
Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount 3 Powerful Ways to Handle the “I’m In a Meeting!” Objection (Ask Jeb)
Cold calling often leads to the dreaded "I'm in a meeting" objection. The discussion highlights three effective strategies to navigate this response. First, there's the Quick Pitch Strategy, a rapid-fire approach to capturing attention. Another technique emphasizes the need to respect their time while still aiming to secure appointments. The speakers also tackle the emotional hurdles of handling objections and stress the importance of preparation in overcoming them. It’s all about turning roadblocks into opportunities!
12:02
Answering Means Possibility
- If decision makers answer while claiming to be in meetings, they may not be truly unavailable.
- Picking up suggests they might be between meetings or using it as a brush-off.
Quick Pitch and Follow-up
- If you have a high-energy style, try the quick pitch approach when prospects say they're in a meeting.
- Follow up rigorously with LinkedIn, emails, and multiple touchpoints to improve meeting show rates.
Acknowledge and Pivot to Meeting
- When a prospect says they're in a meeting, acknowledge their busy status and quickly pivot to scheduling a meeting without pitching immediately.
- This respects their time and increases chances of setting an appointment.
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Intro
00:00 • 2min
Navigating Meeting Objections in Sales Calls
01:52 • 5min
Strategies for Overcoming Objections in Sales Calls
07:11 • 2min
Navigating Sales Prospecting Objections with Confidence
09:40 • 2min

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INKED is a sales-specific negotiation primer that addresses the challenges faced by sales professionals in today's market.
The book provides strategies, tactics, techniques, and human-influence frameworks to level the playing field against savvy buyers.
It emphasizes the importance of emotional discipline, preparation, and understanding power, leverage, and motivation dynamics in negotiations.
The book includes actionable advice and real-world examples to help sales professionals improve their closing rates and negotiate more effectively.

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Fanatical Prospecting is a detailed guide that explains the importance and methods of prospecting in sales.
The book outlines innovative approaches to prospecting, including the use of social media, telephone, email, text messaging, and cold calling.
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Objection

Jeb Blount Jr.

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How Ultra High Performers Leverage Sales-Specific Emotional Intelligence to Close the Complex Deal

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In 'Sales EQ', Jeb Blount emphasizes the importance of emotional intelligence in sales, highlighting that emotions play a crucial role in decision-making rather than just rational logic.
The book explains how top sales performers use four key pillars of Sales EQ: empathy, self-awareness, self-control, and sales drive.
It also discusses the alignment of sales, buying, and decision processes, the use of micro-commitments, and the answering of critical questions that stakeholders ask themselves during the sales process.
Blount provides practical advice on mastering the psychology of influence and managing emotions to achieve ultra-high sales performance.
If you're doing any kind of cold calling or prospecting, you'll eventually hear this objection: "I'm in a meeting right now." Paul Wise, a heavy cold caller from Normandy, France, targets product managers at software companies and says that nine times out of ten when he gets a decision-maker on the phone, they claim to be "in a meeting."
Three Ways to Handle the "I'm in a Meeting" Prospecting Objection
As I explained to Paul, how you respond in that moment can make or break your opportunity to move forward.
First, let's acknowledge something important: If someone is genuinely in the middle of an important meeting, they typically don't answer calls from unknown numbers. The fact that they picked up your call suggests they might not be as unavailable as they claim.
That said, they might be between meetings, heading into a meeting, or simply using this as a brush-off technique. Regardless of their true situation, you need an objection handling strategy.
Based on my conversation with Paul, here are three effective approaches to handle this common situation:
Approach #1: The Quick Pitch Strategy
This is what Paul has been doing: When he gets someone on the phone who says they're in a meeting, he delivers his DMX (Decision Maker Express) pitch as quickly as possible, then tries to secure a meeting.
Paul mentioned this sometimes works for him. He gets the meeting scheduled, then works hard to ensure they show up by engaging with them on LinkedIn, sending follow-up emails, and basically "surrounding" them with touch points.
The upside: You've got them on the line, so why not take your shot? The downside: Rushing through your pitch can make you sound desperate and reduce your effectiveness.
When to use it: If you have a high-energy personality and can deliver a compelling, concise pitch without sounding rushed, this approach can work. It's especially effective if you have a solid follow-up strategy to ensure they show up to the meeting.
Approach #2: The Acknowledge and Pivot Strategy
Instead of trying to pitch someone who's claimed to be busy, simply acknowledge their situation and pivot directly to scheduling:
"I totally expected you to be in a meeting and not able to talk. That's exactly why I called—to find a time that's more convenient for you. Why don't I send you a meeting invite for Thursday at 2:00, and then we can get together when you do have time to talk?"
This approach demonstrates respect for their time while simultaneously accomplishing your objective of setting an appointment.
What happens next reveals a lot:
If they agree to the meeting, you've accomplished your goal without the rushed pitch.
If they ask, "Who are you again?" they're actually signaling they have more time than they initially let on.
If they say they're not available Thursday, they're engaging in a scheduling conversation—which means they're interested enough to find an alternative time.
When to use it: This works particularly well when you sense the prospect is genuinely busy, but they might be interested with the right approach. It's respectful, professional, and surprisingly effective.
Approach #3: The Non-Complementary Behavior Strategy
This is my personal favorite because it uses psychology to your advantage.
When the prospect answers with high energy, saying they're busy or in a meeting, don't match their energy. Instead, deliberately slow down and use a calm, relaxed tone:
"Totally get that. I figured you would be busy. Look, I only have two questions."
Then—and this is critical—be quiet. Let the silence do the work.
If they truly have no time, they'll hang up. But most won't. Instead, they'll likely say something like, "Okay, but go fast."
Now you need to ask a question that gets them engaged—something they can easily answer that reveals qualification information:
"How many data points are you connected to in your current configuration?"
The magic happens in what follows:
If they answer quickly and try to end the call, say: "That's exactly why we need to get together. Let me send you a meeting invite for Thursday at 2:00."
If they slow down and give you detailed information, you've got them talking. Ask another question and build momentum.
The key to this approach is using non-complementary behavior—when they speed up, you slow down. This pattern interrupt makes you stand out from every other salesperson they've encountered.
When to use it: This approach works best when you sense the prospect isn't actually as busy as they claim, but is using "I'm in a meeting" as a reflexive defense mechanism.
Reading the Situation Matters
Regardless of which approach you choose, pay close attention to how they respond to your first question:
If they answer slowly and thoughtfully, they likely have more time than they initially claimed
If they're genuinely rushing, respect that and pivot to scheduling
If they hang up immediately, you've lost nothing—they weren't going to talk anyway
The best strategy depends on several factors:
Your personal style: Paul has a high-energy, engaging personality that makes the quick pitch approach viable for him. Know your strengths.
Your results: As I told Paul, if what you're doing is working, keep doing it. If your show rate for meetings is poor, try a different approach.
The prospect's tone: Listen carefully to how they say "I'm in a meeting." Sometimes their tone will tell you which approach is most likely to succeed.
Test and measure: Try all three approaches with different prospects and track your results. The data will tell you which method works best for your specific situation.
How you handle this moment separates average salespeople from top performers. The best reps have multiple strategies ready and know when to deploy each one.
Remember, in sales, objections aren't roadblocks—they're detours that lead to the same destination. Master these three approaches to the "I'm in a meeting" objection, and you'll turn what most salespeople see as a dead end into a pathway to more meetings and more deals.
Want more sales tips and strategies for overcoming prospecting objections? Download Jeb Blount's FREE Objections Book Club Guide
