Skip to content

Practitioners Waste Precious Sales Time ...

Clive Griffiths
Clive Griffiths
1 min read

Many Entrepreneurial Practitioners Waste Precious Sales Time Because They Don't Qualify With Intent

I'll be the first to admit: I've burned countless hours on leads that were never really leads at all.

Qualification is the key to winning great projects and growing your reputation. So don't try to 'handle' client objections. Instead, go deeper into understanding their needs and why they are hesitating.

Take your happy glasses off.

Find out why the client is hesitating. Here are some tips:

1. Revisit the need.
- What are the business challenges?
- What are their goals for the next quarter/year?
- Are these urgent? Are they important?

2. Check the basics
- What is your budget for this project?
- Who else is involved? Who is the economic buyer?
- How does the decision-making process work?

3. Skin in the game test

- Is the client still responsive to your emails and calls?
- How do you know they are genuinely interested?
- Are they willing to invest significant time with you?

Are you doing all the running?

Don't be afraid to walk away. If a prospect is not a good fit, don't waste your time trying to force the deal. There are plenty of other fish in the sea.

Qualifying out of an opportunity can be difficult.

It can also save you an enormous amount of time and energy.

LinkedIn PostsLI-2023

Related Posts

Members Public

Sunday walk.

Sunday walk. Fresh air. Silence. Feeling. Noticing. Wellbeing.

Members Public

What's really going on

“ … all of us hold on tightly to many things we don’t really have.” This line from Patrick Rhone’s book - This Could Help - got me thinking about our attitudes toward pipelines, relationships, and services.

Members Public

Think Different

I love it when there's a seemingly Unreasonable Agenda. The Apple Think Different campaign epitomised this. Just look at the change makers: Albert Einstein: Questioned absolute space-time. Bob Dylan: Reimagined song meanings poetically. Martin Luther King Jr.: Envisioned equality beyond segregation. Richard Branson: Ignored business conventions fearlessly.