SalesTV Live Podcast

SalesTV.live

SalesTV.live is a weekly talk show created by salespeople, for salespeople. Each episode features insightful conversations with sales leaders, practitioners, and educators who are shaping the future of the profession of sales. Our discussions explore the skills, behaviors, and mindsets that define modern selling: leadership, enablement, ethics, professionalism, communication, social selling, and customer value. Every episode delivers one clear takeaway viewers can apply immediately to elevate their performance and professional credibility. SalesTV produces multiple series, including Mid-Day and Early Editions, plus special Spotlight features and co-produced episodes with the Institute of Sales Professionals. Together, these programs connect a global community of sales professionals, students, and business leaders committed to excellence and Elevating the Profession of Sales. #Sales #Professionalism #SalesLeadership #LinkedInLive #Podcast salestv.substack.com

  1. Why Good Salespeople Keep Losing

    6D AGO

    Why Good Salespeople Keep Losing

    In this episode of SalesTV, Caspar Berry explores how salespeople think about risk, rejection, and decision-making under uncertainty. Most people associate risk-taking in sales with failure, loss, and hearing “no,” and instinctively avoid it, even when those outcomes are a necessary part of success. Drawing on principles from probability and decision science, Caspar reframes how salespeople evaluate opportunities, allocate their time, and interpret results. When decisions are judged solely on short-term outcomes, even the right actions can appear wrong, leading to risk-averse behavior that limits long-term performance and opportunity. Chapters 00:00 Intro – Why good salespeople keep losing 00:54 Salespeople must think like resource allocators 02:41 Risk aversion and the fear of failure in Sales 07:40 Why saying no matters in sales qualification 09:56 Probability payoff and evaluating sales opportunities 13:43 What Negative Metrics mean in Sales 19:09 Even the right decision can still lead to a loss – and that’s ok 20:57 Why buyers choose “no decision” to avoid risk 24:28 Reframe “buy now vs buy later” to “buy vs never buy” 27:34 The ONE Thing – Overcome short-term bias to make better long-term decisions. In this episode, we asked… * What does it mean to be a strong resource allocator in sales? * Are salespeople losing because they don’t say no enough to the wrong opportunities? * How should salespeople evaluate a lead to decide whether it’s worth pursuing? * What are Negative Metrics in Sales, and why do they matter? * Is success in Sales about avoiding rejection, or learning how to work through it? * Why do buyers choose “no decision” to avoid risk, and how should salespeople respond? Key Takeaways * Sales is not just about skill. It’s about how you allocate your time and effort across opportunities. * Most salespeople avoid loss, even when loss is a necessary part of winning. * A decision can be correct even if the outcome is negative. * Focusing only on wins hides the behaviors that actually drive performance. * Saying no to the wrong opportunities is as important as pursuing the right ones. * Buyers often choose no decision as a way to avoid risk, not because there is no problem. The ONE Thing Caspar Berry wants you to take away - We are resource allocators who must overcome short-term bias to make better long-term decisions. Sales performance is often constrained not by effort or skill, but by how salespeople approach risk, rejection, and decision-making under uncertainty. Many sales professionals instinctively avoid situations that could lead to loss, even when those losses are a necessary and predictable part of winning more deals over time. This creates a bias toward low-risk opportunities, poor pipeline allocation, and inconsistent results. By understanding concepts like probability-based thinking, Negative Metrics in Sales, and evaluating decision quality versus outcomes, salespeople and sales leaders can improve how they qualify opportunities, manage pipeline risk, and drive more consistent revenue performance. @SalesTVlive @InstituteofSalesProfessionals #NegativeMetrics #SalesPsychology #SalesMindset #SalesPerformance #Sales #SalesLeadership #LinkedInLive #Podcast ________________________________________ About SalesTV SalesTV.live is a weekly talk show created by salespeople, for salespeople. Each episode explores sales, sales training, networking, and social selling, bringing together sales leaders, enablement professionals, and practitioners from across the globe. About the Institute of Sales Professionals The Institute of Sales Professionals (ISP) is the world’s only body dedicated to raising standards in sales. Through its Sales Capability Framework, certifications, and global member community, the ISP works to elevate sales to the level of a recognized profession. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit salestv.substack.com

