TL;DR
Diagnosing what is broken in your offer (not the economy). If you have demand in your market but your sales are flat, your offer – not the economy – is usually the bottleneck for those people buying from you. Diagnose the stage that’s broken – is it Attention that’s lacking? Interest? Trust? Purchase? Retention? etc. A high converting offer is a clear, believable outcome to a specific buyer at a logical price point with low friction and low perceived risk. No one is buying problems are commonly due to: unclear positioning, no differentiation, insufficient proof, wrong price, or too hard to get started with. Try a short “offer reset sprint”. Interview buyers clients, rewrite your promise, enhance your proof, repackage your pricing tiers and tiers, reduce friction, etc. And make one change at a time.

When your sales begin to dwindle, it’s all too easy to look up to the macro and blame inflation, consumer confidence, layoffs, “tight market,” “everyone’s holding cash,” and so on; sometimes those forces are at work and they’re correct. But most of the time, they aren’t what’s making your sales stop. The hard truth is: if there are people in your market that are still spending money (even from a distance, so to speak, ie. carefully), and if those people behind their computer screens are still closing deals and there are competitors of yours who are still rolling, then it’s probably not down to those factors of inflation – it’s usually down to you and your offer (the way it’s positioned, the way it’s packaged, the way it’s priced, the way it’s ameliorated, and so on).

Is this article giving financial/advice? Not really. But if you sell products into regulated industries (health, finance, legal, anything claims based) then please do work with a qualified professional and get professional advice about anything you change: guarantees and promises, advertising claims, terms of contract, etc.

Here’s what “Your Offer” actually means (the good and bad sides), and what is and isn’t fixed by offers: Your product (or service) is what you deliver. Your offer is the complete reason for which someone says yes. It includes:

When you say, “No one is buying,” you’re not describing a single problem. You’re describing a failure somewhere in that system.

When It Really Is the Economy (And How to Tell)

Macro conditions can reduce overall demand. But “the economy” is often used as a catch-all explanation for problems that are actually within your control.
What you observe More likely What to do next
Your traffic/leads are stable, but your conversions are down Offer / messaging / trust issue Audit your promise, proof, risk, friction; run controlled tests to isolate
Your close rate is stable, but your lead volume has collapsed across channels Demand and/or acquisition issue (could be macro, or channel specific) Validate health across your channels; test new audiences, partnerships, and offers
Your competitors are still selling similar solutions at similar price points Offer issue (differentiation, proof, package, positioning) Study how competitors position you (or NOT you) in their sales; clarify “why you” in your positioning
Your best-fit prospects say “not now” and “budget freeze”, and “paused projects” Could be macro, but is often risk/ROI framing issue Reframe risk around the cost of inaction; add a lower-risk entry offer
Your retention is falling, and your refunds/cancellations are rising Delivery-value mismatch or expectation gap Tighten promise, tighten onboarding, and tighten “first win” time-to-value
A downturn doesn’t stop buying; it changes buying. They expect clearer ROI, faster time-to-value, and lower risk. That’s an offer design problem you can solve.

Diagnose the Bottleneck: Where Are Buyers Dropping?

Before you “fix the offer”, first identify the stage that’s failing, or else you’ll randomize changes (most often – discount) and hope for the best.

The 7-Lever Offer Audit (Use This Before You Change Anything)

Most offer problems are just one (or more) of these seven levers. Audit them all in order – don’t skip to pricing yet. This table summarizes the high-signal fixes for those issues.
Offer audit: symptom → likely issue → high-signal fix
You get “interesting, but not for us” Wrong buyer or wrong moment Tighten ICP + specify “when to use this” (trigger event, deadline, compliance change, growth plateau)
People compare you to cheaper alternatives Undifferentiated mechanism Name your method, show your process, and define a clear success path
You hear “send info” then silence No urgency and no next step clarity Add a simple decision path: 3 steps, timeline, and what happens after purchase
Price objections dominate calls Weak value framing and/or mismatched packaging Add tiers; anchor with outcomes; include an implementation plan
You must discount to close The offer lacks proof and risk reversal Strengthen evidence; add a limited, specific guarantee (or milestone-based guarantee)
Lots of inquiries, few qualified buyers Message attracts the wrong audience Add qualification filters: “Not for…” and minimum requirements
Customers buy once but don’t stay Slow time-to-value Add onboarding, templates, setup help, and a first-win milestone

How to Rebuild Your Offer: A Practical “Offer Reset Sprint”

  1. Pull a funnel snapshot (last 30-90 days): traffic, lead to call, call to close, checkout conversion, churn/refunds. Where is your worst drop-off?
  2. Interview 5-10 people in your target segment (buyers + “almost buyers”). Ask: What were you trying to achieve? Why now? What alternatives did you compare? What scared you? What would have made this a no brainer?
  3. Rewrite your core promise as outcome + time frame + constraints (only if it’s true!): “Help [specific buyer] achieve [measurable outcome] in [time] without [pain/constraint].”
  4. Package the deliverable as a journey (3-6 steps). Give it a name and show exactly what happens first after purchase. (Day 1, Week 1…)
  5. Now prove that you can. Who else is like your buyer? What case studies, quantified before/after, screenshots, demos, sample deliverables, and/or third party validation match the buyer’s situation?
  6. Reduce risk: trial, milestone based guarantee, cancellation window, smaller “starter” offer that naturally leads to the full offer… etc.
  7. Reduce friction: fewer steps to getting started, fewer fields to fill out, clearer CTAs, simpler contract, and one recommended option (plus tiers, not tons of options).
  8. Run one test at a time for 2-4 weeks (or until you have enough data!). If something improves, keep it. Discard what doesn’t.
Don’t change five things at once! If things are improved, you may not know why—and you may not scale well the winning lever.

