
Here is a thing that surprised me early on. You can say all the right words and still lose the call. The buyer does not just hear what you say. They hear how you say it. A flat, fast voice makes you sound nervous. And a nervous voice is easy to say no to. The good news? Your voice is a skill, not a fixed thing. You can train it.
Most people rush. They are scared the buyer will hang up. So they speak fast and keep their voice flat to get it all out. But a rushed, flat voice does the opposite of what they want. It makes them sound unsure of their own words. The buyer hears someone who does not believe what they are saying. So why would the buyer believe it either? You sound like you are reading a script you do not trust.
Good callers sound calm and sure. They slow down. They let their voice drop at the end of a key line, so it lands like a fact, not a guess. And they pause on purpose. A pause gives the buyer a beat to take your words in. It also tells them you are not panicking. You sound like a person who has done this before and is happy to be here. That calm is what earns trust.
Print your opener. Draw a slash where you want to pause. Underline the two or three words that matter most. Now you have a map for your mouth.
Most sales leaders I speak to / are losing good reps faster than they can hire.
When a line matters, let your pitch fall on the last few words. A rising voice sounds like a question. A falling voice sounds like you mean it.
Say "this could save your team a week" with the word "week" going down, not up.
Record a real call. Play it back. If your statements creep up at the end like questions, you found your fix. Say those lines again with your voice landing flat or down.
"We help teams hire faster" should land like a fact, not a hopeful "...faster?"
"HiSamthisisAlexfrommerittwehelpteamshirebettersalespeople?" All one breath. Flat. The end lifts like a question. It sounds like you are bracing to be told no, so Sam tells you no.
"Hi Sam. / This is Alex from meritt. ... We help sales teams hire better reps." Said with small pauses at the slashes, and the last line landing down, not up. Same words. But now Sam hears someone calm and sure.
Same words, very different result. Slow down. Pause. Let your voice fall on the key line. That is what makes a buyer trust you and stay on the phone.
You have got this when you drop your voice at the end of key lines and pause on purpose, without thinking about it. Listen back to your next call. Do your big lines land like facts, not questions? Did you give the buyer room to breathe? If yes, you are there. A calm voice makes the buyer trust you, and trust is what keeps them on the phone.
Slow down and pause on purpose. Most people rush because they are nervous, which makes them sound unsure. Speak a little slower than feels natural. Leave a short gap after your key lines. Let your voice fall at the end of important sentences. That calm, steady delivery is what makes a buyer trust you and stay on the line.
Usually because you are speaking too fast and letting your statements rise at the end like questions. A fast, flat, rising voice signals that you do not trust your own words. The fix is simple. Slow your pace. Add small pauses. Drop your pitch on the last few words of each key line so it lands like a fact.
Record a real call and play it back, listening for lines that creep up at the end. When your voice rises, the buyer hears doubt. Say those lines again with your pitch falling or staying flat on the final words. "We help teams hire faster" should land down, not up. This one change makes you sound far more sure.
Pause right after you say your name and company. Pause again after your most important line, before the buyer replies. A short pause gives them a beat to take your words in. It also tells them you are calm, not panicking. Mark these spots on your script with a slash so you remember to breathe there.
£7-10k flat fee. The methodology, delivered.
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