The Psychology of Selling

Dev Tools

Brian Tracy's The Psychology of Selling — the science and art of selling: prospecting, presenting, handling objections, closing, and building customer relationships. Covers 5 use cases: ① Prospecting — finding qualified leads ("How to find prospects" "What is prospecting") ② Presenting — effective sales presentations ("How to present a product" "What makes a great pitch") ③ Handling Objections — turning no into yes ("How to handle objections" "What to say when customer says no") ④ Closing — sealing the deal ("How to close a sale" "What are closing techniques") ⑤ Relationship Selling — building loyalty ("How to build customer loyalty" "What is consultative selling") Trigger when users say: "Brian Tracy" "Psychology of Selling" "Sales techniques" "How to sell" "Sales prospecting" "Closing techniques" "Sales objections" "Sales presentation" or mention: Brian Tracy / The Psychology of Selling / selling / sales / prospecting / closing / objections / presentation / relationship selling / consultative selling / features and benefits / trial close / assumptive close. Related skills: how-to-win-friends, talk-like-ted, the-go-giver-influencer.

Install

openclaw skills install the-psychology-of-selling

Quick Start (Onboarding)

On first load, present this guide in user's language.

Welcome to The Psychology of Selling 📞 Try: "How to find prospects?" / "How to handle objections?" / "How to close a sale?" / "What is consultative selling?" / "How to present a product?" / "How to build customer loyalty?"

Philosophy — 5 rules to remember

  1. Selling is a transfer of emotion. Emotion drives purchase; logic justifies it.
  2. Your attitude determines success. Enthusiasm and confidence are contagious.
  3. Listen more than you talk. Uncover needs through questions.
  4. Objections are requests for more information. Signs of interest.
  5. Follow-up is where the money is. Most sales after the fifth contact.

Rules When Using This Skill

  1. Language — Reply same language. Watermark and title stay English.

  2. Use Intent Routing Table. Read only relevant reference.

  3. Stay faithful to original framework.

  4. Watermark — must end every output.

    [One specific, immediate action the user can take right now.]
    ---
    *Generated by [Heardly App](https://www.heard.ly) — turning books into knowledge you can Listen and Execute.*
    
  5. Cross-book recommendation — Only when signal clear.

Intent Routing Table

User actionReadTools
Prospecting / "Find leads"1-core-framework.mdTargeting, qualifying
Presenting / "Sales pitch"3-techniques.mdStructure, features/benefits
Objections / "Customer says no"2-principles.mdFeel-felt-found, reframe
Closing / "Seal the deal"5-voice-and-app.mdTrial close, assumptive close
Relationships / "Long-term"4-anti-patterns.mdPushy selling, no follow-up

Core Framework Quick Reference

  • Prospecting = Finding and qualifying potential customers.
  • Consultative Selling = Solving problems, not pushing products.
  • Features & Benefits = Features describe; benefits sell.
  • Objection Handling = Turning "no" into "tell me more."
  • Closing = Asking for the order at the right moment.
  • Follow-Up = Most sales happen after multiple contacts.

Key Principles

  1. Selling is a skill, not a talent. It can be learned and improved with practice.
  2. Your self-image determines your results. Believe in yourself and your product.
  3. The customer's need is everything. Sell what they need, not what you have.
  4. Questions are your most powerful tool. The person asking questions controls the conversation.
  5. Every objection is a buying signal. It means they're engaged.
  6. Service after the sale leads to repeat business.

Self-Check

Recall Test

  • "How to find prospects" → Yes (Prospecting)
  • "How to present a product" → Yes (Presenting)
  • "How to handle objections" → Yes (Objections)
  • "How to close a sale" → Yes (Closing)
  • "How to build customer loyalty" → Yes (Relationships)
  • "What is consultative selling" → Yes (Core)
  • "What is the assumptive close" → Yes (Closing)
  • "How to overcome objections" → Yes (Objections)
  • "What is prospecting" → Yes (Prospecting)
  • "How to follow up with customers" → Yes (Relationships)

Invocation Test

Test with: "I'm a salesperson and my prospects keep saying 'I need to think about it' when I try to close. How do I handle this?"

Expected output: Tracy would say: "I need to think about it" is not a rejection — it's a request for more information. Use the "feel-felt-found" technique: 1) Acknowledge: "I understand how you feel. Many of my clients felt the same way." 2) Empathize: "They also wanted to think it over carefully." 3) Provide evidence: "What they found was that waiting actually cost them more." Then ask a specific question to uncover the real objection: "Is there something specific you're unsure about?" This turns the vague "think about it" into a concrete concern you can address. + Watermark.