Every objection a broker or M&A advisor raises on a cold call — what they actually mean, how to respond, and when to stop pushing. Includes broker-specific and HR professional objections.
What they actually mean: They've tried something before and it's either working or they're comfortable with it. They don't want to add another expense or vendor relationship.
How to respond: "That's actually the best scenario for this conversation — if you already have a marketing system running, what we're doing is adding a revenue layer on top of it, not replacing what you have. We're not asking you to switch anything. We're sponsoring a calling campaign that runs alongside what you're already doing. And at five enrolled clients, we cover five thousand dollars of your monthly marketing investment — whether that's what you're currently spending with your marketing company or something else entirely. The question isn't whether your current marketing works. The question is whether you'd want us paying for some of it."
If they push back: "What does your current marketing company charge you per month?" Let the number land. Then: "We'd cover that at five enrolled clients. You keep your current setup and we fund part of it."
What they actually mean: They're busy. They're managing deals. Every hour spent on something that isn't a closing or a listing feels like a distraction. They're also nervous about what "introducing another product" actually requires of them.
How to respond: "I want to be specific about what the introduction actually looks like — because it's one sentence. Alongside the financials, alongside the legal, alongside the operational, you tell your client this is how you prepare them for what a buyer is going to ask for. That's it. We handle everything after that. You don't manage the platform, you don't follow up with the client, you don't explain how it works. One sentence and you're done. The question is whether that one sentence is worth five thousand dollars a month in covered marketing once you have five clients enrolled."
If they push back: "How long does it take you to write one sentence in an email to a client you're already emailing about their transaction prep?" They'll laugh. Let it land.
What they actually mean: They're worried about staking their credibility on something their clients reject. They don't want to look foolish in front of a client they've spent years building trust with.
How to respond: "That's exactly why we designed the program the way we did. The broker never pitches the platform — you introduce it as a standard part of how you prepare a transaction. It's positioned as a tool that belongs alongside the financials and the legal review. Business owners preparing for a sale want to look prepared. When you frame it that way, it's not something they have to be sold on — it's something they want to have. And the free ValuMate valuation is the entry point. Nobody turns down a free bank-ready business valuation."
If they push back: "Walk me through your last five clients. How many of them would have said no to a free valuation as part of their transaction prep?" They'll do the math themselves.
What they actually mean: They've been burned by revenue share arrangements that promised recurring income and delivered nothing. They trust a one-time referral fee because it's simple and immediate.
How to respond: "That's a fair preference and I want to explain why this is structured differently. A referral fee pays you once and stops. What we're offering pays you every month for as long as that client stays enrolled — and the breakpoint structure means the more clients you enroll, the more of your marketing we cover. At five enrolled clients you're at the free tier — we're covering your entire monthly campaign. A referral fee can't do that. The monthly structure is what makes it worth the introduction."
If they push back: "What's the largest referral fee you've ever received for a single client introduction?" Get the number. Then: "At five enrolled clients, we cover sixty thousand dollars of your marketing over twelve months. That comparison usually speaks for itself."
What they actually mean: They're pattern-matching to every program they've seen before — most of which asked them to risk their client relationships for a small cut of something that never materialized. They're skeptical and experienced.
How to respond: "The difference is who takes the risk. In every referral arrangement you've seen, you take the risk — you make the introduction, you stake your relationship, and you hope the product performs and the company pays. In this program we take the risk. We fund your calling campaign before a single client enrolls. We cover your marketing investment at scale. We built the tool, we built the contracts, we built the onboarding system. You make one introduction. If it doesn't work for your clients, your marketing still ran on our investment. The model is designed so that your risk is as close to zero as we can make it."
If they push back: "What would it take for a program like this to be worth trying? Tell me what you'd need to see." Listen to the answer. It will almost always be something you can address directly.
What they actually mean: One of three things: they're genuinely interested but need time, they're politely declining and don't want to say so directly, or they have a specific unanswered concern they haven't voiced yet. "Let me think about it" almost always means one of those three — never the first one alone.
How to respond: "Of course — I respect that. Before I let you go, can I ask one question? Is there something specific that's giving you pause, or is it more that the timing isn't right?" Pause and wait. The answer will tell you everything. If it's timing: "Understood — when would be a better time to revisit this?" If it's a specific concern: address it directly. If they can't name anything specific: "Sometimes when people need to think about it there's something they haven't said yet. I'd rather you tell me what it is than lose a conversation that might actually make sense for both of us."
When to stop pushing: After one redirect. If they say "I'll get back to you" twice, confirm a specific follow-up date and let them go. Pushing harder than that damages the relationship you need for future conversations.
What they actually mean: This is the most honest objection they'll give you. They have spent years building trust with their clients and they are not going to risk it for anyone. This is not resistance — this is their most important professional value. Respect it before you respond to it.
How to respond: "I hear that and I want to be clear — we are not asking you to push anything. The brokers who get the most out of this program are the ones who genuinely believe that a buyer is going to want this data before they close. Because that's true. Buyers are increasingly asking about workforce health, key person risk, and post-close retention before they sign. You're not selling your clients a product. You're preparing them for a question they're going to get asked anyway. The difference is that when you introduce Humanda as part of your standard transaction prep, you look like the broker who thought of everything. Not the broker who's running a referral program."
The reframe: "This isn't you pushing a product. This is you being the broker who prepares their clients better than anyone else in the room."