How to close more deals without discounting
Most 'closing problems' are actually qualification problems, follow-up timing problems, or multi-stakeholder problems — none of which a discount fixes.
Diagnose why deals stall and apply the fix that matches the actual root cause — not the symptom.
Zalecane narzędzia (ocenione)
| # | Tool | Starting price | Rating | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Close | $49/mo | 4.6/5(1,200) | Try Close |
| 2 | HubSpot | Free | 4.4/5(11,200) | Try HubSpot |
| 3 | Pipedrive | $14/mo | 4.5/5(8,200) | Try Pipedrive |
Protokół rozwiązania
- 01
Diagnose the stall point
Pull your last 20 lost deals. Group by stage-lost: early (discovery), mid (proposal), late (negotiation). Each cluster has a different fix. Early losses = qualification problem. Mid losses = value articulation problem. Late losses = stakeholder or budget problem.
- 02
Fix the follow-up cadence
67% of deals that close do so after 5+ follow-ups. Most reps stop at 2. Build a 7-touch cadence: day 1, 3, 7, 14, 21, 30, 45. Each touch adds new value (case study, ROI calc, relevant news) — not a 'just checking in' email.
- 03
Map all stakeholders before sending a proposal
Ask: 'Who else will be involved in this decision?' before any demo. If you can't name every buyer, your proposal will hit a veto you never saw coming. Multi-thread: get one intro email to every decision-maker before the formal proposal.
- 04
Create urgency without discounting
Deadline anchors: implementation slots, pricing effective dates, cohort start dates. Value expiry: 'the ROI you'd get from Q3 implementation disappears if you start in Q4.' These are honest urgency levers — no manufactured scarcity needed.
FAQ
What is the most common reason deals don't close?
No clear next step agreed at the end of each meeting. Every call should end with a specific commitment: 'I'll send the proposal by Thursday, you'll share it with your CFO by Friday.' Vague 'I'll think about it' endings are pre-closed losses.