Skill Drill: Handling Rejection for IT Managed Services
Skill Drill: Handling Rejection for IT Managed Services
Direct Answer
This drill builds resilience and same-call recovery when a prospect says "no" to a managed services pitch — turning the brush-off into either a re-frame or a clean next step. A sales manager or team lead runs it live with 3–12 reps in 30–60 minutes (compressible to 5), and the team walks away able to absorb a hard rejection, keep composure, and respond with one of three rehearsed moves instead of going silent or arguing.
Why This Drill Matters in IT Managed Services
MSP selling is a rejection machine. You are asking a business to fire or sideline the IT guy they trust, hand over admin credentials, and sign a 36-month MRR contract — all before they have felt a single benefit. The most common rejections are not real objections; they are reflexes: "We already have someone," "We're not looking to change," "Just send me pricing." Reps who take these personally either fold instantly or get defensive and burn the relationship.
The discipline of separating the *reflex* from the *reason* comes straight from Sandler Training's "negative reverse selling" and the Challenger model's reframe. RAIN Group's research on rejection recovery shows the gap between top and average sellers is not fewer rejections — it is what they do in the ten seconds after one.
In MSP specifically, buyers like the office manager, the controller, or the owner-operator of a 30-seat firm reject on emotion (fear of switching pain, loyalty to incumbent), so a rep who stays calm and curious wins follow-ups that a rep who pushes loses forever. This drill rehearses that ten-second window until it is muscle memory.
What You'll Need (5 min prep)
- Group size: 3–12 reps. Pair them; odd numbers get one trio.
- Materials: Printed rejection cards (10 common MSP brush-offs, one per card), a timer, and the one-page "Three Moves" cheat sheet (Acknowledge / Reframe / Ask).
- Room setup: Chairs in pairs facing each other, or breakout rooms on video with the leader hopping between them.
- Handout: The three-move script below, printed so reps can glance at it during early reps.
Round 1 — Set the Scene (5 min)
The leader reads this aloud, verbatim:
"Every one of you is going to hear 'no' more than 'yes' this quarter. That's the job. Today we're not practicing the pitch — we're practicing the ten seconds *after* the no. There are only three legal moves: Acknowledge, Reframe, Ask. You never argue, you never go quiet, you never just send pricing and hope. Pick a move and run it."
Walk through the three moves on the whiteboard:
- Acknowledge: "That makes sense — most of the firms we work with felt the same before we talked."
- Reframe: "When you say you already have someone, do you mean a full team, or one person who's also doing everything else?"
- Ask: "Fair enough. What would have to be true for it to be worth a 20-minute look?"
What good looks like: Reps can recite the three moves without the cheat sheet by the end of the round.
Round 2 — Run the Reps (20 min)
Pairs alternate: one is the rep, one is the prospect holding a rejection card. The prospect reads the rejection cold; the rep has five seconds, then must respond with one named move. After each rep, the prospect says which move it was and whether it landed.
Rejection cards (industry-specific):
- "We already have an IT guy who handles everything."
- "Last MSP we used locked us in and the service tanked — never again."
- "We're a small shop, we don't need managed services."
- "Just email me a price and I'll look at it."
- "Our stuff works fine, why would I pay a monthly fee?"
- "We're mid-contract with someone else."
Leader reads the round opener aloud:
"Prospect, hit them hard — say it the way a skeptical 45-seat law firm office manager would. Rep, breathe, name your move, run it. Don't sell the whole thing. One move, then stop."
Run 6–8 reps per person, swapping roles every two cards.
What good looks like: The rep pauses before answering (no panic talking), names a move, and the prospect feels heard rather than sold.
Round 3 — Pressure Test (10 min)
Now raise the stakes. The prospect rejects, the rep responds, and the prospect rejects again, harder — a double or triple no. The rep must stay in the three moves without escalating or folding across the full exchange.
Leader reads the pressure-test setup aloud:
"This time you don't get off the hook after one move. They'll push back twice. Your only job is to stay calm and stay curious for three exchanges. If you argue or quit, you lose the round."