Offer Clarity: Make It Obvious Who This is For (and Who It Isn’t)

“When we tried reaching for everyone we found ourselves talking to no one.” Antiquated adage here. We know that the fastest way to increase conversions is to narrow the frame: the buyer, the situation, and the desired outcome.

A simple “This is for / not for” template

Differentiation: Sell the “Why This Works,” Not “What It Is”

When buyers say “We can do this ourselves” or “We already have a vendor,” you know they’re telling you they don’t see a unique mechanism. Your job is to make the difference legible.

Proof: Most Offers Fail Because You Make Claims without Backing Them Up

Buyers are skeptical (and they should be). Strong proof does not equal hype. It’s documentation that makes your value plausible in their world.

High-trust proof assets (ranked from strongest to weakest):

How to verify your proof is actually doing its job:

Pricing and Packaging: Stop Selling an Entire Thing and Sell a Decision

This isn’t math. It’s a story. Every buyer needs to decide how much value, urgency, and risk do we assign to this service? If you only have one flat offer, buyers resort to: (a) they can’t afford it, (b) they don’t want to commit, or (c) they don’t know if it fits.

A tiering model (works for most businesses)

Tiers are most basic form of packaging
Tier Best for What changes
Starter Low risk entry, budget buyers, proof builders Smaller scope, faster time-to-value, limited support
Core (Recommended) Most ideal customers Scope + clear onboarding + standard support
Premium / Done-for-you Buyers who want speed, certainty, and less internal effort “Heavier implementation,” priority access, higher accountability

Common “pricing mistakes”—look like “the economy”:

Risk Reversal: Make “Yes” Safer Than “No”

In cautious markets, buyers reject risk. A properly thought-out guarantee or risk reversal earns you money while letting go of the bag for fear they’ll waste money, time or political capital internally.

Risk reversal options (pick what fits your business model)

Guarantees should be specific, measurable, and consistent with your contract and your ability to deliver. Avoid open-ended “results guarantees” if customer actions heavily determine success.

Friction: If It’s Hard to Start, It’s Hard to Buy

Even if your value is strong, buyers quit when starting feels complicated. Friction kills conversion quietly—especially when customers have options.

Friction reduction checklist (fast wins)

Concrete Examples: Turning a “Meh” offer into a “Yes” offer

Example 1 (Service): “We do marketing” → “We build your first predictable pipeline”

Example 2 (SaaS): “All-in-one platform” → “Solve one painful job better than anyone”

Example 3 (Ecommerce): “Premium product”~“Lower decision risk”

Common mistakes that keep you stuck (even with a great product):

Quick self-audit checklist (Copy into your notes):

Perguntas Frequentes (FAQ)

What’s the fastest offer change that usually gets more sales?
Make it clearer for a narrower buyer, and prove it with specific proof. Believability goes further in improving conversion, for most things.
Should I cut my prices if no one’s buying?
Not first. First, fix clarity, proof, risk reversal, or friction. If you cut your price but still don’t do that, you’re likely going to get worse-buyers and more churn.
How can I tell if my offer is “too broad”?
If people keep asking you “what do you do?”, if you look at your leads and see mostly unqualified leads, or if your offer could be 1 of 10 possible things you can sell, you are too broad. A good offer will leave the right people feeling singled out.
What should I do if I don’t have any case studies yet to try and prove my offer with?
Use some sample deliverables, use a demo, use your transparent process, do a small pilot program, or use results you’ve gotten with other services that are adjacent approved to do so. Or run a “founding cohort” offer where you restrict the number of spots available and build your documented results.
What if it’s really a shit economy in my niche?
Shrink your ROI window through smaller starting commitments that warrant less trust, or tighten your targeting around a problem that’s urgent enough to be funded. Even in economically downturns, urgent problems will still get funded.

The Bottom Line: They’re Not Buying? Stop Guessing—And Build Something Buyers Can Explain and Defend

No one’s buying? It’s not because the world’s out of money. It’s because your offer isn’t clear enough, credible enough, differentiated enough, or safe enough so they’ll put down their money. Experiment to fix the offer like a scientist would: find the drop-off point, change only one lever at a time, measure what happens, and iterate. That’s how you create something the market can’t help but buy—no matter who is president today.

Deixe um comentário

O seu endereço de e-mail não será publicado. Campos obrigatórios são marcados com *