High Ticket Sales

High-Ticket Sales: A Guide To Closing Big Deals

By the time a high-ticket buyer reaches out, they've already done the research — they're evaluating whether they trust you to deliver. Learn how AI-powered software can help you manage the entire sales process.

By Emily Diserens, Senior Product Marketing Manager, Salesforce

Here’s a closer look at some of the key differences:

High-ticket sales Low-ticket sales
Industries Enterprise tech, manufacturing, consulting Retail, consumer goods
Price range Tens of thousands to millions of dollars A few dollars to roughly a thousand dollars
Sales strategy Consultative, highly personalized Transactional, can be more generic
Decision-maker involvement Entire C-suite and department heads Single consumer or individual corporate decision-maker
Sales cycle length Six months to over a year Minutes to a few weeks
Buyer risk High. Failure impacts core business operations. Low. Purchases can be easily canceled or returned.
Deal volume Low volume with high profit High volume with lower profit
Salesforce user smiling while on a laptop.
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AI supported the writers and editors who created this article.

High Ticket Sales FAQs

Massive technology implementations, fleet vehicle purchases, custom factory robotics, and high-end management consulting contracts represent common enterprise-level deals. In the consumer space, luxury real estate and private aviation serve as primary examples.

These transactions rarely close in under three months. Depending on the industry and the size of the contract, the evaluation and approval process typically takes between six and twelve months, while some massive governmental or global enterprise contracts can take multiple years to finalize.

Large deals require a massive cast of characters. The buying committee usually includes end-users, department heads, technical evaluators, financial officers, and legal teams. On the vendor side, sales reps rely on solutions engineers, executive sponsors, and implementation specialists to win the account.

Success requires prioritizing relationships over quick pitches. Reps must develop deep industry expertise, master active listening, and manage objections gracefully. Mapping out complex organizational structures ensures the deal stays on track through months of scrutiny.