Closing Moves
Buying Signals
Objection Handling
Negotiation Tactics
Concessions and Strategy
100

This close simply asks for the business directly.

What is the direct request close? 

100

These are verbal or nonverbal clues that a buyer is ready to purchase.

What are buying signals?

100

This technique uses questions to uncover the real reason behind hesitation.

What is probing?

100

A negotiation where both parties aim to benefit is called this.

What is win–win negotiation?

100

This is what you should always receive when giving a concession.

What is something in return (reciprocal concession)?

200

This close summarizes agreed benefits before asking for commitment.

What is the benefit summary close?

200

When a buyer asks about implementation or timing, this is a strong signal of this.

What is readiness to buy?

200

This happens when the customer feels uneasy after saying yes.

What is buyer’s remorse?

200

When a buyer suddenly negotiates at an unexpected time, it’s called this.

What is an ambush negotiation?

200

Concessions should follow this pattern over time.

What is decreasing in size?

300

Giving the buyer two options like “delivery Monday or Wednesday?” is this type of close.

What is the alternative choice close?

300

These are questions the salesperson asks to test readiness without fully closing.

What are trial closes?

300

This type of salesperson handles objections confidently without being aggressive.

What is an assertive salesperson?

300

One person is unreasonable while the other seems cooperative—classic tactic.

What is good guy–bad guy?

300

The ideal outcome where both parties feel satisfied is this.

What is a win–win outcome?

400

Acting like the deal is already done (“We’ll get this installed next week”) is this close.

What is the assumptive close?

400

Facial expressions and body language fall into this type of buying signal.

What are nonverbal cues?

400

Failing to uncover the real reason for rejection leads to this problem.

What is lost opportunity/misdiagnosed objection?

400

Asking for small extras after the deal is done is known as this.

What is nibbling?

400

Your absolute lowest acceptable deal point is called this.

What is the minimum position?

500

This close uses urgency like “only 2 spots left.”

What is the standing-room-only close?

500

When a buyer states requirements that must be met before buying, these are called this.

What are purchase requirements?

500

This is when the salesperson avoids pushing too hard but still guides the close effectively.

What is being assertive (not aggressive or submissive)?

500

Intentionally understating costs to win the deal is this tactic.

What is lowballing?

500

The fallback option if no agreement is reached is this concept.

What is the best alternative to a negotiated agreement (BATNA)?