There is always a way to the sale. Do you have the will to take it?

There is always a way to the sale.

When your prospect says “We’ve used someone else before,” don’t panic. This moment isn’t a barrier—it’s an invitation. There’s always a way. Explore. “What worked well—and what didn’t?” There’s your door in.

Virgin territory is a myth in selling. Most prospects have a history, a past provider, or a previous experience that shapes their view. Acquiescing to, “We’ve used someone else before,” will see you quickly frustrated. Both by the market and your manager. “Kageche, you can’t keep on populating your report with, “They said they already have someone they are using.”

The 3 faces of the “We have an existing provider”

This defence can manifest itself in different ways. It could be a ‘’historical injustice’: “I don’t want to see you here. You people lied to me.” Or, a genuine concern: “We’ve used someone else before.” It can also be an objection clothed in the same wording. Whatever shape it comes in, know there’s always a way in. But your response will determine whether the conversation ends or evolves into a partnership.

There are three ways this can be handled and your approach makes all the difference.

1. The historical injustice: even when trust is broken there is always a way

If it is a historical injustice, own and resolve it first before moving on. You’re unlikely to succeed if you don’t.  Here’s what you can do. If it is a genuine concern. Explore as in the opening. Again, shelf pithing until you have fully understood what went wrong. And if it’s an objection, depending on how it’s levelled respond accordingly. Take Francis, who addressed a historical injustice as an objection.

The CEO thundered, “You! I said I don’t want to see anyone from your bank again. Your colleague lied to me.”

Francis (calm and assertive): “Yes. I’m aware Sir. What would you hae done if he was working for you?”

CEO: “I would have fired them!”

Francis: “And that’s exactly what happened and I was hired. Now, looking at the proposal we had sent…”

2. The genuine concern: a measured evaluation because there is always a way to the sale

Alternatively, if it’s you that goofed, “I’m sorry. We blundered. I blundered. Yet, to err is human and we have learnt from our mistakes.. So, we ask that you judge us not by the mistakes we make but how we handle them. And the only way to find out is to give us a second chance. Is this in order?”

There is always a way

3. Debunking the myth of the “saturated” market

There’s always a way even when a colleague says, “That market is saturated.” Meaning, “There’s no one else to sell to.” This is common feedback from salespeople in response to, “You stopped going to KQ (or such other large market). What happened? I don’t see accounts from there anymore.”

If you have just joined that salesforce or are eyeing a KQ, explore before agreeing. A salesperson that sells for a bank did that. He explains.

“KQ had (possibly still has) 3,000 employees, almost all who were potential customers for the innovative account we were selling. How could one person have sold to 3,000 employees. When I went there on the referral had led me there, I was proved right. Not only were they 3000, they recruited and trained 60 air hostesses every quarter, all fresh graduated none which had a bank account. Long story short, the ‘saturated’ market became my dominant one and within the first year I had closed 400 new accounts. Oh, and in case you are wondering, the salesperson that talked of saturation was running away from the inevitable barbs that come with all the 3000 bouquets. Customers told me that. Personally, I took the customer frustrations and complaints in stride.”

Playing the long game: when “no” means “not right now”

Here’s another point of entry. “I continued intermittently troubleshooting their website even after they went “in another direction” as their email ending our 6 year relationship ended. Come end of year 7 they came back. Turns out the price reduction they had been promised was not worth the pathetic (their words) service it came with. I upped my fee but they still signed the dotted line.

The “small fish” advantage: reframing your size

Even when you are a small fish, there’s always a way. “You are a small bank and you cannot handle our banking needs as a large manufacturer.”

Instead of populating the sales report with, ‘They said we are too small’ or ‘the market is saturated’, try this instead. “You’re right, we are more focused. That often allows us to be more agile and offer tailored service where larger institutions can’t. For instance, we can explore facilities that match your actual cash flow needs with less rigid security requirements, potentially improving your working capital. Could we examine just one aspect to see if our approach brings value?”

The unshakeable sales truth. There’s always a way

The common thread in overcoming these objections is a fundamental mindset: There is always a way. It requires empathy to resolve past hurts, curiosity to uncover real needs, creativity to see beyond “saturation,” and the confidence to reframe your perceived limitations.

There is always a way.


Check out our short courses and other services here. Or, if you would like to have your sales team sell more, we can help. In order for us to do so we propose a free consultation meeting or a call. If in agreement please complete the form below and we will get in touch after receiving your details, none of which will be public. Thank you.

About Author

Related posts

Are you busy—or just avoiding the hard sales conversations?

Are you busy following the sales manual or actually getting results? Following instructions will keep you busy—and keep the peace. It gives you cover when targets are missed: “But I followed the manual.” But that excuse won’t last long. Because in sales, it’s not the manual that moves the sale forward—it’s the hard sales conversations.

Read More

How to sell in a crisis: a step-by-step guide. The case of Airbnb.

What if your product was mired in a scandal like Airbnb is right now? What would you do? Would you roll with the punches or throw in the towel? Would you rise to the challenge or, like an errant seller, sink to resignation, blaming the product and employer? “Na niliwaambia tu.” (I told them but

Read More

Is it the economy that needs fixing? Or, is it just you? Let’s find out.

“It’s not me, it’s the economy,” so you say. And, to justify your many misses and rare hits those in your corner energize you’re position: “It’s not you; it’s the prospects that don’t have money. The problem is the economy; this economy needs fixing by the government.”  Maybe. Maybe not; maybe it’s not the economy,

Read More
Stay ahead in a rapidly changing world with Lend Me Your Ears. It’s Free! Most sales newsletters offer tips on “What” to do. But, rarely do they provide insight on exactly “How” to do it. Without the “How” newsletters are a waste of time.