The 3 Most Important Skills In Sales - YouTube

Channel: Dan Lok

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Nothing is more frustrating when you spend all that time
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and effort talking to a prospect,
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and then at the end, you don't close the sale.
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Today, I'm going to teach you three most important skills
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that you must understand and master in sales
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if you want to be a successful entrepreneur
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or a successful salesperson.
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You see, most people don't know how to communicate.
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Fewer know how to sell, almost no one knows how to close.
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If you're a salesperson, if you are a business owner,
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it is your duty, it is your obligation to close that sale.
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Now maybe, the kind of close that happens,
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maybe it happens after a presentation that you have given
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in a conference room.
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Maybe it happens over the phone.
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Maybe it happens in a shop.
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Maybe it happens in a showroom,
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or maybe it happens in a home kind of setting,
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or maybe it happens after you do an online demo.
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Whenever and wherever a close that is supposed to happen,
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it is your responsibility and your responsibility alone
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to close that sale.
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Most salespeople do not get this, right?
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They get very good at everything else.
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They are very good at prospecting,
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or maybe they get very good at cold calling.
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They are doing very good in terms of outbound,
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or they are very good at giving presentations,
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or they're very good at giving people demo online.
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But unless you close that sale, nothing happens.
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You become a very, very good presentation giver.
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You become a very good demo guy, and guess what?
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Those things don't get you to the bank.
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Closing is the only thing that gets you to the bank.
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So today, let me teach you three things,
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the three skills that you must know,
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three important skills you must master,
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if you want to earn more money.
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Sales skill number one, the ability to empathize
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with your customers.
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You see, if you're selling low ticket item,
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or you're selling a commodity,
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you work in a retail shop, people come in,
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they grab and go, or you're selling something
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that's transactional.
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You just show them the aisle, or you show them stuff,
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well, you don't really need to have empathy,
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because you're just providing a quick answer,
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a quick solution.
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However, if you're selling anything that is significant,
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if you're selling something that's high ticket,
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you need to have deep empathy.
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One thing I always say is this:
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people don't care how much you know,
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until they know how much you care.
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When you are selling something at a higher price,
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at a high transactional value,
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your customers need to know that you've got their back.
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And you have to be able to connect with people.
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You know what, if you want one big secret
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when it comes to having tremendous success
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when it comes to closing, here's one: give a damn.
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Actually give a damn about the wellbeing of your customers.
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Give a damn about their results.
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Give a damn about their outcome.
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When you give a damn, if your product or service
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are not a good fit, you gotta tell them it's not a good fit.
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If there's other people, there are other people
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that could provide a better service, better than you,
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you will not hesitate to recommend that to your prospect.
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That is what I'm talking about: giving a damn.
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I was doing a role play with one of my students
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during one of our live classes, right?
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We were doing role play, and he was saying
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all the right things, he was asking the right questions
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and kind of following the formula,
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saying the right words, but I said, "You know what?
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"You're not gonna close."
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He was like, "Oh, how come?"
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"I'm saying all the right things,
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"I'm following the formula."
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I said, "I don't feel like you give a damn.
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"I don't feel like you care.
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"There's no empathy, you're like a robot!
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"All your answers and questions are so mechanical
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"and so robotic, I don't feel the connection.
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"I'm not able to connect with you.
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"If I don't connect and I don't feel that you care,
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"I'm not gonna buy."
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And at first, he was puzzled, he didn't quite get it.
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I said, "Do it again.
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"And then do it again, do it again, and do it again."
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And then finally, after multiple times, I said,
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"Now, that's better.
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"Now it comes across that you actually
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"care about their wellbeing."
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Very, very important to have that ability.
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Great closers have that ability,
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to develop deep connections with their prospects.
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Skill number two, and that is the ability
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to uncover challenges and discover
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your prospect's pain points.
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I always say, no pain, no sale.
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The problem is, is not that you don't know how to sell.
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The problem is, you don't know how to diagnose.
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Most salespeople, they talk too much.
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They don't know how to ask questions.
