The sales win: Chana mentioned crumbs and trunk odor from spilled soup. Your diagnosis bridge connected both problems to the recommendation: “Sounds like you’re looking for a comprehensive detail to get that smell taken care of and get your vehicle back to looking new.” This made the package feel like a prescription, not a menu pick.
Why it matters: When the prospect hears their own problem reflected back before the price, the price feels justified. The bridge is the connective tissue between discovery and pricing.
The sales win: Instead of a generic “anything specific?” you asked “Anything specific going on like stains, pet hair, vomit, or other extreme interior scenarios?” Chana initially said no, then a message later volunteered the trunk soup odor. The specific examples gave her a menu to react to.
Why it matters: Prospects don’t know what’s relevant. Listing examples surfaces problems they wouldn’t mention on their own. This format consistently unlocks information.
The sales win: After anchoring at $479, you recommended the $349 Showroom with “To be honest, for what you’re describing, this is probably the right call.” That gives her permission to choose the lower option without feeling like she’s settling.
Why it matters: This positions you as an advisor, not a salesperson. She trusts the recommendation because you’re steering her away from the more expensive option. This has been a consistent strength.
The sales win: Even on a 90-second call with a price-shopper, the anchor sequence was correct: Executive $469 first, then Showroom $359 with solid step-down reasoning (“for vehicles that aren’t show cars, it can be a little bit overkill”).
Why it matters: Anchoring is becoming automatic across both SMS and phone. The gap now is what comes before (discovery) and after (close), not the presentation itself.
Called for a quote on Subaru Crosstrek, hung up immediately after pricing ($469/$359). No follow-up text sent. She only heard a number, not what she’d be getting.
Quoted $349–$479 on 2020 Toyota Corolla (crumbs + trunk soup odor). Two-option close sent, no response yet.
Day 2 of the same pattern: both leads quoted with no scheduling attempt. After presenting options, add available dates. On phone, never let a prospect say bye without a probe.
The pattern: 6 consecutive quoted leads across two days (Mar 29 + Mar 30) received pricing with zero scheduling attempts. Chana got “Which one sounds like the best fit for you?” — a choice question, not a close. Patricia said “Oh, okay. Thank you. Bye” and the call ended with no response from Oliver. The presentation generates interest, but without a scheduling question the ball lands in the prospect’s court — and most prospects don’t pick it up.
For SMS (Chana-type leads): After your two-option presentation, add: “I’ve got [Day] at [Time] or [Day] at [Time]. Which works better?” This converts a pricing question into a scheduling question. The prospect goes from deciding IF to deciding WHEN.
For phone (Patricia-type leads): When a prospect gives a polite exit (“Oh, okay. Thank you. Bye.”), that’s not a rejection — it’s a prospect who got their number and is leaving to compare. Probe before they hang up: “Before you go — is it the price, or is it more about timing? Because if it’s timing, I can get you on the schedule whenever works.” This costs five seconds. Even if they still hang up, you planted a seed.
Next time: Your presentations are strong. The anchor-high-plus-honest-recommendation is working. Now close the loop. The follow-through after pricing is the difference between a quoted lead and a booked job.
Q2 with specific examples: Asking “Anything specific going on like stains, pet hair, vomit, or other extreme interior scenarios?” gave Chana a menu to react to. She initially said “No” but then volunteered the trunk soup odor a message later. The question unlocked information she might not have offered unprompted.
Clean diagnosis bridge: “Sounds like you’re looking for a comprehensive detail to get that smell taken care of and get your vehicle back to looking new.” Connects her specific issues (crumbs + odor) to the recommendation. Proves you listened before presenting pricing.
Honest recommendation: After anchoring Executive at $479, recommended Showroom $349 with “To be honest, for what you’re describing, this is probably the right call.” Gives her permission to choose the lower option while positioning you as an advisor.
Price anchoring executed correctly: Executive at $469 first, then Showroom at $359 as the recommended option. The step-down reasoning (“for vehicles that aren’t show cars, it can be a little bit overkill”) was solid and natural. The anchor sequence is becoming automatic.
Tried to cancel a booked job. Oliver saved it by offering reschedule options. The booking is preserved — good recovery instinct. The right move when a customer tries to cancel is to offer flexibility first, not accept the cancellation.
Still in pipeline from Mar 28. Follow-up sent, no response yet. 2023 Acura RDX with chick-fil-a sauce on paint + road trip in 2 weeks. The road trip deadline creates natural urgency — if no reply soon, the window closes.
Still in pipeline from Mar 29. Follow-up sent, no response yet. Early-stage lead — asked interior vs exterior, then went silent. If no reply by end of day, this one is likely a ghost.