Business
Sales Objection Response Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A sales objection response generator solves one of the most common problems in sales prep: knowing what to say when a prospect pushes back. Price resistance, bad timing, competitor loyalty, authority gatekeeping — each objection has a different root cause, and the words you choose in response determine whether the conversation continues or dies. This tool generates multiple response variations for six of the most common objection types, so you're never improvising cold. Sales reps who rehearse objection responses outperform those who wing it. Select the objection you hear most on calls, set how many variations you want, and get a range of approaches — empathetic, ROI-focused, question-based — ready to drop into call scripts, roleplay sessions, or onboarding playbooks.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Select the objection type from the dropdown that matches what you hear most often on calls or in emails.
- Set the number of response variations to four or more to get a useful range of approaches and tones.
- Click generate and read all responses before copying — the best option is often not the first one.
- Copy the one or two responses that fit your product, prospect type, and sales motion most closely.
- Paste into your script, playbook, or email template and edit to include your specific product name, outcomes, and differentiators.
Use Cases
- •Building price-objection scripts for B2B SaaS discovery calls with multiple tonal variations
- •Populating an SDR onboarding deck with realistic objection-handling examples by category
- •Drafting follow-up email copy after a prospect says 'not right now' during a demo
- •Preparing AEs for competitive displacement conversations against an entrenched vendor
- •Generating roleplay scenarios for weekly Gong or call-coaching review sessions
Tips
- →Generate responses for your second and third most common objections too — reps who prepare for only the obvious one get caught on the rest.
- →For roleplay training, generate six or more variations and give different ones to different trainees so they learn to handle variation, not just memorise one script.
- →Price objection responses work best when you have real ROI numbers to insert — placeholder responses become convincing once you add a specific figure or customer outcome.
- →Pair the generated response with a follow-up question — ending your objection handling with a question keeps the conversation open and gives the prospect a way to engage rather than disengage.
- →If a generated response feels too long for a phone call, cut it in half and use the second half as your follow-up if the prospect pushes back again.
- →Test two response styles against each other in live calls — empathy-first versus value-reframe — and track which closes more conversations before committing to one in your playbook.
FAQ
how do you respond to a 'too expensive' objection without dropping your price
Acknowledge the concern without apologising for the number, then shift the frame from cost to outcome — what does inaction cost, and what does success look like in dollar terms? You can also explore phased onboarding or a smaller initial scope to reduce upfront commitment. Defending the price directly rarely works; connecting it to measurable value usually does.
what's the difference between 'not right now' and a genuine timing objection
First, establish whether 'not right now' means a specific future date or an indefinite delay — those require completely different responses. If there's a real timeline, lock in a concrete follow-up date. If timing is vague, explore what would need to be true for this to become a priority, and introduce a compelling event or deadline they haven't considered.
can I use these objection responses in a sales training doc or onboarding deck
Yes — the responses are written to be realistic and immediately adaptable for scripts, roleplay sheets, and call-coaching guides. Generate several variations per objection type, pick the ones that match your value proposition, and edit them to include your specific differentiators. Multiple variations give trainees options rather than a single rote answer.