I love scripts. You might be thinking, “Scripts just sound canned. I want to sound natural.” But hear me out. Does your favorite actor sound canned when they are acting in a movie? No, they sound natural. The reason they sound natural is they have practiced the script, and embraced it so it sounds natural. So if the script sounds canned, it’s probably not the script. It’s the actor.
I’m not suggesting for one minute that a sales person should be an actor playing a role. You can be yourself. Fortunately, in real estate sales, we are not given a script and told we have to say it word-for-word. We get to write out own scripts. You don’t have to play a part in a movie. I’m suggesting you should prepare what you are going to say and practice it until you can deliver it naturally.
You might be saying, “But it’s a live presentation. I don’t know what the prospect is going to say.” Let me ask you this… when a stranger says, “How are you?” Do you pause, think about it, and then answer? Or do you say, “I’m fine. How are you?” I’m betting you follow the script. Now you might not say those exact words. You might have a different script that you follow. You might say, “I’m great. Thanks for asking.” My point is that you took a script that you were probably taught at a very early age, modified it to fit your personality, and have been using it so long that it sounds natural and just rolls off your tongue. When someone says, “How are you?” you don’t even need to think about how you are going to respond.
I’ve done several types of sales. Usually after about 5-10 presentations, you have heard all of the objections. Every once in a while, you hear a new one. But most fields have a handful of objections that you hear all the time.
Let’s say the customer says, “Mr. Agent, your commission is too high.” When is the best time to come up with an answer to that? Right now when you are sitting in her living room? Or last week, when you had a few minutes to think about it, write it down, and practice it so it would just roll off your tongue.
If you work in timeshare, they might say, “We are planning to buy a house soon.” Is today the first time you’ve ever heard that objection?
If you don’t have a script for an objection, a good place to start is the training your company offers*. If your company doesn’t offer training, ask the other people in your office how they answer it. I take that back, don’t ask everyone in your office – ask the best agents. You don’t need to mimic mediocrity.
Write down what people say. Try using their script, modify it until it works for you, then stick with it. Practice it enough with other people until you can say it as smoothly as you can say, “How are you doing?”
“I’m fine. How about you?”
*If your company doesn’t offer training, you might be at the wrong company. Call me.
What a great article! It amazes me that salespeople listen to the same old objection over and over without learning or creating an appropriate response. I know they do. Thanks.