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What are the 5 most common B2B SaaS sales objections — and exactly how do you handle each?

👁 1 view📖 1,410 words⏱ 6 min read5/26/2026

Direct Answer

The five most common B2B SaaS objections — based on Gong Labs' 2024 analysis of more than 100,000 sales calls — are "we don't have budget" (28%), "we're already using a competitor" (21%), "we need to think about it" (18%), "send me a proposal" (14%), and "your pricing is too high" (11%).

None of those sentences mean what they literally say. Each one is a coded message. The objection itself is rarely the real problem — it is a signal that you have not surfaced enough value, urgency, or trust.

Handle the meaning, not the words.

TL;DR

flowchart TD A[Buyer raises objection] A --> B[No budget 28pct<br/>Real meaning I do not see value] A --> C[Using competitor 21pct<br/>Real meaning convince me to switch] A --> D[Need to think 18pct<br/>Real meaning no decision process] A --> E[Send a proposal 14pct<br/>Real meaning get off the phone] A --> F[Price too high 11pct<br/>Real meaning doing procurement job] B --> B1[Counter re-anchor on quantified ROI] C --> C1[Counter ask what would have to be true to switch] D --> D1[Counter what specifically are you thinking about] E --> E1[Counter who else needs to see it and when live] F --> F1[Counter ask compared to what]

The 5 Most Common Objections and Their Real Meanings

Every objection has a surface sentence and an underlying meaning. The job of a B2B SaaS account executive is to translate the first into the second in real time, then respond to the second. The Gong Labs 2024 study of more than 100,000 recorded calls is the most rigorous data set on this, and it makes one thing painfully clear: roughly 70% of "budget" objections are actually value objections in disguise.

Treating them as literal — by offering a discount or asking for a smaller deal — trains the buyer to negotiate price and reinforces the wrong frame.

ObjectionSurface meaningReal meaningCounter responseWhat NOT to say
We don't have budgetNo money existsI don't see enough value yet"Let's run your numbers. If this saves you 300K a year, is finding 50K easier?""We can do a discount"
We're already using competitor XWe're happy where we areConvince me to switch"What would have to be true for you to consider a switch?""Their product is weak in area Y"
We need to think about itWe need internal timeWe don't have a decision process"Help me understand — what specifically are you thinking about?""Sure, when should I follow up?"
Send me a proposalI'll review itGet me off this phone call"Happy to. To make it relevant, who else needs to see it, and when would you want to be live?""Great, I'll send it today"
Your pricing is too highIt costs too muchI'm doing my procurement job"Compared to what?""I can talk to my manager about a discount"

The pattern across all five: the buyer is testing how confident you are in the value. A junior AE responds to the words. A senior AE responds to the unspoken pressure underneath the words.

When a CFO says "we don't have budget," she rarely means the company is broke — she means she has not yet been convinced that this expense beats the next twelve competing line items. Re-anchor on ROI, and the budget conversation usually solves itself.

The 3 Handling Principles

Tactical empathy. Borrowed from Chris Voss's hostage-negotiation playbook in Never Split the Difference, tactical empathy is the practice of labeling the buyer's emotion before solving for it. The script: "It sounds like price is a real concern — am I getting that right?" Then shut up.

Silence forces the buyer to either confirm (good — you can now solve the real issue) or correct you (even better — they just told you what the real issue actually is). Most reps skip the label and jump to the solve, which makes the buyer feel unheard and dig in.

Reframe to value, not feature. An objection is almost never about your product missing a checkbox. It is a signal that the buyer does not yet see the connection between what you do and an outcome they care about. When someone says "we already have a tool that does this," the wrong move is to list five features your tool has that theirs doesn't.

The right move is to ask, "What outcome are you getting from that tool today, and is it where you want it to be?" That redirects the conversation from feature parity to business result, where you usually win.

Never accept the first objection at face value. The first objection is almost always a smokescreen — the polite version designed to end the conversation. The real one surfaces two or three follow-up questions deep. A useful drill: every time you hear an objection, ask one calm clarifying question and wait.

Repeat up to three times. By the third pass, you are usually inside the real concern, which is almost always one of three things — fear of internal political risk, lack of confidence in your team's ability to deliver, or absence of a personal champion.

flowchart TD A[Buyer raises objection] A --> B[AE pauses 2 seconds] B --> C[Apply tactical empathy<br/>It sounds like X is a concern] C --> D[Ask one clarifying question] D --> E[WAIT 5 to 7 seconds in silence] E --> F[Reframe to business value or outcome] F --> G[Confirm understanding<br/>Did I get that right] G --> H{Real objection surfaced} H -->|Yes| I[Solve directly with proof or case study] H -->|No| D I --> J[Advance to next commitment]

The 3 Failure Modes That Make Objections Worse

Discounting first on "too expensive." The single most damaging move in B2B SaaS. Once you offer a discount in response to a price objection, you have permanently anchored the conversation on price rather than value, and you have taught the buyer that your list price is fictional.

Procurement will press until they hit a real floor — usually 25 to 40% off — and your gross margin walks away. The Gong data shows deals where the first response to price is a discount close at roughly half the rate of deals where the first response is "compared to what?"

Trashing the competitor. When a buyer mentions an incumbent, the temptation is to explain why that incumbent is bad. Almost every senior buyer has personally chosen, championed, or implemented that incumbent. Trashing it is trashing them.

Instead, respect the past decision ("they're a solid tool for X") and pivot to what has changed since they bought it — new use cases, new teams, new scale. That respects the buyer's judgment and creates room for a switch.

Over-talking after a question. Top-quartile AEs ask a question and then go silent for 4 to 7 seconds. Bottom-quartile AEs ask a question and immediately keep talking — usually because the silence feels uncomfortable. Silence sells.

The buyer almost always fills the gap with the real concern. Practice this in role-play until it becomes muscle memory: ask, count to six, stay quiet. The Gong benchmark on response length — 30 to 50 words for top-quartile versus 90 to 120 for bottom-quartile — is downstream of this single discipline.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I memorize objection-handling scripts word-for-word? Memorize the frame, not the words. The principle (tactical empathy → clarify → reframe → confirm) is fixed; the language adapts to the buyer. Reading a memorized script aloud sounds robotic and triggers more resistance, not less.

What if the objection is genuinely real — they actually don't have budget? Then you have a qualification problem, not an objection problem. Real no-budget situations should have surfaced during discovery via MEDDPICC or BANT. If a true budget block appears late, the play is to either find a fiscal-year boundary, a different cost center, or a smaller pilot scope — not to discount.

How do I coach reps on this without micromanaging? Use Gong or Chorus to tag the five objections by deal, then run weekly 30-minute role-play with paired reps swapping buyer and seller roles. Score on response length, silence duration, and whether they reached the real objection inside three exchanges.

Sources

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