Forcing reps to follow a strict script and hit daily call targets makes them feel constrained, preventing them from adapting to the customer's needs. True connection happens when reps are trusted and equipped to be human, not just follow a checklist, especially in high-stakes meetings.

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When preparing for a sales call, reps often confuse tactics ('walk through price') with the actual goal. A manager should coach them to articulate what they are trying to *accomplish* (e.g., 'align on value with the economic buyer'), not just what they plan to *do*. This separates productivity from busyness.

Leaders often expect reps to drive one-on-ones, but the best leaders prepare beforehand with a clear point of view and desired outcomes, treating their reps like internal customers who deserve preparation.

As AI floods the market with templated outreach, the most critical challenge for sellers is a decline in fundamental interpersonal skills. The ability to connect with a prospect authentically, without a script, is the key differentiator that builds the trust required to close deals in an overly automated world.

Over-investing in sales tech creates an environment where reps are drowning in logins, reporting, and process. This 'paucity of time' stifles creativity and prevents them from focusing on the essential human element of building rapport and trust, which is often what actually closes deals.

Forcing reps to perform in front of the entire C-suite creates a critical, high-pressure environment that is counterproductive to learning. Successful enablement requires a phased approach with pre-training and post-event reinforcement using real-world customer calls, not just high-stakes internal role-plays.

When a salesperson's pipeline is weak, they latch onto any potential deal with desperation. This forces them to rush the sales process, skipping crucial relationship-building steps. The counter-intuitive solution is to slow down, build genuine rapport, and understand the client, which actually speeds up the sales cycle.

When you feel like you're trying to convince or 'push' a prospect during a sales call, treat it as a critical signal. This feeling indicates a flaw in your process—either you're targeting the wrong people or misinterpreting their demand. Use this to diagnose and fix the root cause.

Inconsistent sales performance is often a cultural problem where process is not respected. To create consistency, mandate that the sales script is followed verbatim. The process must always be valued above the individual player, with no exceptions for top performers.

Many leaders mistakenly manage their team as a single entity, delivering one-size-fits-all messages in team meetings. This fails because each person is unique. True connection and performance improvement begin by understanding and connecting with each salesperson on a one-on-one basis first.

Focusing intensely on the sales number, especially when behind, leads to desperate behavior. Customers sense this "commission breath" and back away. Instead, salespeople should forget the outcome and focus exclusively on executing the correct daily behaviors, which builds trust and leads to more sales.