Sample escalation chain (incumbent loyalty, the hardest MSP rejection):
- Prospect: "We're happy with our current guy."
- Rep: *Reframe* — "Totally — when something breaks at 9pm, how fast does he get back to you?"
- Prospect: "He's responsive enough. We're not switching."
- Rep: *Acknowledge + Ask* — "Makes sense, loyalty matters. If I sent over a free response-time and backup audit, no obligation, would that be useful or annoying?"
- Prospect: "...the audit, maybe."
What good looks like: The rep never raises their voice, never bad-mouths the incumbent, and converts the third no into a small, low-commitment yes (an audit, a 15-minute call, a single email of value).
Round 4 — Debrief & Lock It In (10 min)
Go around the room. Each rep names the rejection that rattled them most and the move they'll default to next time. The leader captures the top three rejections the team struggled with on the whiteboard and assigns each a "house answer" the whole team will use.
Leader reads the close aloud:
"Rejection isn't a verdict on you — it's data about where the buyer is. You now have three moves for every no. Use them, and 'no' becomes 'not yet' more often than you'd believe."
Scaling It: 5-Minute, 30-Minute, and 60-Minute Versions
- 5-minute version: Run only Round 2. Four rejection cards, two reps each, then one sentence of feedback. A perfect pre-call warm-up before a dialing block.
- 30-minute version: Rounds 1, 2, and 4. Skip the pressure test; focus on naming moves cleanly and locking house answers.
- 60-minute version: All four rounds, plus a final 15 minutes pulling a real rejected call recording from Gong or your dialer and having the team coach what move the rep *should* have run.
Common Mistakes & Coaching Cues
- Panic-talking. Reps fill the silence with features. Cue: "Count to two before you respond. Silence is fine."
- Arguing with the incumbent. Never bad-mouth the current IT guy. Cue: "You're the calm professional, not the rival."
- Treating a reflex as a real objection. "Just send pricing" is usually a brush-off, not a buying signal. Cue: "Reframe before you quote."
- Folding on the first no. Reps say "okay, no problem" and hang up. Cue: "One no earns you one more question."
- Over-rehearsing tone. Scripts are scaffolding, not a teleprompter. Cue: "Use your own words once you know the move."
FAQ
How often should we run this drill? Weekly for new reps for the first 90 days, then biweekly as a team warm-up. Rejection resilience decays fast without reps.
What if a rep genuinely freezes and can't respond? Pause, let them reset, and feed them the move name out loud. Freezing in practice is the whole point — better here than on a live $4k/month MRR call.
Should the prospect role be played by a veteran or peer? Both. Peers keep it light and high-volume; the leader playing prospect delivers the realistic, gut-punch rejections that veterans need.
Does this work for inbound leads too? Yes. Even warm MSP inbound leads reject on price and switching cost. The three moves apply identically.
How do we measure if it's working? Track the rate of rejected calls that still produce a next step (audit, follow-up, referral) before and after a month of drilling.
Can we use real call recordings instead of cards? Absolutely, and you should in the 60-minute version. Pull anonymized rejected calls from Gong or Chorus and run the exact same three-move analysis.
Bottom Line
After this drill, your team can absorb a hard MSP rejection without flinching, name and run one of three rehearsed moves, and convert a flat "no" into an audit, a follow-up, or a referral. Re-run it weekly with new reps and biweekly with the full team, and rotate fresh rejection cards as the market throws new brush-offs at you.
Sources
- Sandler Training — Negative Reverse Selling
- The Challenger Sale — CEB / Gartner
- RAIN Group — Sales Rejection and Resilience Research
- SPIN Selling — Huthwaite International
- Gong Labs — Call Analytics and Coaching
- Dale Carnegie — Handling Objections and Rejection
- Harvard Business Review — Resilience in Sales
- Association for Talent Development (ATD)
*rejection handling skill drill — a runnable team training exercise for IT managed services, with scripts, timing, and coaching cues.*