One real lead and one opt-out today. Corrie — an Occasional Detailer with a 2011 Mercedes E350 who details every two weeks but lapsed for a couple months — got quoted Showroom $369 / Executive $479 and said she needs to check with her husband. Here’s the headline: Oliver asked “what are you checking on? Is it price, timing, or something else?” for the first time. That’s a milestone. After 13+ documented instances of surrendering on “let me think about it” or “let me check with spouse,” this is the first probe — and it got a direct answer: price. The coaching system has been building toward this moment since Feb 22. The bridge is still stuck on Day 3 of the same template, and the OD signals were ignored, but the probe changes the trajectory.
Three days now. Corrie told you three specific things: “especially the wheels,” “every 2 weeks,” and “it’s been a couple of months.” The bridge referenced none of them — she got the same “sounds like you’re looking for a great comprehensive detail to get the car back to looking new.” Meanwhile, the probe proves you can adopt new behaviors mid-conversation. Apply the same discipline to the bridge: re-read their message, pull one word, use it.
Not analyzed: Jenifer — opted out immediately (sent “Stop” after auto messages, DnD enabled). Not a lead.
Corrie
What you did: After Corrie said “I will need to speak with my husband and I’ll reach out,” you asked “what are you checking on? Is it price, timing, or something else?” Got a direct answer: price. Then delivered a clean value justification.
Why it matters: This is the exact sequence the coaching has been building toward since Feb 22. After 13+ documented instances of surrendering on “let me think about it” / “let me check with spouse” (S14), you asked. The probe surfaces the real objection. “Price” is actionable — you can justify value or offer a downsell. Without asking, you never know what the husband discussion is actually about. This is now proven on SMS. Next milestone: use it on phone.
Replicability: Every time someone says “let me think about it” or “let me check with [person]” — ask what specifically they’re weighing. Price, timing, or something else. That’s the whole move.
Pattern: Third consecutive day. Corrie had 3 specific signals — wheels, bi-weekly habit, couple-months gap — and the bridge referenced none of them. “Sounds like you’re looking for a great comprehensive detail to get the car back to looking new” has appeared in every conversation since Mar 15. The probe proves you can learn new behaviors mid-conversation. Apply the same discipline here.
Fix: Re-read their message. Pull one word. Reference it. 5 seconds. “Got it — so the E350 has been a couple months and the wheels need extra attention.”
Pattern: Corrie said “usually every 2 weeks but it’s been a couple of months” — textbook Occasional Detailer. She got the Problem Solver pitch. No rebook seed, no recurring mention, no adapted language. When someone tells you their detailing frequency, they’re an OD. The pitch should match.
Fix: When someone says they detail regularly, switch to the OD path: “For regular maintenance, this is probably the right call” + rebook seed. Corrie is a $5,200/year relationship at bi-weekly — the first visit is just the door.
Quoted Showroom $369 / Executive $479 on a 2011 Mercedes E350. Checking with husband on price. She details every 2 weeks — lead with the recurring angle, not the one-time sale.
First probe on hesitation — MILESTONE: “What are you checking on? Is it price, timing, or something else?” after “I need to speak with my husband.” First documented probe on a hesitation signal after 13+ surrenders on this pattern. Got a direct answer (“price”) and delivered a clean value justification. The exact sequence coached since Feb 22.
Clean value justification: After the probe surfaced “price,” responded with specifics: full deep clean, leather/fabric conditioning, hand wax, glass treatment. Feature-based justification — not “trust me” or “it’s worth it.”