In many sales organizations, the performance bar is surprisingly low. Reps can stand out and become top performers simply by consistently showing up and executing the minimum required activities, as many of their peers fail to do even that.

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Your best reps are often "unconsciously competent" and can't explain their own success. Before an SKO, leaders must help these individuals deconstruct their process and build a prescriptive presentation, translating their individual "art" into a replicable science for the entire sales team.

Leaders misallocate time on low performers who won't improve or top performers who don't need coaching. The greatest return on coaching time comes from investing 80% of it in the solid B-players (the "six pluses") who have the raw ability to become elite A-players.

Sales leaders must identify reps who focus all their energy on one large, one-time deal, neglecting future pipeline. This "flash in the pan" behavior leads to inconsistent performance. The solution is coaching consistent, daily activities that sustain long-term success.

Top performers naturally gravitate toward each other, sharing strategies and reinforcing a winning mindset. Underperformers often commiserate, creating a cycle of negativity. To improve, salespeople must consciously change their work social circle to absorb the habits and attitudes of high achievers.

Even top performers struggle with the discipline for repetitive sales tasks. The problem isn't the difficulty of the work, but the absence of a clear, compelling reason to do it. Discipline requires sacrificing present ease for a future goal; if that goal is fuzzy or already achieved, motivation collapses.

At a small company, one or two big deals can significantly inflate the average productivity per rep. This hides the fact that the majority of the team may be underperforming. As the team grows and these outliers have less impact, the true, often flatlining, productivity of the sales force is exposed.

Top salespeople aren't just skilled; they've mastered their internal psychology. Most performance issues stem from fear, lack of information, and self-limiting beliefs, which prevent them from taking necessary actions like making calls.

Newcomers to sales often fail when they fixate on immediate outcomes. The key is to embrace the learning process—making dials, fumbling through conversations, and learning from mistakes. Competence and results are byproducts of consistent effort over time.

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.

The traditional definition of a champion (power, influence, vested interest) is incomplete. The most critical, and often overlooked, criterion is their proven willingness to actively sell on your behalf when you are not present. Without evidence of them taking action, you don't have a champion, regardless of their position.