Why You Chase Prospects Instead of Asking for the Next Step cover art

Why You Chase Prospects Instead of Asking for the Next Step

Why You Chase Prospects Instead of Asking for the Next Step

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You avoid pushing because you do not want to look like the stereotypical salesperson. So you soften, you hedge, and you leave calls without a firm next step. Then you spend the week chasing. The problem is not that you are too aggressive. It is that fear of aggression has quietly turned you into a professional visitor.

In this episode we separate assertiveness from aggression and show why the gap between them is where most sellers lose clarity, and deals.

Why your read on your own assertiveness is unreliable We open with an uncomfortable truth: your sense of how assertive you are is subjective. It is anchored in how you were raised. Jim describes being told by his wife, "why did you say that," about a comment he did not even register as sharp. If you lean passive, asking for help or interrupting a server can feel aggressive. If you lean forward, you may run over people without noticing. You cannot calibrate off your own perception, so we look at what the situation actually requires instead.

The fire hydrant problem Jim tells the story of learning to ride a bike, fixating on the one fire hydrant down the sidewalk, and hitting it. Sellers do the same thing. They stare at the salesperson stereotype they are trying to avoid and steer straight into it. The fix is not to focus harder on what to avoid. It is to map where you actually want to go.

Assertive and permissive at the same time Being assertive does not mean pressuring the buyer. We break down how to hold your position while leaving the decision genuinely in the buyer's hands: "I am here to help you decide whether you want this or not. It is completely fine if you don't." Most buyers reached out because something has been frustrating them for months. They are closer to a decision than you think, and pressure is the wrong tool.

The clear future commitment We get into the Sandler idea of never ending a call without a clear future commitment: a scheduled meeting on the calendar, a mutually agreed agenda, and a defined outcome. For a lot of people who come to Sandler, that feels almost unthinkable, so they chase instead. We make the case that direct leadership, being crystal clear on when you meet and what happens next, is the healthiest way to move from passive to assertive.

Why a plan beats courage Conversations move at a thousand miles a minute. If you have to summon nerve in the moment and invent the words on the spot, you will find every wrong way to say it. We compare it to a shooter at the three-point line who has repped the motion enough that it runs on autopilot. Assertiveness with a plan is not a complicated move.

If you tend to avoid being direct because you do not want to pressure anyone, this one reframes the whole thing.

The Sandler Training Hour Hosted by Jim & Jason Stephens | Crossroads Business Development

Join hosts Jim and Jason Stephens from Crossroads Business Development as they discuss techniques, tactics, and the occasional tangent associated with the Sandler Selling System. Whether you are prospecting, negotiating, or closing, The Sandler Training Hour gives you the actionable advice you need to stop "winging it" and start controlling the sale.

📧 Reach out: jason.stephens@sandler.com 🌐 Crossroads Business Development

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