In 200 dials of UK trades I tagged every cold call by what killed it.
71% of dead calls died before the 30-second mark. That number isn't a marketing rounding — it's the actual dispositions log. And of those early-death calls, five objections accounted for 84% of the kills.
If you're losing cold calls in the first half-minute, it's almost certainly to one of these five. Here they are, in order of frequency, with the exact branches I'd write into your script tree to handle each.
1. "Not interested." (38% of early kills)
The most common, the laziest, and the easiest to recover from — because they don't yet know what you're not interested in.
The prospect is filtering. They've heard a thousand cold calls. "Not interested" is muscle memory. Most of the time they've not even processed who you are or what you said.
The wrong response: "Sorry to bother you" → hang up.
The right branch: acknowledge, reframe, qualify. Don't pitch. Ask one question that makes them think before they auto-no.
You: Hi, it's Alix from APLeads —
Them: Not interested, mate.
You: Fair enough — quick one before I let you go.
Are you fully booked through to the new year,
or could you take more work this month?
That second sentence breaks the auto-pilot. They have to actually think about whether they're booked. About 40% of "not interested" prospects answer this honestly — and half of those convert into a real conversation.
2. "Just send me an email." (19% of early kills)
The polite kill-switch. They're not saying yes. They're not saying no. They're closing the call without confrontation.
The wrong response: ask for the email, send it, never hear from them again. The open-rate on cold-emailed pitches sent after a phone-cut is sub-2%. That email is dead before you write it.
The right branch: treat "send me an email" as the START of a conversation, not the end. Get them to qualify the request.
Them: Just send me an email.
You: Happy to. Quick one — what's the email?
And should I copy your operations lead too,
or are you the right person to look at it?
Two things happen. One: you're now mid-conversation again, and 30% of these turn into a 90-second pitch. Two: even if they hang up, you've signalled you're a buyer-aware operator, not a list-spammer. The email you DO send afterwards has a 4-5x better reply rate.
3. "I'm driving / busy right now." (14% of early kills)
This is a real objection, not a polite one. They genuinely can't talk. Treating it as an obstacle is rude and wrong.
The wrong response: "It'll only take 30 seconds."
The right branch: book the callback right now. While you've got their attention. Don't let them go without a specific time.
Them: Mate, I'm driving.
You: No worries — what's a better time?
I'll book a 9-minute slot in your diary now,
no calendar invite needed. Tomorrow morning?
This evening?
About 60% of "I'm driving" prospects will agree to a specific time if you offer it. That conversion rate is dramatically higher than asking them to call you back, which has near-zero success.
4. "We've tried marketing companies — doesn't work." (15% of early kills)
This one is huge in trades. They've been burned. Before you arrived, three other firms sold them dead leads, charged £2k, and disappeared.
The wrong response: defend your product. "We're different! We're not like those other firms!"
The right branch: validate the burn. Then differentiate by mechanism, not adjective.
Them: Tried marketing companies — total waste of money.
You: Got it. I hear that maybe four times a week.
Most of them sell you ad clicks and call them leads.
We dial 800 trades a week and only hand you the
3-5 that have actually said "yes, send someone round".
Booked calls. Different model.
The structure here is: acknowledge → name the failure mode → describe your mechanism → no adjectives. About 25% of "tried marketing companies" prospects will let you finish that sentence. Half of those engage.
5. "How did you get my number?" (5% of early kills)
Small percentage, but disproportionately fatal because it punctures the whole interaction.
The wrong response: vague answer ("I, uh, found it online").
The right branch: be specific and confident. The right answer is usually "your Companies House filing" or "Checkatrade public listing" or "your website contact page". They listed it publicly. You're allowed to call.
Them: How did you get my number?
You: Pulled it from your Companies House filing —
you're listed as the director. We use it for
cold outreach to UK trades. You're on the
supplier-data side, fully GDPR-compliant.
Anyway — how are leads coming in for you?
The trick is the transition back to the conversation. Don't dwell. Answer cleanly, pivot to the next branch. If you sit on the GDPR explanation for too long it sounds defensive.
The script-tree implications
If you're running a script tree (and you should be — see the 27-node tree), these five objections need explicit nodes with explicit recovery branches. The branches above aren't suggestions. They're the lines I run, and they're shipped as the seed tree in AP Sales Coach.
The point isn't that my exact lines are right for your business. The point is that you cannot ad-lib these in real time — you need them written, in front of you, surfaced the moment the prospect says the trigger phrase.
That's what Coach does.
— Alix