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In this episode, Dan Sullivan shares how one powerful question can transform any sales conversation. Instead of pitching, you invite prospects to imagine their bigger future and talk themselves into working with you. Learn how The R-Factor Question® builds instant trust, filters out wrong-fit clients, and makes every sales call about them, not you.
Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:
Show Notes:
A great sales conversation starts long before you speak, with a trusted referral that pre-sells your credibility and lowers resistance.
The R-Factor Question instantly signals that the conversation is going to be about the prospect’s future, not your offer or your agenda.
When you ask someone to imagine their life three years from now and describe what progress would make them happy, you shift them into possibility thinking.
The person who does most of the talking in a sales conversation is the one doing the buying, so let your prospect talk themselves into their future.
Silence after you ask the question is your best tool because it proves the question has landed and gives the prospect space to think deeply.
When a prospect openly shares their dangers, opportunities, and strengths in response, they’re demonstrating real trust and a desire for a relationship with you.
If someone refuses to answer The R-Factor Question, they’re telling you they don’t trust you, and the most productive move is to graciously end the conversation.
The first thing anyone truly buys in the marketplace is a relationship, long before they decide on a product, service, or program.
People don’t actually want your answers; they want better questions that help them discover their own best answers and next steps.
Asking questions you genuinely don’t know the answer to keeps you curious, keeps them engaged, and reveals what they really want to transform.
By focusing on their three-year future, you immediately differentiate yourself from every salesperson who is focused on this quarter’s sale.
A prospect who shares painful parts of their past or their failures with you is demonstrating deep trust, which is the foundation for any meaningful transformational work.
Knowing early that someone is not a fit protects your time, energy, and team so you can focus on clients who genuinely want your help.
Resources:
How To Improve Business By Asking Good Questions
By Dan Sullivan and Strategic Coach4.8
111111 ratings
In this episode, Dan Sullivan shares how one powerful question can transform any sales conversation. Instead of pitching, you invite prospects to imagine their bigger future and talk themselves into working with you. Learn how The R-Factor Question® builds instant trust, filters out wrong-fit clients, and makes every sales call about them, not you.
Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:
Show Notes:
A great sales conversation starts long before you speak, with a trusted referral that pre-sells your credibility and lowers resistance.
The R-Factor Question instantly signals that the conversation is going to be about the prospect’s future, not your offer or your agenda.
When you ask someone to imagine their life three years from now and describe what progress would make them happy, you shift them into possibility thinking.
The person who does most of the talking in a sales conversation is the one doing the buying, so let your prospect talk themselves into their future.
Silence after you ask the question is your best tool because it proves the question has landed and gives the prospect space to think deeply.
When a prospect openly shares their dangers, opportunities, and strengths in response, they’re demonstrating real trust and a desire for a relationship with you.
If someone refuses to answer The R-Factor Question, they’re telling you they don’t trust you, and the most productive move is to graciously end the conversation.
The first thing anyone truly buys in the marketplace is a relationship, long before they decide on a product, service, or program.
People don’t actually want your answers; they want better questions that help them discover their own best answers and next steps.
Asking questions you genuinely don’t know the answer to keeps you curious, keeps them engaged, and reveals what they really want to transform.
By focusing on their three-year future, you immediately differentiate yourself from every salesperson who is focused on this quarter’s sale.
A prospect who shares painful parts of their past or their failures with you is demonstrating deep trust, which is the foundation for any meaningful transformational work.
Knowing early that someone is not a fit protects your time, energy, and team so you can focus on clients who genuinely want your help.
Resources:
How To Improve Business By Asking Good Questions

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