E65: Sales Mindset Week: The Sales Success Mindset

December 29, 2023


What specific challenges have you faced in maintaining a positive mindset in your own sales career?

Do you have a sales success mindset?


Most people, in my experience, are fully aware of their mindset – especially when its negative or mediocre.


If you have been listening to this follow up Mindset Week, then hopefully you have spent some time thinking about it.


Again, disclaimer – there is not a mindset that is good or bad, right or wrong. It’s just a function of what serves you in achieving your goals and being HAPPY in your life.


In my experience, most long-term successful sales professionals have a positive mindset (again, I have seen a negative mindset drive people to want to ‘prove’ something, or they have a fear that pushes them to take action). If you are not achieving your sales goals – then it might be time to shift your mindset to achieve success in your life.

  • Show Transcript

    Welcome to episode 65 of the sales experience podcast, finishing mind set. Week number two. My name again is Jason Cutter.


    So glad that you’re here. This episode is going to be a bit of a recap and setting you in the direction of focusing all of this on sales. So if you didn’t hear episode 61 through 64, part of me wants you to go back and listen. Of course, I want you to go back and listen.


    Such good stuff. I was on literally fire every one of those episodes. And so I think they’re great, but that’s just me talking. However, you know there’s lots of value in their homework assignments and if you miss those or didn’t have time for those, I’m going to recap. I’m going to bring it all together and then we’re going to focus on sales and how you can find success with your mind set on a regular basis.


    Really staying positive. So when we talked about mind set, when I covered everything this week, I was talking about the negative side and the expectation gaps that lead to disappointment.


    So one part of a successful sales mind set and positivity is watching out for those negative triggers, so you’ve got to identify what triggers you to be negative, what triggers you to be stuck. One of the things that I didn’t mention that’s also important is watching out for areas where you get to in your head too analytical and trigger things like analysis paralysis.


    Analysis paralysis is where you’re literally researching, thinking about something or trying to find the best solution in an endless loop that doesn’t actually lead to any action taking place. For example, in sales, I know I’ve got to call this person, I know I’ve got to call them and try to sell them something or do a demo with them, or maybe it’s a cold call business to business, business to consumer.


    Maybe it’s an appointment. I’ve got to go knock on doors, whatever it might be, and then you find yourself researching that person you’re calling, researching your script, reading the script, maybe rewriting the script, handwriting it out, trying to put it in a better way. Handwriting your voicemail message, trying to plan all of this out.


    What if they say this, what am I going to do with this? And then you realize, you know, 10 minutes later you’re like, okay, well before I call them, let me take a break. Let me go to the bathroom, let me get something to drink. Then you come back, you’re like, okay, let me go through this.


    Oh wait, I’ve got to do something. And you just end up in this constant loop that will big build the negativity. Like I said in the episode on positive mind set, you want to take action.


    The biggest thing, if you want to be positive, if you want to be focused on success in sales with the right mind set, it’s all about taking action. Now, you don’t want to just take action fractions. Say you don’t want to just be calling, you know, 500 people a day and calling them without leaving voicemails or just calling them, you know, in a shotgun approach without any prep.


    If you do that, that’s not gone work well either. So you’ve got to be strategic and smart about it. But when in doubt, take lots of action. Go all in. Watch out for the analysis paralysis and getting stuck. That’s your ego.


    Again, trying to keep you safe and everyone does it in a different way. Some people avoid making the phone calls they don’t want to make by walking around and talking to co-workers or you know, going to take early lunch.


    So watch out for that and focus on the steps to be successful. There is a formula for everything that we do in our lives that will lead to success. And again, not somebody else’s formula necessarily. It’s our formula.


    So whether it’s health, it’s what works best for you, for you to be healthy, relationships, what works best for you in sales. It’s going to be a combination of what the company has found works well, as well as who you are, your personality and what you bring to the table and how that works well, how you can leverage that into a successful sales career. And so keep that in mind.


    It’s about action steps. It’s about the formula and it’s about doing that. Taking steps all the time, putting in action when possible, take massive action. Take massive. If the goal is to make a hundred calls a day, how can you make 200 calls a day?


    Or if your goal is to be on the phone for two hours a day or have two hours of meetings, how do you have four hours of phone calls or four hours of meetings, right? So how do you just take so much action? Because that will build momentum, that will build this positive feeling in yourself where even if you know that you didn’t win, you don’t, didn’t close any sales today, but you literally gave it everything you could and you can’t imagine anything else.


