In sales there is a universal axiom that sales trainer Brian Tracy calls “The Law of Six”…
…It states:
“Clients really have no more than six objections to owning your product or using your service.”
You may hear what seems like countless objects to sales during your career.
However, if you categorize the objections, you will find they normally fall into six basic categories.
In the lawn and landscape business, our typical objections are:
- Price / Risk
- Price, cost, budget, or ROI concerns all fall into this category. Price objections are often really about risk. If the sales representative has justified the cost by building value during the interaction, the customer will be less worried.
- Competition
- We already work with “Competitor.” Your prospects are busy — they don’t want to fix things that aren’t broken. It is your duty to change their mindset and explain why they need the specific value you provide.
- Quality of Service
- If the customer is concerned about the quality of your products or services – e.g., they express doubts about product quality, the training of your personnel, speed or responsiveness of service, or compatibility – these are examples of quality of service concerns.
- Fear of Change.
- This is often related to complacency, having a fear of change can make the decision-making process a difficult one for many business owners.
- Timing / Stall
- Customers sometimes attempt to stall their decision. The closer the sale is to closing, the more pressure the customer feels, and if there is any remaining conflict or anxiety (or no sense of urgency) they may try to stall.
- Trust / Relationship
- The customer might be concerned with the legitimacy or credibility of you or your company. (This indicates that a good relationship has not been established between the salesperson and the client.)

