We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.
A leader's worst habit is getting comfortable when things are working well. Hitting quota is not an excuse to stop innovating. Great leaders operate on the principle that you must run as fast as possible just to stay in the same place, constantly questioning processes even in success.
A sales leader's job isn't to ask their team how to sell more; it's to find the answers themselves by joining sales calls. Leaders must directly hear customer objections and see reps' mistakes to understand what's really happening. The burden of finding the solution is on the leader.
Even a top-tier sales professional has a career pitch win rate of just 50-60%. Success isn't about an unbeatable record, but a relentless focus on analyzing failures. Remembering and learning from every lost deal is more critical for long-term improvement than celebrating wins.
Don't wait for poor results to re-evaluate your sales strategy. Continuously look for optimization opportunities in your process, even when you are successful, to stay ahead and improve performance. This makes process review a continuous improvement cycle, not just a reactive fix.
Achieving extraordinary results requires extraordinary, often exhausting, effort. If your team ever finds themselves in their comfort zone at work, they are making a mistake. This high-intensity environment is easier to maintain when the company is clearly winning, providing leadership with "air cover" to demand more.
Maximum growth occurs during 'boring' periods of repetitive execution, not exciting periods of innovation. Many leaders, craving novelty, mistake this valuable stability for stagnation and prematurely introduce disruptive changes that hurt the compounding returns of a team mastering its craft.
The highest-performing sales reps don't wait for production to dip before seeking improvement. They consistently invest in skill-building by attending optional workshops, viewing it as a compounding investment in their success rather than a remedial action when they are already succeeding.
To exceed sales targets, stop focusing on the final number. Instead, use math to reverse-engineer the quota into controllable daily and weekly activities. Consistently hitting these input goals will naturally lead to crushing the overall output goal without the associated pressure.
The most successful sales teams don't necessarily hit every specific goal they write down. Instead, their success comes from the continuous habit of setting goals. This constant process of intentionality leads to significant overall improvement and achievements they didn't even initially plan for.
Top coaches like John Wooden and Bill Walsh taught that winning is a byproduct of executing the process correctly. Instead of fixating on sales numbers (the score), leaders and sellers should analyze and improve the daily inputs and activities that ultimately produce the desired results.
After a highly successful month, the natural temptation is to relax. This "breather" often leads to a lackluster next month or a disastrous quarter. Sustained success requires immediately recommitting to the core activities that drove the initial win.