Prospects rarely say what they actually mean when they object. "I need to think about it" is not a request for thinking time. "The timing is not right" is not a calendar problem. Every objection, regardless of how it is framed, is one of four things: trust, money, urgency, or authority. Identifying which one you are dealing with is the only thing that makes the response useful.
Money
The money objection is almost never about absolute affordability. It is about perceived ROI. The prospect is not sure the outcome is worth the investment. The handle is to bring them back to the impact calculation from discovery: "You mentioned the problem is costing you around 12k per month in lost deals. If we solve that, the investment pays for itself in the first month. What part of that maths does not add up for you?" Defending the price in isolation never works. Reconnecting the price to the problem always does.
Trust
Trust objections are solved with evidence, not reassurance. The prospect is not sure you can do what you say. Telling them you can makes it worse. Showing them a result from a client in their exact situation makes it better. The case study needs to match: same type of agency, same type of problem, specific outcomes. A generic case study says you do good work. A specific one says you have already solved this.
Urgency
Urgency objections mean the prospect does not feel enough pain to act now. The only thing that creates urgency is a vivid projection of what staying where they are costs over time. "If your close rate stays at 12 percent for the next six months and your lead volume stays flat, what does that mean for your revenue targets?" Let them calculate the cost of inaction themselves. It lands harder than you telling them.
Authority
Authority objections mean someone who can say yes is not in the room. The handle is not to wait for a callback. It is to offer to present directly to the other decision maker: "What would they want to know? Let me answer those questions with you now so you are not trying to relay a conversation secondhand." A prospect who agrees to that call is genuinely invested. One who declines is probably not close to a decision regardless.