Skill Drill: Handling Vendor Loyalty Objections for Commercial Real Estate
Skill Drill: Handling Vendor Loyalty Objections for Commercial Real Estate
Direct Answer
This drill builds a repeatable way to handle the "we're happy with our current broker" objection that stalls most commercial real estate prospecting calls. A brokerage team lead or sales manager runs it with 4 to 12 brokers in 45 minutes (compressible to 5, extendable to 60). The team walks away able to reframe incumbent loyalty using SPIN questioning and a Challenger-style insight, with verbatim scripts they have already rehearsed against live pushback.
Why This Drill Matters in Commercial Real Estate
Commercial real estate (CRE) brokerage runs on relationships that are sticky by design. A tenant rep at CBRE, JLL, Cushman & Wakefield, or Colliers calling into a corporate occupier almost always hits the same wall: "We already have a broker we trust" or "Our landlord relationship is great — we renew with them directly." The incumbent advantage is real.
The current broker handled the last lease, knows the portfolio, and the decision-maker has zero pain on the surface.
The bottleneck here is not prospecting volume — most brokers can fill a call list. The bottleneck is converting a satisfied-incumbent conversation into a discovery conversation without sounding like every other broker who calls trying to "earn the next deal." When a broker hears "we're happy," the weak response is to argue ("but we're better") or to retreat ("okay, can I follow up next year?").
Both lose. The strong response uses questions to surface costs the occupier has normalized — under-market renewals negotiated without competitive tension, unexercised expansion rights, missing benchmarking data, deferred maintenance buried in pass-throughs.
This drill trains two named methodologies against that wall. SPIN Selling (Situation, Problem, Implication, Need-payoff questions) is used to uncover and expand latent dissatisfaction the occupier hasn't priced. The Challenger Sale reframe is used to teach the occupier something they didn't know — a market insight or a structural cost in their current arrangement — so the broker earns the right to compete.
The skill is not overcoming the objection by force; it is dissolving the premise that "happy" means "optimized."
What You'll Need (5 min prep)
- Group size: 4 to 12 brokers. Above 12, split into two pods with a co-facilitator.
- Materials: Printed SPIN question bank (a half-page of CRE-specific Situation/Problem/Implication/Need-payoff prompts), a one-page Challenger insight card with two real market reframes, and a scenario card per pair describing a specific occupier and incumbent.
- Room setup: Pairs facing each other for role-play, with one observer per trio if numbers allow. Whiteboard up front for the leader to capture strong reframes.
- Leader prep: Have one current, real market data point ready (e.g., a submarket where effective rents softened or concessions rose) to model a credible Challenger insight. Generic insights kill the drill.
Round 1 — Name the Objection and the Weak Replies (7 min)
The leader writes "We're happy with our current broker" on the board. Brokers call out the weak responses they actually use today — arguing superiority, asking to "just stay in touch," dropping the call. The leader lists them, then crosses each out.
Leader reads aloud:
"Every one of these loses because it accepts the occupier's frame: that happy equals optimized. Our job is not to attack their broker. Our job is to ask the questions that reveal what 'happy' is costing them — and to bring one insight they don't have. We compete on what they don't know yet, not on who's nicer."
What good looks like: The team agrees that arguing and retreating both fail, and that the goal is a discovery conversation, not a rebuttal.
Round 2 — Build the SPIN Ladder (12 min)
In pairs, brokers draft a four-question SPIN ladder for a specific scenario card (e.g., "A 60,000 sq ft logistics tenant, lease expiring in 14 months, renewed directly with the landlord last cycle, no competitive process").
- Situation: "How was your current space and term originally structured?"
- Problem: "When you renewed directly last time, how did you confirm the rate was competitive without other offers on the table?"
- Implication: "If that renewal was even 8% over market across a five-year term on this footprint, what does that add up to — and who owns that number internally?"
- Need-payoff: "If we could benchmark your renewal against three comparable deals signed this quarter, how would that change the conversation with your CFO?"
Leader reads aloud:
"Problem and Implication questions are where the deal turns. Don't rush to pitch. A renewal signed with no competing offers almost always leaves money on the table — your questions make the occupier feel that gap before you ever mention switching brokers. Let them do the math out loud."
Role-play prompt: Partner A is the occupier who opens with "We're happy, we renew direct." Partner B must run the SPIN ladder without pitching, getting the occupier to acknowledge one unquantified cost.
What good looks like: The occupier-player says some version of "I actually don't know if we got market terms" — the latent problem surfaces through questions, not assertions.
Round 3 — Deliver the Challenger Reframe (12 min)
Now brokers add the Challenger move: a teaching insight that reframes the occupier's situation. Using the leader's real market data point, each pair writes a two-sentence reframe.
Example reframe:
"Most occupiers assume a direct renewal saves the broker fee — but in this submarket, tenants who ran a competitive process this year captured an average of four months of free rent and a TI bump that dwarfs any fee. 'Loyalty' to a single landlord is quietly the most expensive line in the lease."
Leader reads aloud:
"The Challenger reframe earns you the meeting. You're not bad-mouthing their broker — you're showing them a structural cost they couldn't see from inside the relationship. Lead with the insight, back it with the number, then connect it to their renewal. Teach, tailor, take control."