    One of the biggest things that will foster a negative mind set, and I see people, I see sales reps struggle with this all the time, is they leave at the end of the day, they leave with zero sales and inside, even without being asked inside, that person knows that they did not give it their all. It’s one thing to go into a game or an event or some kind of situation and you literally give it your all and you still lose.


    But you know that you gave it your all and you learn some things from it and you’re better for it, and then you’re going to come back swinging the next time, right? That happens. That’s life. It’s another one to go into something, not give it your all. Just look for excuses or reasons why it’s not your fault and then lose. And then this is just going to put you into a negative spin.


    You’re going to go into this dis depressive depression spiral type of outlook, and it’s going to just trigger that negative mind set. You might’ve already realized that when you did the homework after episode 61 where maybe that’s one of your triggers.


    When you don’t give it you’re all and you’re not successful, that triggers you to be more negative. So watch out for that. Give it everything you can. And if you don’t win today, you’ll win long term.


    Remember, professional sales career is not about winning every single day, every single game, every single moment and hour. It’s about winning season. It’s about winning your career.


    It’s about winning the quarter, the month over long enough time you will win. And you want to win more than you’re losing and that success, as long as you’re happy and you’re doing what you should be with your talents and your skills, abilities and experience, you’re giving it your all and you know that you’re doing the best that you can to help other people with the skills that you’re bringing to the table and your strengths, then you’re winning.


    So just keep that in mind. You know, I see a lot of reps and they asked me like, how do I stay positive? Those kinds of things really help. What I just covered combined with what I’ve talked about so many times on this podcast in the past, which is having a why, having a reason why you show up for work, why you do what you do, what drives you?


    Family, money, goals, accolades, certificates, high fives, rewards, trophies, you know, whatever it is that drives you, whatever your why is, why you show up every day and you want to go at it, that will lead to a successful mind set.


    When I see somebody who’s negative or unhappy in their sales career, either it’s a mismatch of where they want to be with where they are. So there’s this expectation gap. Like they thought they were going to be happy, but they’re actually not. And maybe they’re a square peg in a round hole or the other side is there’s no real goal or thing motivating them through the tough times because you know what rejection is going to happen.


    It’s that, that’s true in life in general. You know, we talk, I talk about health off and on, and you know, you go to the gym, your workout or you’re trying to eat right.


    You weigh yourself or you look in the mirror, you’re like, wait a second, I don’t look good today or I’m not losing weight or I gained weight. Like you’re going to have those times. The question is, can you bounce back in sales that’s goanna happen a bunch. You know, you’re going to get rejected. People are not going to buy.


    Somebody might buy and then call back and cancel or come into the store and return what they bought or they bought a car and then they’re returning it and now what? Right? So now you’re hit with this, you know, charge back to your commission and now you’re starting off the date backwards, right? So how do you recover from that? How do you focus on the positive?


    What in your mind set is the positive triggers and build on everything that we talked about. And then lastly, so important, wrapping up all this success mind set, kind of focus in, in this framework of what we’re talking about this week is to watch out for those people in your sales life.


    Let’s narrow it down to just that then your sales life that are trying to bring you down or keep you at their level of not winning. Now, if you’re in the club of people who are winning, hitting goals, hitting quota, easily making bonus most of the time, right? And they’re celebrating you and their victories, and it’s all about winning. And it’s all about success. And on challenging days, it’s about reflection and honest feedback.


    To win the next time, then you’re blessed. That’s great. That club is usually hard to get in and doesn’t exist in a lot of sales floors. On a purely positive level, what’s more common is the group of people that sit around complaining about the script, the leads, the managers, the trainers, the weather, taxes, and the government, whatever it might be.


    She won watch out for that. If your goal is to have a successful sales career, to have a positive mind set, you want to make sure you surround yourself with people, have a positive mind set who are focused on winning, even if they’re not winning yet.


    Sometimes it’s great to hang around somebody else who’s at your same level, maybe not winning, but you and them are in it together. You’re both focused on the right things, blocking out the wrong things in order to get your goals and to get where you want to be.


    So hopefully all of that helps. Hopefully this has kind of helped with your sales success mind set in terms of your daily walk in a professional sales career and hopefully some things that when you expand out and you start getting better at this, you can apply this to other areas of your life or see the various areas that various buckets and verticals of your life that, where you, you know, some of them are positive, some of them are more of a negative mind set.


