Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

Flip the traditional sales script. Instead of trying to sell to everyone, first filter prospects through the lens of an ideal partnership. If a customer doesn't seem like an obvious, high-quality fit for you, have the confidence to disengage early and preserve your focus.

Related Insights

A major mistake is pursuing any potential customer. Salespeople must be willing to turn down prospects who are not a good fit, and do so early in the process. Chasing the wrong business wastes time and resources that should be spent on ideal clients, leading to lost deals that should have been won.

Resist adding every interested partner to your program. Instead of focusing on quantity, vet potential partners based on their profile and a clear "propensity to sell" your specific solutions. This ensures a mutually beneficial relationship and avoids wasting resources trying to force an unnatural fit.

An Ideal Client Profile (ICP) is insufficient. Adopt a Perfectly Profitable Prospect Profile (P3P) to filter for alignment on core values, culture (e.g., agile vs. structured), and delivery fit (are they ready for your solution?). This proactively avoids friction and ensures engagement with high-value, low-headache clients.

Average salespeople hoard every lead out of scarcity. Top performers, operating with an abundance mindset, willingly give away prospects that don't fit their Ideal Customer Profile (ICP). They understand that time spent on a poor fit is time stolen from a better one.

Wasting time and energy trying to persuade skeptical clients is a critical business vulnerability. It is more effective to state your case confidently and move on if there is resistance. This conserves energy for opportunities that are already aligned and receptive.

In a commodity market, many prospects who need your product are not good customers because they are purely price-driven. Your prospecting goal is to find the smaller subset of businesses that fundamentally value relationships and security. Disqualify prospects who explicitly state that price is their only criterion to focus your efforts.

Adopt the mindset that the meeting's purpose is for you to determine if the prospect qualifies to be your customer, not for you to convince them to buy. This posture shifts control, positions you as the prize, and forces the prospect to prove they are a serious potential partner.

The counterintuitive strategy for struggling reps is not to widen the funnel but to narrow it. Brutally qualifying out low-probability deals frees up finite time. This allows for deeper engagement with prospects who are a perfect fit, ultimately creating more value and increasing the chance of closing business.

Many salespeople resort to last-minute tactics like discounts because they failed to build sufficient value throughout the sales process. The goal is to make the final decision a no-brainer by establishing your solution as the only logical choice from the very first conversation.

Instead of forcing a sale, elite salespeople act as advisors by proactively telling smaller companies when a solution is a poor financial fit. This builds long-term trust and prevents you from becoming the highest, most scrutinized line item on their P&L.