An exit presentation isn't a typical business update. The immense pressure of the sale, combined with uncertainty about their future roles, can undermine even confident speakers. Training builds confidence specifically for this high-stakes, unfamiliar scenario.

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Teams focus heavily on slide content, leaving only a single, late-stage rehearsal. This is insufficient because it doesn't allow time to practice and internalize feedback on delivery, tone, and confidence, which are key value drivers for investors.

Unlike consultants who only teach, Sales Gravy's trainers are full-time employees who must also sell. This "practice what you preach" model ensures their training is grounded in real-world, current experience, making it more credible and effective for clients.

Granting stock options is only half the battle. To make equity a powerful motivator, leaders must constantly communicate a clear and believable narrative for a future liquidity event, such as an acquisition. This vision is what transforms paper ownership into a tangible and valuable incentive in the minds of employees.

Don't wait until you're completely exhausted to sell your company, as buyers will sense your desperation and gain the advantage. The ideal time to exit is when your passion for the market wanes or growth slows, allowing you to negotiate from a position of strength before burnout sets in.

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.

A founder credited his accelerator's grueling schedule—pitching to 20 investors weekly with harsh feedback—as a transformative experience. This intense repetition wasn't just for fundraising; it was a powerful training ground that polished his core sales and communication skills for all future business dealings.

A founder's decision to sell was triggered by her first-ever panic attack during a casual conversation about the business's future. This intense physical reaction served as an undeniable gut signal that her ego-driven push for the next funding round was the wrong path, prompting her to explore an exit.

Top performers, like sales expert Jeb Blount and Army Golden Knights, still experience fear before high-stakes activities. They don't eliminate the fear; they manage it by relying on a consistent, practiced routine to push through the initial emotional resistance and execute their tasks effectively.

Private equity and investment banking teams know a company inside out, creating blind spots. An external coach with the same limited information as a potential investor can identify confusing messages or unintended negative impressions, preventing costly misinterpretations.

A rehearsal is like a friendly match—a final check. Training is the practice that builds core skills: developing the storyline in managers' own words, coordinating team interaction, and mastering Q&A. Training allows for pausing, analyzing, and iterating on delivery.