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You're losing sales, not because
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you don't have product knowledge.
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You know your products or services very, very well.
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You're losing sales because you can not diagnose exactly
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what your prospects' problems and concerns are.
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You see, your product doesn't drive sales.
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Nobody cares about that.
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Problems drive sales.
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In order for you to motivate, inspire and empower
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your prospects to buy right now,
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you need to be able to understand and diagnose exactly
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what their problems are.
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Does that make sense?
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So think about this as where they are at,
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where your prospect is at.
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This is where they wanna go.
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From where they're at to where they wanna go, guess what?
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This is a gap.
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There's this gap, it is your job as a closer
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to make the prospect understand how your product or service
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or solution can bridge that gap.
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If you don't understand what this gap is,
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you're not gonna close the sale.
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If all you do is keep pushing your features
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and benefits, they're not gonna buy.
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That doesn't motivate them to buy.
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Then you're gonna get objections like, "Yeah, you know what,
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"that sounds good, but I kinda wanna think about it.
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"Let me get back to you."
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Or maybe, "Follow with me in six months."
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When you can help your prospects understand
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that you are the perfect company to help them
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bridge that gap, that's when they buy.
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See, sometimes the problem is not what it sounds like
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or what it looks like.
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Prospects don't even know exactly what their problems are.
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They might say, they come to you and say,
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"Hey, I want XYZ", and they might think, XYZ,
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that's what's gonna solve their problems.
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But actually, they actually need something else.
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Maybe they need DFG, right?
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They need something completely different.
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But they don't know, it is your job
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to help them understand, it is also your job,
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just goes beyond just your products and services,
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it's your job to understand the big picture,
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and how your products or services best fit
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to help them solve their problem.
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You cannot do that if you don't have the ability
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to uncover challenges and diagnose their problems.
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Skill number three, and that is the ability
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to handle objections.
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Now, you've seen this a lot, people talk about
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how to handle objections in sales.
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You know, your prospect says this,
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then you're gonna say that.
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This is how you're gonna respond,
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this is how you're gonna reply.
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All that is good, but my approach
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when it comes to objections, I actually do not like
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to handle objections, because the way I see this,
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if you're thinking about handling objections,
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you are being reactive.
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You're waiting for the prospect, you say this,
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then I'm gonna do that,
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it's like a martial art, right?
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Someone throws a punch, and then I'm gonna do this,
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and then he throws a kick, then I'm gonna do that.
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You're always playing catch up, you're playing defense.
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I would much rather play offense.
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I believe the best defense is a good offense.
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I like to preempt objections.
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I like to set the agenda so objections don't even come up.
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Done properly, objections don't even come up.
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And another thing I believe in is, I don't use a script.
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A lot of sales gurus or trainers, they wanna teach you,
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okay, this is a script that you use.
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This is exactly what you're gonna say,
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this is how you say it line-by-line.
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I compare that, it's like going to a boxing match
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with a predetermined plan.
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I'm gonna throw a jab, and then he's gonna do this,
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and then I'm gonna throw a hook,
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I'm gonna throw a cross, I'm gonna throw an uppercut,
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it is stupid.
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You can not pre-plan too much.
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You need to have flexibility, or Bruce Lee said,
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you gotta be like water, my friend,
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to be able to do that.
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I'd much prefer to preempt objections versus
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handle objections.
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Preempting is proactive, handling is reactive.
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There are better and smarter ways to sell and close.
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You don't have to do what everybody else is doing.
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There are better ways to do this.
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I teach a methodology called High-Ticket Closing.
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We now have students in over 150 countries.
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Now it's the ninth season that we have.
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If you want to learn the skill, the art and science
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of closing, no BS, no nonsense, what works right now,
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when it comes to selling premium products or services.
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Click the link here or here and join us.
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Our next season's starting very, very soon.
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So go ahead, check it out, see for yourself.
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Why do we have so many successful students?
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Why do we have so many successful closers?
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There's a reason for that, so go ahead, join us.
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I look forward to seeing you in class.