Listening With Two Ears, Speaking With One Mouth
Too many prospects jump straight to cost, but cost is not the answer to the problem. Finding the right solution always comes first, and then cost can be factored in to build something suitable and affordable.
The instinct to pitch is understandable, but it is often counterproductive. When you speak before you have truly listened, you risk offering solutions to problems you have not yet fully understood. The most effective salespeople are the ones who ask better questions, sit comfortably in silence, and let the other person do the talking. What comes out of that space is almost always more valuable than anything you could have planned to say.
Conversations That Convert
A sale rarely happens in a single conversation. It might take three or four, it may even take ten before something converts. Understanding pain points and where friction exists helps to determine what the real needs are, and those needs are often only surfaced after a number of discussions, not a single ten-minute chat over coffee.
This is why relationship-building matters so much in sales. Each conversation is an opportunity to deepen trust, gather more context, and demonstrate that you are genuinely interested in finding the right outcome for the other person rather than simply closing a deal. The patience to let a sale develop at the right pace is itself a skill, and one that pays dividends in both conversion rates and long-term client relationships.
Overcoming Objections
Objections are often in the moment. They are the blockers that can be seen right now. One of the most effective tools for handling them is to reframe the question and ask about the future state instead. If an investment now seems unaffordable, try asking: “If in six months you had £2,000 in recurring monthly revenue, would the investment of £1,500 now be worthwhile?” Shifting the conversation from present cost to future outcome changes the entire dynamic.
Asking For The Objections
Too often, objections are never asked for outright. You sense a hesitancy, but rather than surfacing it directly, the temptation is to pile on more features and benefits and hope it drowns the doubt out. It rarely does. Asking for the objection clearly and confidently is one of the most underused skills in sales, and it ties directly into effective listening and having the kinds of conversations that actually convert. When you create space for someone to voice their concern, you allow yourself to actually address it – and that is where trust is built and decisions are made.
