Sealing the Deal
There’s no way around it: those who aren’t extraordinary athletes or entertainers but who still want to get rich have to get good at sales. Whatever that may be, even for artists, or whoever. You have to more specifically not only become good at sales, but great at closing sales.
Now, how do you close a sale? There’s three or four ways to do it. The best way is the invitational close. ‘Do you like this? How does this sound?’ Doing this invites feedback. ‘If it sounds pretty good, why don’t you give it a try?’ Assume that when you’ve answered a question or an objection, it’s the equivalent of them having decided to buy.
Or you can use what’s called an alternative close. ‘Would you prefer this or that?’ You offer a choice between A or B. The probability of them picking one or the other goes up dramatically if they have a choice, and whichever one they say ‘Yes’ to, you’ve made a sale.
Here’s a neat trick from one of the masters, Brian Tracy: if you get the customer to give you a single piece of information, you’ve successfully used the power of suggestion. ‘How do you spell your last name exactly?’ If they give you the spelling of their last name, they’ve bought the product. It’s very powerful.
In the end, the most important quality for a sale’s success is boldness. All qualities are habits, habits of thought and action. Because of childhood conditioning, we have fears of failure and rejection, but these are learned because children have no fears. We learn them as we grow up, but this also means we can unlearn them. The way you excavate the fear of failure and rejection is by doing the opposite of what you would do in a failure or rejection situation.
When we back away from fear, it grows and grows. Soon it will dominates your whole life, and it will paralyze you. But when you confront the fear it will get smaller and smaller and will become manageable. So for the rest of your life make a habit of doing the things you fear.
With time you will develop the habit of courage. You reach the point where you’re not afraid of anything. The key to your success as a person and as an entrepreneur is to develop the habit of courage. The way that you attack every single situation of which you feel a bit scared or nervous will move toward control of the fear. You pick up the phone. You make the call. You knock on the door. You ask for the order.
Whenever you feel afraid, do that which you fear. In a week, a month, a year from now, your fears will diminish. As your fears go down, your confidence and your self esteem go up, and you start to feel fabulous about yourself. You start to feel unstoppable.
What were some of the fears you’ve had to overcome in your life that held you back from success? What once seemed like a mountain but now more resembles a molehill? Give us your feedback. We want to hear from you!






I used to be afraid of speaking in public. After attending Enlightened Warrior Camp 2 years ago and also developing the habit of doing that which scares me most on a daily basis, these things are no longer an issue.
Hi Harv,
thanks for sharing this. Without closing sales, no product movement, no money. It's just that simple.
My take is: Even athletes are good at sales because they make the bulk of their money with negotiating advertising deals, especially when their career is over.
I love one closing sentence from one of my mentors, Tom Schreiter. It goes:”What's going to be easier for you…?” Buying our product and getting its benefits or not buying it and not getting the benefits.
Take care
Oliver
Fear is a desease we can easily heal with our action
FEAR stands for False Evidence Appearing Real.
I have really been pushing through some big fears over the past month or so. Seen some good come from it, looking for great to come of it! Sharing with my clients as I “sell” them.
I started my company nearly 4 years ago scared to death! I faced the fear and did it anyway. Every day I have to make decisions that impact my life and the lives of those around me. Getting closer and closer every day to being financially free. I have learned that if I continuously do things that scare me I will never become mechanical or get complacent. This year I am doing a Celebrity Dance Challenge. I don't dance-at least not on stage. Grace is NOT my middle name. But I am going to do it and do it in front of the entire city of Atlanta….. at least for those that come out to watch. YIKES! Makes Predicament look easy!
I have a bit of fear to stand in front of an audience and start talking. But at the Foodshow here in Auckland, I served 10,000 samples of our delicious Cone Kings Frozen Yogurt and talked and sold and advertised and talked even more… I didn't recognize myself, totally out of my comfort zone, but we were the absolute stars of the show!
Thanks for sharing that closing sentence, Oliver. That fits my persona well and I will feel comfortable using it. Appreciate it!
Yep! I agree. Just keep pushing thru the awkwardness of the sales process and it suddenly becomes second nature. I am beginning to feel the tingled of being unstoppable. Closed two sales this week and the diff between the two in terms of my confidence was drastic. Can you guess which one I was bolder at, it's the same one I sold for 2.5 times more.
I used to be terrified of people. It was an irrational fear that I had. I knew that without confronting it it would get worse. After going on medication I became better able to deal with my fear. Confronting it was important. I trusted that everything would be fine and often talked myself into doing what I knew I needed to do. Learning also dispells fear. Today, I read about the areas I am afraid of.
thank you for sharing this. 🙂