"It is too expensive" is not really an objection. It is the moment where the rep finds out what the buyer actually thinks about the value. Objection handling training is not about clever counter-arguments. It is about teaching reps the 5 named behaviors that work when a buyer pushes back, and what NOT to say in the same moment.
Objection handling training is structured practice that builds the behaviors a rep needs when the buyer raises a concern: reflect the objection back before responding, anchor on the buyer's outcome, ask one clarifying question before offering a solution, name the trade-off explicitly, and never close on the same call the objection landed.
The 5 enterprise objections that recur across every B2B deal are: price, timing, authority, status quo, and competitor preference. Each has a coached redirect (what to say) and a default mistake (what most reps do under pressure). The post below has all five.
The 5 Enterprise Objections (Frequency × Difficulty)
Not every objection is equally common, equally hard, or equally fatal to deals. The scatter below maps the 5 against how often they come up vs how hard they are to handle without coaching. Bubble size = how often deals stall on this objection.
The 5 Objections, Each With a Coached Redirect
What is really being said: "I am not sure this is worth what you are asking." The redirect: "Compared to what?" Pause. Listen. The buyer almost always reveals the actual comparison they are using. Do not say: "We can offer a 15% discount." (Discounting on objection trains the buyer to push every quarter.)
What is really being said: "The cost of switching feels bigger than the gain." The redirect: "What would have to be true 6 months from now for you to wish you had switched?" The question reframes from "what is wrong now" to "what is the regret cost of inaction." Do not say: "Let me show you 12 features we have that they don't."
What is really being said: "This is not a priority for me right now." The redirect: "What would need to be true for it to be the right time? What signal tells you?" Do not say: "When is a good time to follow up?" (That is the conversation killer. You will follow up forever.)
What is really being said: Either (a) this is a real procurement step, or (b) the rep has been talking to the wrong person. The redirect: "Walk me through how a decision like this gets made in your org. Who else needs to see what, and what are they looking for?" Do not say: "Can you set up a call with them?" (You skip discovery on the actual decision maker.)
What is really being said: "I want to see if you will discount before I decide." The redirect: "Walk me through what you like about them and what you wish was different. I would rather give you the honest comparison than the sales-deck version." Do not say: "Let me show you why we are better." (Sales decks are forgettable. Honest weakness comparison is memorable.)
What Coached Objection Handling Looks Like on a Radar
5 dimensions of objection handling. The light blue polygon = average rep before coaching. The navy polygon = the same rep after 8 weeks of coached scenario practice. The biggest gain is usually on "reflect before respond."
The Stage 3 → Close Funnel With and Without Objection Coaching
Compare 100 enterprise deals that hit Stage 3 (proposal sent, objection raised). The funnel drops off differently for coached and uncoached reps:
An objection is the moment the buyer tells you what they really think about the deal. Train your reps to hear that, not to argue with it. The argument loses every time.
Retorio capability team, recurring observation across enterprise sales deploymentsSide-by-Side: What to Say vs What Most Reps Say
Coach the 5 objections with Retorio
Retorio scenarios cover each of the 5 enterprise objections, scored against the named redirect behavior. Each rep runs 2-3 sessions per week, manager debriefs the dashboard. The 8-week cycle becomes muscle memory.
Start with RetorioFAQ: Objection Handling Training
What is objection handling training?
Structured practice that builds the behaviors a rep needs when a buyer pushes back: reflect the objection before responding, anchor on the buyer's outcome, ask one clarifying question, name the trade-off explicitly, and never close on the same call the objection landed. The 5 enterprise objections that recur most are price, status quo, timing, authority, competitor.
How do you train sales reps to handle objections?
Not with a binder of scripts. The format that works is weekly AI scenario practice with a virtual buyer who pushes back on the named objection, scored behaviorally (did the rep reflect, did they ask before answering, did they avoid same-call closing), debriefed by the manager via dashboard. 8-week cycle, one objection per 2 weeks.
What is the best response to "it is too expensive"?
"Compared to what?" Then pause and listen. The buyer almost always reveals the actual comparison they are using (a competitor, doing nothing, an internal build, last year's budget). That comparison is the real conversation. Discounting is almost never the right response on the first surfacing of price.
How long until objection handling behavior shows up in deal close rates?
Behavior shift in scenario practice in 2-3 weeks. Behavior carrying into recorded customer calls at 6-8 weeks. Stage 3 → close rate lift visible at 60-90 days. Across coached enterprise teams, the typical lift is 20-36% on the same Stage 3 cohort.
Should objection handling be a separate program or built into general sales training?
Built in. Objections are not a separate skill; they are 80% of what happens after discovery. Treating them as their own program creates a "module" that decays. Treating them as the core of sales conversation training puts the behavior where it belongs: in every cycle, not in a one-off.
