Sales Scripts for Communicating Value Propositions

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Summary

Sales scripts for communicating value propositions are structured conversations designed to clearly convey the benefits and unique value of your product or service to potential customers. These scripts help sales professionals effectively address customer needs, build trust, and guide prospects toward a decision.

  • Start with empathy: Begin conversations by acknowledging the customer's perspective and granting them control over the discussion, making them feel comfortable and open to engaging.
  • Focus on the customer: Use language that centers around the customer’s needs and challenges, showing them how your solution directly benefits them instead of focusing on what your company offers.
  • Present a complete picture: Highlight not just your product's features, but also the expertise of your team and the efficient processes that ensure a successful partnership, showcasing the full value of working with your company.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Dylan Rich

    Founder | Author | If I'm Not Golfing, I'm Helping Online Businesses 3x Their Revenue By Building Sales Systems And Staffing Their Sales Teams.

    9,577 followers

    Small tweaks in your sales script can turn “no thanks” into qualified sales calls. We reviewed a client’s outbound calls, made five key adjustments, and saw a 20% boost in engagement. Here’s what worked: 1. Start with a Permission-Based Opener Jumping straight into the pitch made prospects feel cornered, often leading to resistance. What We Changed: We switched to a permission-based opener like, “Hey, this is (name) from (company), we haven’t spoken before, I’m calling you out of the blue, but it'll take me 30 seconds to tell you why I called and then you can tell me if you even want to keep talking after that, does that sound fair” This gave prospects control and set a respectful tone. Prospects felt more comfortable and engaged when they had the option to continue, leading to smoother, more productive conversations. 2. Use “You” Instead of “We” The scripts were too brand-focused with “we” and “our” statements, making it sound impersonal. Shifting to “you” language made a huge difference. Instead of “We offer the best solution,” we said, “You deserve a solution that actually fits.” Prospects felt the call was about them, not us. 3. Add Specific Social Proof Generic claims weren’t cutting it. Instead of “We’ve helped hundreds,” we got specific: “Last quarter, we helped [X industry] achieve [result].” Specifics boosted credibility and helped prospects see the potential value for themselves. 4. Ask Open-Ended Questions Closed questions led to dead-ends. We replaced “Do you struggle with [problem]?” with “What challenges are you facing with [problem]?” This invited prospects to share more, making the conversation richer and helping us respond better. 5. Frame Price with Value Mentioning price early often scared people off. Instead, we tied price to benefits: “With an investment of $X, you can achieve [result].” Positioning price in correlation to perceived value kept the conversation moving forward. These small changes led to big improvements in qualified booked appointments. ___________________________________ Follow Dylan Rich for more tips on scaling your sales team

  • View profile for Mandy Schnirel

    VP of Growth Marketing | Creating Purpose-Driven Growth at Benevity | Sales-Aligned. Data-Led. Human-Centered.

    5,884 followers

    Most B2B SaaS companies miss the mark when it comes to messaging and positioning. They try to pack in EVERYTHING, including buzzwords, every feature, every new industry trend and end up with some convoluted SaaS-speak nonsense that most of the buyers don't understand—and certainly don't act on. The biggest mistake? Competitive copycats echo buzzwords no human has ever said aloud. And "final" copy ships without hearing a single customer heartbeat. Companies forget that every line is a promise of a better workday. When the promise feels real, your buyers remember. Here's my 6-step plan, built on research, refined by emotion: 1. Immerse yourself in your customers' day. Note every frustration and workaround. 2. Interview for emotion. "What stressed you out? What would have made you proud by week's end? What keeps you up at night?" Record their exact phrases. 3.. Map the gap. Tear down five competitors to spot the pains they ignore; the problems they're not solving. Plot where your buyers are feeling underserved. 4. Write the narrative from the lens of empathy. Keep it simple: A one-sentence value prop plus three proof pillars. Tie each of these to a concrete benefit (e.g., time back, confidence up, career impact stronger). Keep it simple. Read it aloud. Read it to someone outside of your industry. Do they grasp it quickly? Or do you have to explain it? If you do, this is a big 🚩🚩 and you need to go back to editing. 5. Draft your MVP and test, test, test. Drop lines from your narrative into ads, nurture emails, and BDR scripts. Track not just the clicks, but the RESPONSE. Did your message resonate? Did the prospects repeat your promise back in their own words? 6. Take your test winners and create a one-page playbook with example stories and customer quotes so that every single teammate can deliver it verbatim—and believe it. ⚠️ Pitfalls to avoid: - Buzzwords that sound impressive but echo no real pain - Internal acronyms or lingo that your buyers have never heard - Value props so long your reps need cue cards - Claims with no data or customer voice behind them - Skipping sales and CS feedback—the people closest to the emotional stakes Great messaging is a mirror reflecting your hopes and headaches. Start with their words, show the better life your product unlocks, and they'll feel—and respond—to the truth.

  • View profile for Matt Green

    Co-Founder & Chief Revenue Officer at Sales Assembly | Developing the GTM Teams of B2B Tech Companies | Investor | Sales Mentor | Decent Husband, Better Father

    52,912 followers

    Your product demo just lost another deal. Not because your software isn't good enough. Because you're only selling 33% of what buyers actually evaluate. Most reps think value proposition = product features. Buyers assess three things: People, Product, and Process. Here's how the illustrious Kemyell Rieves, who led a Sales Assembly course this week on competitive differentiation, encouraged folks to think about it: 1. Product = What you build. - Features and functionality. - Integration capabilities. - Performance metrics. 2. People = Who delivers it. - Expertise of your team. - Quality of support and onboarding. - Industry knowledge and insights. 3. Process = How you work together. - Implementation methodology. - Communication cadence. - Internal workflows that impact customer experience. Take Slack as an example. Their value prop goes beyond "workplace messaging." It's: - Product: Simple UI with 2,000+ integrations. - People: Community-driven sales with strong onboarding teams. - Process: Viral bottom-up adoption that drives org-wide stickiness. All three. Every conversation. Meanwhile, you have lots of reps leading with: "Our platform has advanced analytics and real-time reporting..." 🤦♂️ Feature lists don't win deals. Your competitors probably have similar features. But they DON'T have your people or your process. Sell the complete experience! "Here's what you get with us: The technology to solve X, a dedicated CSM who knows your industry, and a proven 90-day rollout process that gets you to value faster." That's one integrated pitch, not three separate conversations. Always remember that your prospect isn't buying software. They're buying confidence that you'll deliver the OUTCOME they need. Give them all three reasons to believe you.

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