Medical Sales Training Article Series



Don’t Make Your Prospects "Wrong" When Handling Objections In Medical
Selling

By Mace Horoff, President
Sales Pilot
Handling objections. When we are giving a sales presentation to one of our
healthcare customers and we hear an objection we know we can handle without much
thought, what do we do? We handle it, usually immediately and emphatically! While
this is a knee-jerk response and an effort to get the objection out of the way quickly, it
is often not in our best interest.

We sell to healthcare providers – doctors, nurses, therapists, and technologists –
professionals of one kind or another who are highly educated in their respective
fields. Whether or not they are "true experts" is irrelevant. What matters is how they
see themselves and that we don’t do or say anything that contradicts that perception.

Objections take on many forms. One common form is the "I prefer a design that is
different than your product’s design" objection. How will most sales people respond?
They will jump right into the design rationale and all of the benefits of this design over
that which the prospect prefers. What is the prospect’s possible interpretation of the
sales person’s response? "Mr. Prospect, obviously you don’t have enough
knowledge or experience to recognize a better design when you see it!"

Could we instead respond with the feel, felt, found technique? "Mr. Prospect, I
completely understand the way you feel. Several other therapists that I call on felt the
same way that you did about our new design. But what I found is that most adapted
easily to the change that we made and felt that it was an improvement after they got
the hang of it. Would you like to try it out?"

Another common objection relates to something your prospect heard or read about
your product, which is absolutely incorrect. An example is your prospect telling you
"your instrument system is the slowest on the market." Now, you could jump right in
and say, "Where did you hear that, our system is much faster than anything else out
there." The prospect may interpret your answer as, "Dr. Prospect, you idiot - where
do you get your information from?" This is not a good way to win friends and
influence people and it will certainly lengthen the sales cycle, if not cause it to end
abruptly!

A better response might be, "Dr. Prospect, you are absolutely correct about our
previous design. That instrument system was cumbersome and took a lot of time to
use. But we have recently redesigned it to make it more user-friendly and faster to
use. Would you like to see what we changed?"

Notice that the second response tells Dr. Prospect what he really wants to hear – that
he is right, at least as far as his information. However, recently (too recent for him to
possibly know) we changed it. And we are offering to show him how we changed it so
he can continue to be "right."

There are many ways to answer objections without making the prospect "wrong."
Keep this in mind the next time the response to an objection is on the tip of your
tongue.

Mace Horoff is a professional speaker and medical device sales trainer. He was a
successful, award-winning sales representative in the medical device industry for over
22 years. Mace is founder and president of Sales Pilot Consulting, a company
dedicated to training medical device representatives for success. He can be reached
at (561) 333-8080 or
email. For information on having Mace speak for your group or
to learn more about Sales Pilot training programs, visit
www.MedicalSalesTraining.com

 

 


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