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  1. 30 Minutes to President's Club | No-Nonsense Sales
  2. #527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t)
#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t)

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t)

30 Minutes to President's Club | No-Nonsense Sales · Nov 27, 2025

Drive deal velocity by shifting from meeting-based to stage-based progression. Focus on exit criteria, not activity, to close deals faster.

Validate Problems With Data, Not Sentiment

True problem agreement isn't a prospect's excitement; it's their explicit acknowledgment of an issue that matters to the organization. Move beyond sentiment by using data, process audits, or reports to quantify the problem's existence and scale, turning a vague feeling into an undeniable business case.

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t) thumbnail

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t)

30 Minutes to President's Club | No-Nonsense Sales·3 months ago

Stage Progression Beats Meeting Progression

Don't measure deal progress by the number of meetings held. Instead, define specific exit criteria for each sales stage. A deal only moves forward when the prospect meets these criteria, which can happen with or without a live meeting. This reframes velocity around outcomes, not activities.

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t) thumbnail

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t)

30 Minutes to President's Club | No-Nonsense Sales·3 months ago

Combine Stages, But Never Skip Them

You can't skip a fundamental agreement stage, like getting problem buy-in before proposing a price. However, you can and should look for opportunities to achieve multiple agreements within a single meeting. This combines stages, condensing the sales cycle without missing crucial validation steps.

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t) thumbnail

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t)

30 Minutes to President's Club | No-Nonsense Sales·3 months ago

Focus On What You Get, Not What You Do

Frame your sales stages around the decisions you need from a prospect (a 'get'), not the tasks you must complete (a 'do'). For example, the goal isn't 'do a demo,' it's 'get agreement that you're the vendor of choice.' This encourages creativity and efficiency, preventing unnecessary activities.

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t) thumbnail

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t)

30 Minutes to President's Club | No-Nonsense Sales·3 months ago

Win Power Agreement with Executive-Level Plays

Securing executive buy-in is its own sales stage, distinct from champion agreement. Don't just repeat the demo for the boss. Use executive-level tactics like reference calls with their peers, exec-to-exec meetings to build relationships, or roadmap presentations to sell the long-term vision and partnership.

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t) thumbnail

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t)

30 Minutes to President's Club | No-Nonsense Sales·3 months ago

Enter Proposal Stage Only After Full Agreement

Discussing pricing early doesn't mean you're in the proposal stage. True proposal and negotiation begins only after you have secured explicit agreement on the problem, the solution, and from the key decision-maker. At this point, the deal would close if it were free; price is the only remaining variable.

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t) thumbnail

#527 - The Sales Process Elite Reps Use (And You Don’t)

30 Minutes to President's Club | No-Nonsense Sales·3 months ago