There are three ways we experience rejection:
1) Real rejection
2) Perceived rejection
3) Anticipated rejection
Whether the rejection is anticipated, perceived or real, it creates an emotional response. The hardest part of the selling process, which is top of the funnel is interrupting a stranger and asking them for their time – emotional control in these situations is of paramount importance. I cannot teach you how to take away the “sting” of the client saying “no” when you are reaching out to clients, but what I can teach you are frameworks that you can use in context to control the emotion and flip the buyer’s script, so you can ask again and get what you want. When I have leveraged this for sales teams, I have seen results exponentially increase with the number of meetings the sales team gets.