Sales Objection Handling: Complete Guide with Scripts 2026
Top performers embrace objections—they're buying signals. 35% of sales are lost to "no decision." Objection handling closes deals.
Key Takeaways
- Objections = interest (indifferent prospects don't object)
- Listen first, respond second
- LAER framework: Listen, Acknowledge, Explore, Respond
- Prepare for common objections before calls
- Never argue—collaborate to solve concerns
The LAER Framework
L - Listen
- Let them finish completely
- Take notes
- Don't interrupt
- Resist the urge to defend immediately
A - Acknowledge
- Validate their concern
- Show you understand
- "I completely understand why you'd feel that way"
E - Explore
- Ask clarifying questions
- Understand the real concern
- "Help me understand—is it the budget itself or the timing?"
R - Respond
- Address the specific concern
- Use relevant proof points
- "Based on what you've shared, here's how we've helped others..."
Top 10 Objections and Responses
1. "It's too expensive"
Explore: "When you say expensive, are you comparing to your budget or to alternatives?"
Responses:
- "What would the cost of NOT solving this be?"
- "Let's break down the ROI together."
- "What if we start with a smaller scope?"
Script:
"I hear you. Price matters. But let me ask—you mentioned losing $50K monthly to this problem. Our solution costs $20K/year and fixes that. That's not a cost—it's a $580K return. What would it mean to eliminate that problem?"
2. "We don't have budget right now"
Explore: "Is this a timing issue or a prioritization question?"
Responses:
- "When does your budget cycle renew?"
- "What would need to happen to make this a priority?"
- "Is there another budget this could come from?"
Script:
"Totally understand. Budget constraints are real. Can I ask—if budget weren't an issue, would this be the right solution? [Yes] Great. Let's explore creative options—phased rollout, next quarter start, or perhaps there's another budget line this fits under?"
3. "We're already using [Competitor]"
Explore: "How's that working for you? What do you wish it did better?"
Responses:
- "What made you choose them originally?"
- "If you could change one thing about your current solution..."
- "Many of our best customers switched from [Competitor]."
Script:
"Got it—[Competitor] is solid for [what they're good at]. Where we typically win customers over is [your differentiator]. I'm curious—you took this call, so something must be on your mind. What prompted you to explore alternatives?"
4. "I need to think about it"
Explore: "Of course. What specifically are you still weighing?"
Responses:
- "What information would help you decide?"
- "Is there a concern I haven't addressed?"
- "What's the timeline for making a decision?"
Script:
"That's fair—this is an important decision. So I can be helpful, what's the main thing you're thinking through? Is it fit, price, timing, or something else? [Wait for answer] Let me address that directly so you have clarity."
5. "Send me more information"
Explore: "Happy to. What specifically would be most useful?"
Responses:
- "What would you need to see to move forward?"
- "Who else will be reviewing this?"
- "Would a brief call to walk through it be more efficient?"
Script:
"Absolutely. Before I do—what's the best use of your time? A generic brochure, or a custom summary of how we'd solve [specific problem you discussed]? And who else should I include? I want to make sure the right people have the right information."
6. "We need to talk to other vendors"
Explore: "Completely understand. What criteria are you using to evaluate?"
Responses:
- "What would make us the clear winner?"
- "Who else are you considering?"
- "What timeline are you working with?"
Script:
"Smart approach—due diligence matters. Can I ask what you're looking for in a vendor beyond the product itself? [Listen] Perfect. Here's how we stack up on those criteria... And if it's helpful, I can share a comparison we put together against [competitors]."
7. "I'm not the decision-maker"
Explore: "Who else is involved in this decision?"
Responses:
- "What would you recommend to them?"
- "How can I help you make the case internally?"
- "Would it help to have a call with everyone together?"
Script:
"Appreciate you sharing that. It sounds like you're an important part of the evaluation though. What's your impression so far? [Listen] Great. Who else needs to weigh in, and what do they care most about? Let's make sure we address their priorities too."
8. "It's not a priority right now"
Explore: "What IS the priority? And what would make this become one?"
Responses:
- "When do you see this becoming a priority?"
- "What's the cost of waiting?"
- "What would need to change?"
Script:
"Understood—you're focused on [their priority]. Here's a thought: many customers found that solving [problem you solve] actually helped with [their stated priority]. Would it be worth a quick conversation about how that worked for them?"
9. "We tried something similar before"
Explore: "Tell me about that experience. What went wrong?"
Responses:
- "What would need to be different this time?"
- "What specifically didn't work?"
- "Here's how we're different..."
Script:
"I appreciate you sharing that—bad experiences are frustrating. What happened? [Listen carefully] I can see why you'd be cautious. The reason we succeed where others fail is [specific differentiator]. But honestly, let me show you rather than tell you—would a pilot make sense?"
10. "Can you give us a discount?"
Explore: "Help me understand—is it a budget constraint or are you comparing options?"
Responses:
- "What would make the full price worth it?"
- "Here's what we can adjust in scope instead."
- "Let me see what flexibility we have."
Script:
"I want to make this work for you. Before we talk price, let me understand—if price weren't a factor, is this the right solution? [Yes] Good. Let's talk about what flexibility makes sense. Sometimes we can adjust scope, terms, or timing rather than just cutting price. What matters most to you?"
FAQ
When should I overcome objections vs. disqualify?
If the objection is about fit (wrong industry, wrong size), disqualify. If it's about value, timing, or understanding, overcome. Both save time.
How do I handle objections over email?
Acknowledge, ask a clarifying question, and request a call. Example: "I hear you on pricing. Could we do a quick 10-minute call to discuss options? Sometimes there are creative approaches that work."
What if they say "no" flatly?
Ask: "I respect that. Before we part ways, can I ask what specifically isn't a fit? It helps me improve." Sometimes this opens the door back up.
Should I memorize scripts?
Learn the frameworks, not word-for-word scripts. Scripts sound robotic. Understanding the logic lets you adapt naturally.
How do I get better at objection handling?
Record calls (with permission), review what works, practice with colleagues, and role-play before big calls. Repetition builds skill.
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