    You have different beliefs in different areas and how can you adjust those so that they’re all supportive of the life that you want to be living.


    That’s really what it comes down to. That’s it for this episode, for this mind set Week 2.0 that I covered. Hopefully enjoy the episodes to make sure to subscribe, rate review, and if nothing else, please share this with other salespeople, sales leaders, trainers, owners of companies where they have sales reps.


    Please get this message out this whole week. Feel free to share all of this with them and say, hey, listen to this. It will help with mind set or if it’s maybe a leader of a sales team say, hey, maybe this could help your sales reps. I would love that if you shared it.


    If you’re not sure who to share with or you have somebody in mind and you think, hey, they could use your help on a coaching level or a consulting level with their sales team, please either reach out to me or give me their information so that I can, connect with them.


    Or you can give them my information. Give them the cutter consulting group.com website, give them the link for a LinkedIn. If you’ve got that, you can message me. I can send you all of that.


    I would love those introductions because I’m really doing what I can to help change the landscape of sales leaders, sales teams, and shifting the experience that everyone’s having to the proper sales experience. That just makes it an award winning level of service from the salesperson’s perspective as well as for what the customer’s experiencing. And that’s it. Thanks again for listening.


    Always, remember that everything in life is sales and people remember the experience you gave them.


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By Jason Cutter February 26, 2025
How Can You Predict The Future Of Sales Ops? One of the keys to sales success is to be able to predict the future – what that other person is thinking, what they might say, what they will experience, how they will feel about the product/service. But what can you do – from a sales ops leadership perspective – to predict the future in masse of all the potential customers that will flow into and out of the sales process/funnel? That is a really tough one, but it is doable. Meeting Prospective Customers Where They Are The key is to always meet the prospective customers where they are and with the experience they hope to find. It’s a common theme now in these articles because it’s important AND widely disregarded – your potential customers do not care about you, your sales team, your company, your industry. They don’t care about your stats, your testimonials, your logos. They don’t care about your mission statement or your values. They only care about themselves. They also firmly believe that there is currently unlimited choice for any product/service, which means that everything in their mind is a commodity. Easily replaceable and interchangeable. Nothing (other than iPhones…which you can only get from Apple) is special to consumers unless they feel like it should be special. Are You Still Making It All About You? There is a good chance you are still running a marketing, sales funnel that is all about you. I bet if I looked at your company’s website that from the top down it’s all about you (the company). How great you are. What you do for people. What you have done for others. I bet if I tried to speak with your sales team, I will be made to go through your process whether I like it or not. Maybe fill out a form and wait for a response. Or made to call into a toll free number, even though I don’t want to talk to someone yet. Or made to use a chat widget on a site to get started. I bet when I speak with your sales team, 70-80% of the conversation will be about them, your company, and how amazing you all believe you are. This is all fair. No one starts a company to be mediocre. The goal is to provide value and make money. The missing piece, again like I said above, is no one cares about your goals. They only care about themselves. Predicting What Customers Want From The Sales Experience Back to your mission as sales ops leader – predict what massive amounts of prospective customers are going to want from the Sales Experience. It’s why I wrote about it last week and even offered up a book for free to help in any way that I can. To succeed at your mission, you have to stay ahead of the curve of what the public, and specifically – your buying demographic, psychographic, and valuegraphics, want from that experience. Key Questions To Shape The Sales Experience Do they want to call, text, email or chat? Probably all of them…so can you offer each one? (Don’t make someone decide if they want to go through your hoops…remove all the hoops) Do they need to see pricing online – should it be available and transparent? (In most cases, yes) What sales process will be ideal for moving the most people through the sales conversation to a successful outcome? (More discovery, empathy, active listening. More front-loaded about them, not you. Use the Authentic Persuasion Pathway as your model) Who are the decision makers? Is that individual going to decide or do they need to check with others for approval? (Set them up for success, and don’t force them to make a decision in the moment – you will just lose the potential sale) What type of follow up do they want and need until they make the buying decision? What type of post-purchase follow up would go above and beyond a) their expectations and b) what others in your industry do? If there is an ‘onboarding’ stage after the sale – how can you make that actually customer centric and successful? (It is rarely both) Can You Stay Ahead of the Curve? Remember – evolution is natural. The buying public is always evolving their desired sales experience. Can you predict the future of what they want so that when they encounter your company it matches what they were hoping to find – both in the experience and the solution to their need?
