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How To Bully Your Prospects Into Buying Your Product or Service

Date Published: 14th March 2006
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How To Bully Your Prospects Into Buying Your Product or Service
(c) Copyright 2004 by Chris Coffman

Selling is a tough job, and sometimes you may need to appear tough in
order to get the sale.

As a salesperson (whether in person or in print) you don't have
to
appear to the customer as being needy of the sale. Many times, the
opposite can work quite effectively, that is, to make the customer
think of purchasing your product or service as a special privilege.

Here are a number of ways that you can "bully" the customer
into
buying from you.

1. State that only a LIMITED number is available.

This is a commonly used technique to push the customer over the
finish line. Presenting your offer as limited in quantity nudges the
prospect to act now since the offer may not be available later.

Companies that manufacture luxury line vehicles often use this
technique by manufacturing only in small batches. Think of Hawley
Davidson motorcycles for example. Only a limited number is
manufactured so as to keep the price high.

A limited time offer works just as well, even though it is less
compelling since the buyer may still procrastinate depending on the
time window that is given. On the other hand, a limited number offer
may go at any time. This places a bit more pressure on the
prospective buyer.

2. Place pre-qualifications on the prospect before they can buy.

Many business opportunity type offers normally indicate that the
company is looking for a "few top leaders" in a particular
geographic
area. You are then required to call and listen to a recorded message

that will further `qualify' you to work with the company. In
this way
the rejection is placed on the side of the customer not the seller.

Another slant to this same technique is to simply state that this
offer is not for everyone. And only a few special people will
recognize the offer for what it is. This of course appeals to the
person's ego and pride. Again they are placed in the defensive
position not the seller. They are the ones on the rope.

3. Show how most people will grab this offer.

This appeals to the "band-wagon" or "herd instinct"
that is common to
us as humans. We don't want to be left out of the new trend or
crowd.
It's all about `keeping up with the Joneses'. Show how
thousands have
already ordered and how your operators cannot keep up with all the

calls coming in. Any statement which can show that other people are
flocking for this offer will work here.

4. Demonstrate very strong credibility in your copy.

By showing all the years of experience you have under your belt and
the many authority figures that recommend your products, you can
bully the customer into submission. The customer feels that it will
be very foolish not to trust you when all these other top authorities
do. Having someone whom the potential customer admires and respects
endorse your product can create the magic here.

5. Show that you are not desperate for the sale.

This is another technique that can place the customer at ease or on
the defensive. Here you want to indicate that you're already
doing so
well (mostly from the benefits you've derived from the product)
that
the small investment they are making will make no big difference to
you. This may seem at first to be counterproductive but it works!
Again if the prospect ever senses that you're just dying to get
that
sale you can scare them away.

Another way of stating this is to show that you're actually
creating
competition for yourself by sharing this product with them.

6. Tell them what will happen if they don't get your product.

Most likely your product is satisfying a need or solving a problem
otherwise you'll not be selling it. So you can heighten the
prospect's awareness of the problems that they'll continue to
have if
they choose not to purchase your product or service. Here is where
you really want to `rub their faces in the mud'. Spell out,
in no
uncertain words, the pain they'll endure and the loss they will
suffer.

These six approaches are all based on a deep psychological principle
that controls us all - Our desire heightens for whatever is denied us
or just appears to be denied us.

This reminds me of the story I read some time ago of a small hotel
that had problems with guests fishing from the balcony despite clear
warning signs to the contrary placed in all the rooms. In a simple
experiment, the hotel management removed the "no fishing"
signs and
the problem practically disappeared overnight! I guess that the
thrill of fishing from the balcony vaporized with the
signsùfishing
was no longer denied.

Try making your product or service appear `denied' to the
casual
prospect and see what happens to the dollars `fished' out of
your
advertisement account.

It's about time to go out there and be a respectable
"bully"!

----------------------------------------------------
Chris Coffman is the publisher of The Internet Marketing Letter.
Visit http://www.theinternetmarketingletter.com to subscribe today
and receive instant access to the IML member community.
----------------------------------------------------




Tags: prospects, salesperson, privilege, limited time offer, ego, business opportunity, rejection, batches, prospective buyer, finish line, tough job, recorded message, slant, time window
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