NLP’s Most Powerful Presupposition For Successful Selling
Following a customer presentation gone south, have you ever found yourself saying things like, “They took me the wrong way,” or “They just didn’t understand what I was trying to say,” or “They didn’t get it,” or “The misinterpreted what I was meaning to say,” or “They were looking at it from the wrong perspective,” or “They misunderstood the presentation,” etc.?
My guess is from time to time, we’ve caught ourselves saying this and thought nothing of our own reaction.
One of the more valuable presuppositions taught in Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) is that the meaning of your communication is the response that you get.
If I asked you, do you like to be in control? What would your answer be?
My guess is your answer would be “yes.”
Most salespeople like to feel somewhat in control of their situation. If that is the case for you, why would you forfeit control to your customer by allowing the blame to go to them for misunderstanding you?
While it can be fun to point the finger or blame someone for “their misunderstanding” of what we were “trying” to communicate, it’s not useful for improving our communication.
If instead you adopt this empowering self-responsibility mindset of “the meaning of my communication is the response that I get”, you will find that it puts you in control of changing the outcomes.
I encourage you to approach each sales presentation, each customer encounter with this mindset, always asking what you could say different, how you could position your product in the way they will understand it best, based on how they buy, how they make decisions, and based on how they interpret the value best.
Tags: neuro-linguistic programming, neurolinguistic programming, NLP, nlp and business, nlp and persuasion, nlp and rapport, nlp and sales, nlp and selling, nlp blog, nlp for sales, nlp skills, nlp technique, nlp trainer, nlp training, overcoming resistance, presuppositions

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