Appointment-setting role play — training notes. Every objection is a chance to move someone from a cost to an investment.
Every objection is a chance to move someone from seeing this as a cost to seeing it as an investment.
Don't memorize scripts. Know the real answer to each objection — for example, "no money" means payment plans — and weave it into the simple framework below.
Turning a no into a yes is the whole game. The person who gently asks the most times gets the most sales. Aim to try about three times before offering a genuine callback.
Every response follows the same three calm beats.
Validate what they said.
"I completely understand." · "That's a great point." · "I hear you."Everyone else felt the same — and here's why they moved ahead anyway.
Go for the sale again, a new way.
"Would you prefer mornings or afternoons?"Same shape every time — acknowledge, associate, then ask again. Only the angle changes.
The move: Acknowledge, then point straight to payment plans.
I completely understand. A lot of our patients use payment plans to spread the total over a few months — would you like to know more about that?
The move: Name it as an investment, then associate with people who went cheaper and regretted it.
I totally understand — it's not cheap, getting lip filler is an investment. A lot of our patients went to cheaper injectors first, but the craziest thing is they ended up paying more in the long run, because they had to get it dissolved with us and redone. A skilled injector actually saves you money over time. Plus we offer payment plans — would you be interested in that?
The move: Same shape — lean gently on the risk of a cheap result and what they're really paying for.
I totally understand — a lot of our patients thought the same, so they shopped around. But cheaper often means you don't get the result you want, and you pay more in the end getting it removed and refilled. With a skilled injector you're not paying per syringe — you're paying for the result. And we can spread it over a few months. Would you be interested in that?
"I need to do research." "I'll get back to you." These are almost always price in disguise. You can't fight a ghost — so draw out the real objection gently.
A yes re-commits them to the goal.
"Based on the ad you clicked, do you think this will help with the goal you mentioned?"Don't wait for them to confess it — hand them the choices.
"Would it be the price, or do you just want more information?"Reframe the delay as an information gap you can close right now.
"Most people think they need more time, but really they just need more info — and the best source is us. What's on your mind? I can probably answer it right now."Life gets in the way the moment you hang up.
"Honestly, life happens once you hang up. Let's book a consultation — that's where you can really think it through, with the provider in front of you."Lower the stakes of saying yes — a booking is reversible, a lost slot isn't.
"Let's put you on the calendar now — worst case you reschedule. How does that sound?"
"Our injectors are almost fully booked. Let me grab you a spot before it's taken — and you can always reschedule."
"You've been following our page for months — haven't you had enough time to think, and now you just need to decide?"
A calm way to let them talk themselves into it — and to surface the real blocker.
They list everything they like — they sell themselves on it.
That surfaces the real objection. If it's fixable, fix it and book them.
Four ways to shift the conversation from price to value.
"If it were $50, would you book?" Then: "Do you think you'd get a good result for $50?"
"If I gave you a full syringe but it looked awful, would you prefer that over paying a bit more for a beautiful result?"
It's not the product, it's the technique of the artist. You'd pay more for a real MUA if you had the money — same with injectors.
"…would you do it?" If yes, pivot to payment plans: "$100 today gets you the lips of your dreams, and you pay the rest later."
When you offer Cherry or Afterpay, frame it as what everybody does — and end with a gentle hook, not a yes-or-no.
A lot of our patients love taking advantage of these — they use them all the time. They're super easy to get approved. Would you like to know more about it?
Why it works: people don't want to feel like the only one. If it's the norm and others succeed with it, it feels safe.
If they mention migration from a pen filler, use it later: "That's exactly why it costs more — no migration like last time."
Try about three times. If they're still difficult, schedule a real callback and move on. Some leads book months later.
"You saw something in our work that made you not just go to your usual place — so why go back to them?"
More calls means more chances and more skill. The two build on each other over time.