How can I tell genuine buying signals from polite signals in a sales pitch?
#1
I’ve been trying to get better at reading a room during a sales pitch, but I keep misjudging when a client is genuinely interested versus just being polite. Last week, I thought I had a clear buying signal, so I moved to present the contract, and the whole atmosphere just went cold. How do you tell the difference between a real green light and someone just being non-confrontational?
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#2
I’ve chased that same line before. They nod, they smile, then you slide the contract and the air changes. It felt like polite consent, not ignition. I started slowing down, and I started listening for gaps in their answers rather than the confidence in their tone.
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#3
I had a client who kept saying let’s keep this moving, but it turned out he was worried about time. When I paused and asked who would approve the decision, the energy shifted and the meeting got real—but that could be coincidence.
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#4
I don’t think there’s one magic signal. Sometimes a real green light shows up as a clear commitment to a next step or a dated milestone, but more often it’s a quiet alignment that doesn’t need a big push. I’m still unsure how to separate that from polite agreement.
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#5
Do you think the room was reacting to the word contract, or to the pressure you brought when you moved to close? I’m not sure I have a reliable way to tell yet.
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