Legendary CRO John McMahon posits that while the human element of sales (the art) remains constant, the process (the science) has evolved into a highly structured discipline focused on playbooks, messaging, and ideal customer profiles.
Effective sales isn't about tactics or closing; it's about a raw, organic transfer of belief and excitement. This reframe expands the concept of "selling" beyond revenue to include recruiting top talent, inspiring a team, or pitching a vision to investors. True influence comes from genuine passion, not a polished script.
New SDRs get overwhelmed when forced to learn industry nuances first. A better approach is to prioritize mechanics (CRM, scripts), then knowledge (personas), and finally the 'art' of sales, which develops over time. This builds confidence and allows them to execute quickly while they learn.
A sales process isn't a static path; it's a dynamic environment. Just as oil patterns on a bowling lane change, so do market conditions and buyer priorities. Top performers don't blame the "lane" when deals stall. Instead, they read the changes and adjust their messaging and timing within their established process.
A common failure mode for new CROs is attempting to create the sales playbook in isolation. Core pillars like ICP and value proposition are company-level decisions. The CRO's role is to be interdependent, facilitating this cross-functional creation process, not dictating it.
The most effective use of AI in sales is not to replace core selling activities but to handle low-value 'grunt work' like research, list building, and follow-ups. This strategy frees up a salesperson's time to focus on irreplaceable human skills like listening, building trust, and navigating complex emotions.
Top-performing salespeople eventually hit a limit with process optimization. Further growth comes not from a better process, but from developing personal attributes like courage and authenticity to navigate complex buyer dynamics that a rigid process can't handle.
Leaders with an operations background often clash with the emotional, less-structured nature of sales. To succeed, they must actively study sales management to bridge this mindset gap, not just learn tactics. This prevents frustration and enables them to guide their sales team effectively instead of trying to force them into rigid processes.
The fundamental force in a sale isn't a seller's persuasion. It's the buyer's pre-existing need to accomplish a task on their mental "to-do list." When your product (supply) fits that task better than alternatives, the buyer pulls it from you, requiring minimal convincing.
Instead of a generic agenda, effective CROs design SKO content to solve the specific, known stages where their sales team consistently gets stuck, such as discovery or reaching the economic buyer. If you don't know these bottlenecks, you're not ready to lead.
Like Picasso mastering fundamental techniques before developing his style, elite salespeople develop their "art" only after mastering the "science"—the structure and process of selling. True artistry is built upon a foundation of discipline, not just natural talent.