Handling Objections

The ability to recognize the real reason someone hesitates or does not take action — the fear, the doubt, the hidden concern underneath what they say — and address it honestly instead of pushing harder or taking the stated objection at face value.

What it looks like in real life

  • Example 1 — Without this skill

    A potential client tells a business owner the price is too high. The business owner immediately offers a discount. The client takes a day to think about it and still does not commit.

    The business owner lowered the price and still lost the client. Not because the price was actually the problem. The client was uncertain about whether the result was possible for their specific situation. That uncertainty was never addressed. The discount did nothing to resolve it. The real objection was never touched.

  • Example 2 — With this skill

    A potential client tells a business owner the price is too high. Instead of offering a discount the business owner asks a question. Help me understand — is it that the number feels like too much right now or is there something about whether this would work for your situation that you are not sure about yet.

    The client pauses and admits they are not sure whether their business is at the right stage to get results from the service. That is the real objection. The business owner addresses it directly — explaining what stage of business the service works best for and asking the client to describe where they are. The conversation that follows resolves the actual concern. The client commits at the original price.

  • Most objections are not the thing they appear to be. Price is rarely about price. Timing is rarely about timing. I need to think about it is rarely about needing more time. These are the words people use when they do not feel safe enough to say what is actually stopping them.

    When you take objections at face value you address the wrong thing and the real concern stays unresolved. The person does not commit not because you failed to respond but because the thing that was actually stopping them was never touched.

    When you can see underneath the stated objection to what is really happening you can have the conversation that actually matters. That conversation builds more trust than any amount of persuasion because it shows the person that you are genuinely trying to understand their situation rather than just trying to close them.

  • You will know this skill is developing when you stop hearing the same objections repeatedly without knowing what to do with them. When you can hear an objection and immediately have a sense of what might actually be underneath it you are developing the ability to see past the surface.

    Another signal is when your response to an objection opens the conversation rather than ending it. If your response produces a longer more honest exchange you are getting closer to the real concern. If it produces a short response and silence you addressed the wrong thing.

  • Taking every objection literally. The price is too high almost always means something else. I need to think about it almost always means something else. I am not ready yet almost always means something else. The first job when an objection appears is to find out what it actually means before responding to what was said.

    Responding to objections with more information. When someone hesitates the instinct is often to add more — more features, more benefits, more reasons why the offer is worth it. But objections are rarely caused by a lack of information. They are caused by unresolved doubt or fear. More information does not resolve doubt or fear. A genuine question that uncovers what is underneath them does.

    Treating objections as problems to overcome. An objection is not an obstacle between you and a close. It is information about what the person needs to feel safe enough to decide. Treating it as something to overcome makes the conversation feel adversarial. Treating it as something to understand makes it collaborative.

    Offering a discount as the default response to hesitation. Discounting signals that the original price was not genuinely justified. It often deepens the doubt rather than resolving it because now the person is wondering why the price dropped so quickly. Address the real concern first. The price is almost never the real concern.

    Pushing harder when someone hesitates. Pressure does not resolve doubt. It confirms it. When someone hesitates and feels pushed they become more certain that something is off. Backing off and asking a genuine question creates more safety than any amount of persuasion.

The Exercise

 

Write down the three most common objections you hear from people who do not end up buying or committing.

For each one write down what you typically say in response. Then ask yourself honestly — does my response address what they said or does it try to uncover what they actually mean.

Now for each objection write down two or three things that might actually be underneath it. What fear could be driving it. What doubt. What hidden concern that the person does not feel safe saying directly.

Then write one question you could ask in response to each objection that would open the conversation rather than close it. A question that creates space for the person to say what is actually stopping them rather than what feels safe to say.

Practice asking those questions in your next three conversations where an objection comes up. Pay attention to what the person says after you ask. That is the real objection. That is what you address.

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