of your products and services.
Whether it costs a few dollars or a few million, buyers want to understand the benefit of what they are buying
in their terms.
The best way to avoid having objections become last minute deal breakers is to take the following three steps to identify and address them in the course of your marketing.
1. Validate Objections
Openly acknowledg.common concerns in your marketing materials and presentations. If you are a small fir.competing against large.companies, don't try to sweep this obvious fact under the carpet. Point it out and use it to your advantage.
2. Understand Objections
Use questions to get prospects talking about each of their concerns. If you charge high prices for your services, ask them what their concerns are about price. With the right questions, you'll find out where to take the discussion or how to refine your marketing strategy.
3. Educate Prospects
Once you have a clear idea of your prospects' distinct priorities you can explain the benefits of using your high priced service or how the smaller size of your firm is actually to their advantage.
When to Address Objections
The best time to address objections is in your marketing materials. You can use your brochure, your web site and other materials to validate prospects' objections, understand their concerns and educate them. Assuming your prospects read your materials, you can use this approach to eliminate objections before you even have the first conversation with a prospect.
Of course, not all prospects will read everything you provide and some will have lingering concerns despite your best efforts. Until the sale takes place, you should assume that your prospects might have questions that need to be addressed. What can you do about these persistent objections?
Use your marketing conversations to get prospects to clarify their concerns so you can address each one. For example, don't wait until the last minute to find out that the person you've been talking to needs to consult their boss. Early on in your marketing effort, ask them who needs to be part of the purchasing decision so you can include them from the start.
Prior to asking for the sale, get your prospect to identify: When would be the right time to use your services? What information do they want to see in a written proposal? What they like and don't like about their existing supplier? What their financial or other objectives are? How a smalle.company could better meet their needs? What benefits would justify the costs?
Your marketing objective is to make it as easy as possible for your prospects to become clients. Unanswered questions and concerns get in the way and result in lost sales. Eliminate these up front in your marketing and you'll find many more prospects signing up to be clients.
About The Author
2004 ©, In Min.communications, LLC. All rights reserved.
The author, Charlie Cook, helps service professionals and small business owners attract more clients and be
more successful. Sign up for the Free Marketing Plan eBook, '7 Steps to get more clients and grow
Your business' at
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