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Painting a Word Picture of Why They Should Buy Now

Painting a Word Picture of Why They Should Buy Now

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Most salespeople think the sale is won or lost in the solution. It isn't. By the time you get to "Would you like to go ahead?", the buyer is still deciding emotionally whether saying yes now feels safe, smart, and personally rewarding. That's where a word picture becomes your unfair advantage: you help them see the future after they've chosen you—and feel what that future means for them. Is a logical solution enough to get a buyer to say "yes" today? No—logic explains, but emotion decides when the buyer will act. You can have rapport, strong questioning, a great solution, and even pre-empt objections, and still not get a yes because the buyer is focused on outcomes, not your sales process. In B2B sales—whether you're selling SaaS, training, manufacturing equipment, or professional services—buyers are juggling risk, internal politics, budget cycles, and their own reputation. In Japan, that risk often shows up as consensus-building and caution; in the US or Australia it can show up as "send me a proposal" or "we'll get back to you." The point is the same: your solution needs to be wrapped in a future they want to step into. Mini-summary / Do now: Logic gets understanding; word pictures create urgency. Build a "future state" scene before you ask for the close. What is a "word picture" in sales and why does it create urgency? A word picture is a vivid, emotionally engaging description of the buyer's future success after adopting your solution. The goal is to have them see it in their mind's eye—a bright future that resonates—rather than simply hearing features and benefits. This is "high persuasion mode," because you're translating what they told you matters into a scene where those outcomes are already real. You're not inventing fantasies; you're echoing their priorities back to them: results for the company and what it means personally to the decision-maker. This is why it works across markets: humans everywhere respond to story, status, relief, pride, and reduced stress—whether they're a Tokyo division head, a Silicon Valley VP, or a German procurement manager. Mini-summary / Do now: Turn benefits into a scene. Write a 6–8 sentence "future success" story for your next key deal. How do you build a word picture that actually lands with the buyer? You build it from the buyer's own words—company outcomes first, then personal meaning. The word picture must loop back to the reasons they needed a solution in the first place and connect to what success means to them personally. That means you can't stay at a high level. You need granularity: what changes, who benefits, what improves, what stops hurting, what becomes easier, and what wins get noticed internally. The best word pictures also include the emotional ripple effect—how colleagues, customers, and leaders respond when the solution delivers. If you can feed back some of their exact phrases, even better; it makes the story instantly believable and relatable. Mini-summary / Do now: Use their language. Pull 3 exact phrases from discovery and embed them into your future-state story. Can you share an example of a word picture that makes a buyer want to act now? Yes—an effective word picture makes the buyer feel the win, the recognition, and the relief as if it's already happening. Here's a structure you can adapt (notice how it includes team impact, leadership approval, and personal upside): Example structure (customise with their details): "Imagine this scene…" (set the context)"Your boss/leadership response…" (status and recognition)"Your team's reaction…" (social proof and relief)"The operational change…" (what gets easier/faster/safer)"The measurable outcome…" (leads, revenue, costs, time)"Your personal payoff…" (bonus, promotion, reputation) This works especially well when the buyer has told you what they're hoping for—career progress, reduced stress, team stability, stronger results. Mini-summary / Do now: Don't wing it. Draft your word picture in advance using the six-part structure above. Why shouldn't you try to create this word picture on the spot? Because a great word picture is engineered, not improvised. It should be built piece by piece from what you've learned in questioning, and it needs to be polished until it flows smoothly without hesitations or stumbling. In many Japanese sales cycles, there's often a gap between needs discovery and the proposal—use that break strategically. That's your time to craft the scene, tie it back to their stated motivations, and rehearse the delivery. To the buyer it will feel effortless; to you it requires rehearsal and repetition. The smoother you are, the less "risk" you transmit—and the easier it becomes for them to say yes. Mini-summary / Do now: Write it, then rehearse it out loud three times before the ...
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