By Jason Cutter February 25, 2025
How do you, as a sales leader, help your team become Oracles that can predict the future? [make sure to read the Selling Effectiveness article this week https://go.sellingeffectiveness.com/LI.2.25.AM ] There are five ways to facilitate their Oracle-ness. Be Present in the Moment First, you have to get your salespeople to be in the moment. The challenge that most salespeople (and…humans, for that matter) experience is they are always thinking ahead. Salespeople default to thinking about what they will say next. The next part of their script or process. The next question they want to ask so they can get through discovery. The next part of the agreement they need to discuss and review. Their mind is too busy thinking about what they are going to say and do next, that they aren’t present. As weird as it sounds, if you want to predict the future you must be present. I have said this for decades: the moment you no longer need to think about what you are going to say/do next and can actually be present with your prospect and truly listen to what they say (and don’t say) – you will become a sales professional. Master Active Listening Second is Active Listening and paying closer attention. It’s actively listening…it’s taking what I mentioned above and putting into place. First step is to be present, second is to actually listen. For what they say. For what they aren’t saying. For changes in their tone. For when they are talking to someone on the side – who are they talking to, and is it about your sales conversation? If you sell in person, reading their body language and facial expressions. You must help them develop an almost sixth sense of listening (and yes, I know hearing is one of our senses…but this goes beyond hearing…it’s truly, deeply listening). Ask Better Questions Third, is to help them ask better questions. So many people in sales ask the discovery questions they are required to ask in order to check the discovery ‘box’. Or, they have done sales long enough they know all the answers, they think they know what everyone wants and why, so no reason to even ask questions. [Note – this type of salesperson thinks two dangerous things: 1 - everyone is the same and wants the same thing, 2 – people like to be sold to.] When your team asks better, deeper discovery questions with a focus on uncovering the what and the WHY, they will get better answers. Remember this – when you ask the right questions and you listen close enough, each prospect will tell you EXACTLY how to help them buy. Build Up Experience Fourth, build up experience. If you want to predict the future it comes from enough experience to know the probability of what will happen. For example, when I am in a season of commuting from home to an office, I am the type of person that can predict exactly what will happen on the freeway. Which lane is always faster around certain exits, which lanes always slow down, how much leaving five minutes later can make the drive suck a lot more. How do I know what will happen on a freeway with hundreds and hundreds of random people? Because of experience (and the fact that most people are just going through the motions in life so they become predictable). The more experience your team has with sales scenarios, they more they can predict the future. I generally see that it takes about six months for most people in a new sales role to have seen enough scenarios where they can start to know what will come next before it happens. Trust Intuition The fifth and final trait to help them with is intuition. One definition of intuition is “a thing that one knows or considers likely from instinctive feeling rather than conscious reasoning.” It’s that feeling you get when you know something, even if you cannot explain it. It’s what Malcom Gladwell wrote about in Blink! It’s what we do very well as humans, even if we don’t listen to it. The more you can help your team tune into their intuition and listen and trust it – the better they will do in helping persuade that other human. This goes back to the first suggestion – about being present. When your team trusts they know what to do and say next and they are mentally living in the moment with that prospective client, they can let their intuition guide them. Conclusion When I do trainings, public speaking, facilitating meetings, interviews, and sales – this is my main key to success. I trust and know that I have the experience to handle whatever comes my way in the present moment, while also knowing the destination I am heading towards. I can be present, let that experience and my intuition guide me instead of getting stuck in my head and worrying about what I will say next. Get your team to do some or all of these five steps – and they will become an amazing Oracle.
By Jason Cutter February 25, 2025