Role-play prompt: Partner B opens with the Challenger insight, then bridges to one SPIN Implication question. Partner A pushes back ("Our broker would have told us that"). Partner B holds the frame: "They might have — did the renewal go to competitive bid?"
What good looks like: The reframe is specific and numeric, the occupier-player leans in, and the broker bridges smoothly from insight to a discovery question.
Round 4 — Pressure Test and Debrief (10 min)
The leader runs three escalating live objections; pairs respond on the spot, then a volunteer demos:
- "We've worked with our broker for ten years — loyalty matters to us."
- "We don't have time to run a process; renewal is in three months."
- "If we even talk to you, our current broker finds out and it gets awkward."
Leader reads aloud:
"Each of these is a feeling, not a fact. Ten years of loyalty doesn't mean ten years of market terms. No time is the strongest buy signal you'll hear — it means they're about to sign something untested. And awkwardness is solved by confidentiality. Answer the feeling, then return to the number."
Each broker then commits aloud to one SPIN question and one Challenger insight they will use on their next real call this week. Partners write down each other's commitment.
What good looks like: Every broker handles all three pushbacks without arguing or retreating, and leaves with one rehearsed SPIN question and one reframe ready for a live call.
Scaling It: 5-Minute, 30-Minute, and 60-Minute Versions
- 5-minute version (huddle): Run Round 1 only. Each broker states one weak reply they default to and swaps it for a single SPIN Problem question. Use it to open a Monday sales meeting.
- 30-minute version: Run Rounds 1 through 3. Pairs build a SPIN ladder and one Challenger reframe and role-play once. Skip the three-objection pressure test or assign it as call homework.
- 60-minute version: Run all four rounds, then record each pair's final role-play on a phone and review two on screen as a group, critiquing the bridge from insight to question. End with the team building a shared bank of three Challenger insights for the current quarter's submarkets.
Common Mistakes & Coaching Cues
- Attacking the incumbent broker. Coach: never bad-mouth the current broker — it makes the occupier defensive and disloyal-feeling. Reframe the structure, not the person.
- Pitching before the problem is felt. Coach: hold the pitch until the occupier acknowledges one unquantified cost through an Implication question.
- Generic Challenger insights. Coach: an insight without a real, current number is just an opinion. Anchor every reframe in this quarter's submarket data.
- Accepting "no time" as a no. Coach: treat urgency as a buy signal — a rushed renewal is exactly the deal that needs competitive tension.
- Skipping Need-payoff questions. Coach: let the occupier articulate the value of benchmarking themselves; self-generated need closes meetings, broker-asserted value doesn't.
- Retreating to "let's stay in touch." Coach: that's a polite loss. Always exit with a specific next step tied to a date or a renewal milestone.
FAQ
Isn't it disrespectful to compete for an account that already has a broker? No — running a competitive process is standard fiduciary practice for occupiers. The drill never disparages the incumbent; it reframes loyalty as a structural cost the occupier should test, which is a legitimate value to surface.
What if the occupier genuinely got great terms from their broker? Then SPIN questions confirm it quickly and you move on with a relationship intact for the next cycle. The questions cost nothing and occasionally reveal the rare optimized account — but most direct or non-competitive renewals leave value on the table.
How is the Challenger reframe different from just sharing market data? Data alone is a fact dump. The Challenger reframe connects a specific insight to the occupier's own situation and reframes how they see their current arrangement — teach, tailor, take control. The bridge to their renewal is what earns the meeting.
My brokers freeze when the occupier pushes back hard. How do I fix that? Run Round 4 more than once and let them fail safely in role-play. Rehearsed pushback is the entire point — the first time a broker hears "loyalty matters" should be in the drill, not on a live call.
How often should we re-run this? Run the full 45-minute drill monthly while building the quarter's insight bank, and the 5-minute huddle version weekly. Reframes go stale as market data moves, so refresh the Challenger insights each quarter.
Does this only work for tenant rep, or landlord rep too? Both. Landlord reps face the same loyalty wall ("we always use the same leasing team"). Swap the scenario cards and the SPIN ladder targets leasing velocity and concession benchmarking instead of renewal terms.
Bottom Line
After this drill, the team can hear "we're happy with our current broker," refuse both the argue and the retreat, run a SPIN ladder to surface an unpriced cost, and deliver a Challenger reframe anchored in real submarket data that earns a discovery meeting. Re-run the full version monthly and the 5-minute huddle weekly, refreshing the Challenger insights each quarter as the market moves.
Sources
- SPIN Selling — Huthwaite / Neil Rackham
- The Challenger Sale — CEB / Gartner
- Harvard Business Review — The End of Solution Sales
- Sandler Training — handling stalls and objections
- CBRE — occupier and market insights
- JLL — research and capital markets insights
- RAIN Group — sales conversation research
- Corporate Visions — messaging and reframe research
*Vendor loyalty objection skill drill — a runnable team training exercise for commercial real estate, with scripts, timing, and coaching cues. Vendor loyalty objection skill drill review, rating, and review 2027 for CRE brokerage teams.*