The High Hazard of High Emotion
We love emotion don’t we? When we see a coach ranting and raving on the sideline, we say, “Boy, look at that passion!!” Usually, what we mean is “He’s come unhinged-but it’s for a good cause.”
But is out-of-control emotion all it’s cracked up to be in the sales cycle? I say, “No.” Here’s why.
We have a saying in our business when we’re working with clients: “The only emotion that should be seen is the prospect’s demonstration of emotion of why they need to fix their problem.” Not only does your emotion (desire to sell the product, desire for the resulting income, ego satisfaction) not help, it hurts the process.
You want the prospect’s emotion to fill the air and the space between you and him. The more your emotion is on display, the less room there is for theirs to play out.
Catch Yourself
Believe me, this is hard for me to do…and I see it difficult for others. When your points are falling flat and your customer resorts to “Your price is too high,” you WILL get emotional. But it won’t come out as passion…yelling…screaming. It will come out as defensive. And the instant you go defensive, you’ve lost the battle.
Write down the thing that your prospect commonly says that drives you crazy. Then come up with a strategy/device so that when they say it, you stay calm and in the moment. Then you can, logically, walk thru how they got to that decision/conclusion.
And, of course, practice detachment. If it is not meant to be, then you must move on. But don’t use detachment as a way out of the process. Detachment is merely a ‘way of being’ so that you can logically sort out the truth.
Well, I’ve been pretty detached when in situations where my emotions could be excited. Yet, the other party has rarely responded well to that detachment. Now, I’m not aloof when detached, but for some reason, my detachment has annoyed or enraged the emotionally invested folks I’ve dealt with… as if they’d expected me to get all excited about their issue, and not be rational about it.
I believe people operate as much (if not more) on emotion (including fear) than on reason, personally. Before being rational, I suggest calming the emotional party down as much as possible.
I’m enjoying your blog, thanks for the thought-provoking content.
Best,
Glenn