The Oracle’s Role in The Matrix If you have seen the Matrix movies, starring Keanu Reeves (as Neo), then you are familiar with an Oracle. In the movies, the Oracle knows what will happen. She has seen it, and it is predestined. In the Oracles mind there is no such thing as free will. In the first Matrix movie, Neo goes to visit her and knocks a vase off the shelf, and it hits the ground and breaks. Right before he hits it, she says “Don’t worry about the vase.” Neo says, “How did you know?” Then the Oracle responds with “What’s really going to bake your noodle later on, is would you still have broken it if I hadn’t said anything.” Becoming an Oracle in Sales Your mission as a sales professional is to be an Oracle for your prospects and clients. To know the future. Then be able to see around corners, as they say. Which means you know what is going to happen before it happens, because you have enough experience that you have become a psychic. You want to be able to predict, with amazing accuracy: What will happen next What will happen after that What issues will pop up What your prospect/client is thinking before they think it What concerns they might have before they have them Eliminating the Fear of the Unknown During your presentation/demo you want to set the expectation of what is going to occur next. Remember, humans fear the unknown. They want to avoid risk as much as possible. Your sales presentation is risky and dangerous and very unknown. They don’t know if you have good intentions or not. Are you going to persuade them? Are you going to try to manipulate them? Are you going to overcharge them? Will you actually care about what they need and want? Dealing with salespeople is so scary. Yet they still need and/or want something, so it’s the dangerous game they must mentally play. Guiding the Buyer Step by Step When you explain what you are going to do in part 1 of your process, and then what that part is done you let them know the plan for part 2, and so on – they will be at ease in the moment. They will feel like they have control over this portion, that there is an exit they can take if they don’t want to proceed. That level of control will help them accept the risk of part 1, and part 2, and part 3. Tell them what you will do. Do it. Tell them what you did. This will validate that you can be trusted. Predicting Thoughts and Feelings The next level is being able to predict what they will think and feel before they do. You can use this information in your presentation (without telling them what you are doing). You can also verbalize it, which could sound like “I am guessing from experience that you are probably wondering about _____, so let’s cover that right now.” Or “most people I speak with ask about _____.” They will think – wow this person knows what I am thinking, he/she is in my mind! And that’s a good thing. A really good thing. Conclusion The more they feel like you know what you are doing, know what they are thinking, know what they are afraid of – the more they trust you as a Guide. Because Guides only know what they know because they have helped other Heros successfully accomplish their journeys. Your mission as a sales professional: Become an Oracle.
By Jason Cutter February 19, 2025
What does it take to build the ideal Sales Experience? Why does it even matter? Maybe you think you already have one. You are a professional sales ops leader. You have put everything you can in place to help your salespeople sell more. You have optimized the processes so that your sales team can focus on one thing – selling. But I promise – even if you think all of that is true, it’s not. The Reality: No Perfect Sales Experience Exists I have never seen any company or team with the ‘ideal’ Sales Experience and operation. And to be honest – I have never built one successfully. Why would I admit that? Because the ideal Sales Experience is aspirational and business, teams, processes, and customer needs/desires are constantly changing. So as soon as you put new processes in place, something else needs to change and evolve. The Scalable Sales Success Iceberg In my Scalable Sales Success Iceberg – there are 24 categories that, when built out, create a scalable sales machine – where you can add in an input and get way more output. I would love to see companies have all 24 categories set up and running optimally. But that’s not even possible – because, as I mentioned, things are always changing. Focusing on the Biggest Levers Here is the key – to build the ideal Sales Experience takes focus on the biggest levers. The ones that, when pulled, create the biggest and best results. There are many processes and systems that you can put in place – but those are going to get you a few percentage points of improvement. Instead of putting it all in here, I want to make you a special offer. Email me at jason@sellingeffectiveness.com with your mailing address, and I will mail you the book that I co-wrote with Nick Glimsdahl called Reasons Not To Focus On The Sales Experience. It will be your starter guide, facilitating the creation of your ideal Sales Experience.
By Jason Cutter February 18, 2025
The Numbers Game Mentality is a Losing Strategy Sales is no longer a “numbers game.” You cannot succeed, long term, by focusing on volume of activity. Making a million dials, sending a million emails, knocking on a million doors (the first two are way easier than that last one) is a scorched earth strategy that will sink your business. You can’t out-dial a bad sales process. It will lead to even more bad online reviews. You can’t out-email a terrible sales funnel process that requires people to jump through poorly planned hoops. You can’t out-knock your way past slimy tactics and bad products/services. The Danger of the "Every No Gets Me Closer to a Yes" Mindset The whole “every no gets me one step closer to a yes” mentally is dangerous. That mindset and strategy assumes that it’s a numbers game. That the only thing that matters is finding the right person who will buy from you. Potentially, no matter what you even say – they are just ready to buy. Not only will this destroy any online reputation you have it will also wreak havoc on your team. It is the fastest and best way to burn out your team. It will lead to a revolving door or hiring, training, and quitting as people realize how unfun the game is you have built and how hard it is to be successful. It will also feel like a mismatch – very few people (and hopefully even less over time) are long-term excited about the business model of calling 500 people a day in hopes of making a few sales. If It’s Not a Numbers Game, Then What Is It? It’s quality over quantity. [Now…note – it does take a certain quantity of activity to fill a sales pipeline. So I am not saying that your sales team can just sit and wait for people to fall into their pipeline with money in hand.] It’s about the Sales Experience. It’s about your team ensuring that they are providing the right and best experience for that potential customer – in a way that sets them up to get into the buying mood and mode. All that matters is the Sales Experience. How can you support your team in terms of the quantity of activity to fill a pipeline, and then the quality of interaction that leads to sales? What Does an Ideal Sales Experience Look Like? What does that look like – the ideal Sales Experience? It’s when your team understands that the potential customer they are speaking with only cares about themselves. They don’t care about the salesperson, your company or the product. They are only focused on themselves. It’s when the Discovery/Empathy portion of the conversation is the most important part. Does your team realize that everything after Discovery – when done right – is just a presentation of the solution? It’s the fact that when you combine the parts of the Authentic Persuasion Pathway (Rapport + Empathy + Trust + Hope + Urgency) that the assumptive close is all you need. If your team is having to ask for the sale they are doing sales wrong. And don’t confuse earning the right to close with asking for the sale. The Sales Leader’s Role in Creating a World-Class Sales Experience Your job as a sales leader is to ensure your team understands that the only thing – above all else – is the sales experience they provide to each potential customer. That customer knows that they have the power and the feeling of unlimited choice. Which means they will decide who to give their money to based on the experience they have with buying from a company. How can you shift your team away from the numbers game mentality to actually providing a world class sales experience to each and every person they speak with?
By Jason Cutter February 17, 2025
The Abundance of Options Today we all have lots of options. While writing this I could speak into my phone and order whatever I want. I can get food delivered before I finish writing this article. I could get a TV delivered to my door before I wake up tomorrow. When someone wants to buy something, they are armed with as much information as they want to access. They can research, read reviews, and watch videos about a product or company. The Shift in Power to the Buyer Because of this, the power balance of sales has shifted away from the salesperson and company to the buyer. Knowledge is power – and they now have all the knowledge they want. With knowing that they have ultimate choice of what to buy (internet and globalization has led to the ability to order anything you want from anywhere…so you are no longer limited to the stores you can drive to and what they have on hand), it means that everything is a commodity in their minds. Nothing is unique or special. Everything is interchangeable. Does the Sales Experience Even Matter? So, this means the sales experience doesn’t matter anymore. There is no reason to put effort into the sales process, the conversations with potential customers. No value in spending time trying to ‘help’ people – since they just view products, salespeople, and companies as interchangeable. You are not special, so there is no benefit in caring. They will walk into your store, and they will decide what they want. They fill out your online for, and they decide if they answer when you call and how the call will go. They walk up to your event/booth, and they decide how the interaction will go and if they want to listen to your elevator pitch. They will let you know if they are interested in moving forward. They will let you know how they want to buy. So, like I said above, there is no real value anymore in the sales experience. Or could it actually be valuable? Is it possible that all that matters IS the sales experience? If people feel they have ultimate information and control of the buying process, how do they decide on what to buy and who to buy from? When I search on Amazon for a product type I have never purchased before, how do I pick? When I want to go shopping for garden supplies for the house, how do I pick where to go? When I need to buy a new fridge, who will I hand my money over to? The cheapest place with terrible service? The place with reasonable prices and great service? The Sales Experience Shapes the Decision I choose based on the sales experience that I will receive. With everything else being equal, I (and I believe most people) will select the place to shop at or the products to buy online based on the experience I receive. To me all that matters is the experience. While I am trying to buy something. Once I receive it – ensure it does what I need it to do. With the feeling of unlimited choices, it can actually be harder now to buy something that in the past. People get into analysis paralysis more often. Which means that for consumers to buy something new they need help. They need a professional salesperson. They need a sales experience that matches their expectations. They want a guide who will help them make the right decision for them, with an experience that goes above and beyond what more people receive any more when they walk into a store, call a company’s toll-free number, or visit a website and have to fill out a form. If you want to succeed in sales – the only thing that matters is the sales experience you provide.
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