    30 min
  2. Most Sales Leaders Confuse Coaching and Mentoring

    APR 7

    Most Sales Leaders Confuse Coaching and Mentoring

    In this episode of SalesTV, we’re joined by James Barton, Chief Solutions Officer at Mentor Group and co-author of Infinite Selling, to explore why sales leaders often confuse coaching, mentoring, and directing. The conversation breaks down the practical differences between these approaches and why most leaders default to sharing experience or giving direction rather than true coaching. We also examine how over-reliance on a single leadership style limits seller development and contributes to inconsistent performance. The discussion emphasizes the importance of adapting leadership style based on the seller’s experience and the situation at hand, rather than treating coaching as a one-size-fits-all solution. It also explores how technology and AI can support sales coaching, while reinforcing that leadership judgment remains critical in knowing when to coach, mentor, or direct. Chapters 00:00 Intro – What do we mean by Coaching vs Mentoring? 03:06 The Biggest Coaching Mistake 06:12 Directing vs Mentoring vs Coaching 06:42 Why Sales Leaders Default to Directing 10:04 When to Coach vs Direct 12:18 Coaching vs Training 13:27 Skills of Effective Sales Coaches 16:09 From Sales Leader to Leader of Leaders 18:11 Technology in Sales Coaching 20:09 Where Technology Falls Short 22:24 The ONE Thing – Know When to Use Each In this episode, we asked… * What’s the difference between coaching and mentoring in sales, and why do so many sales leaders confuse the two? * What’s the biggest mistake sales managers make when trying to coach their teams? * Why do sales leaders often default to a directing or dictating style? * When is direct instruction better than sales coaching or mentoring? * What skills do frontline sales leaders need to become better sales coaches? * How can technology help sales leaders become better sales coaches? Key Takeaways * Most sales leaders aren’t coaching - they’re mentoring or directing without realizing it. * Coaching is about asking questions, not giving answers. * The best sales leaders know when to coach, mentor, or direct based on the situation. * Relying on a single leadership style limits seller development and performance. * Great sales leaders listen first instead of jumping in to solve the problem. * Technology can support sales coaching, but it cannot replace leadership judgment. The ONE Thing James Barton wants you to take away - Know when to coach, mentor, or direct—because it’s never just one approach. Sales coaching, mentoring, and directing are often used interchangeably, but they represent distinct leadership approaches that impact sales performance in different ways. Effective sales coaching focuses on asking questions to help sellers think critically, while mentoring draws on experience to guide behavior, and directing provides clear instruction when immediate action is required. Many sales leaders default to mentoring or directing without recognizing it, limiting their ability to develop independent, high-performing sales teams. The ability to shift between these approaches based on the seller’s experience and the situation is a critical sales leadership skill. As organizations invest in sales enablement and leadership development, understanding how to apply coaching effectively becomes essential for improving consistency and results. Technology and AI can support sales coaching by providing data and insights, but leadership judgment remains central to turning those insights into action. @SalesTVlive @InstituteofSalesProfessionals #SalesCoaching #InfiniteSales #SalesMentoring #SalesManagement #SalesEnablement #Sales #SalesLeadership #LinkedInLive #Podcast ________________________________________ About SalesTV SalesTV.live is a weekly talk show created by salespeople, for salespeople. Each episode explores sales, sales training, networking, and social selling, bringing together sales leaders, enablement professionals, and practitioners from across the globe. About the Institute of Sales Professionals The Institute of Sales Professionals (ISP) is the world’s only body dedicated to raising standards in sales. Through its Sales Capability Framework, certifications, and global member community, the ISP works to elevate sales to the level of a recognized profession. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit salestv.substack.com

    23 min
  3. Why Great Salespeople Walk Away from Deals

    APR 1

    Why Great Salespeople Walk Away from Deals

    In this episode of SalesTV, we’re joined by Matt Webb, CEO of Mentor Group, to discuss why so many sales deals stall in the pipeline and how stronger sales qualification improves outcomes. The conversation explores how weak discovery and unclear buyer intent lead to low-probability opportunities entering the sales process. Matt shares how top-performing salespeople identify warning signs early, ask better qualification questions, and understand why customers are really looking to change. The discussion also examines when to walk away from a deal and how disciplined qualification leads to a healthier pipeline and more predictable revenue. Chapters 00:00 Intro - Why Great Salespeople Walk Away from Deals 00:52 Why Sales Deals Stall in the Pipeline 02:31 The Problem with Poor Sales Qualification 03:04 How to Know if a Deal is Qualified 05:36 When Should You Walk Away from a Deal 07:02 Sales Qualification Questions That Matter 09:56 Warning Signs of a Bad Deal 13:43 The Sales Manager’s Role in Qualification 16:26 Habits of Great Sales Qualifiers 20:50 The ONE Thing - Be Brave In this episode, we asked… * Why do so many sales deals stall in the middle of the pipeline? * How do you know if a sales deal is really qualified? * When should a salesperson walk away from a deal? * What questions should salespeople ask to truly qualify a deal? * What are the warning signs that a deal is not truly qualified? * What are the warning signs a sales manager should be aware of and act on? * What habits separate great qualifiers from average sellers? * Is there one habit in particular we should start with? Key Takeaways * Lack of closing skill is not the primary reason deals stall in the pipeline; it’s weak sales qualification. * Most low-probability opportunities enter the pipeline because sellers fail to fully understand buyer intent and the motivation to change. * Strong discovery is about uncovering why a customer is looking to change now, not just gathering surface-level information. * Warning signs appear early in the sales process, but are often ignored in favor of keeping pipeline volume high. * Great salespeople protect their time and pipeline by identifying weak opportunities early and choosing not to pursue them. * The best salespeople don’t just qualify deals - they qualify bad ones out. The ONE Thing Matt Webb wants you to take away – Look at your deals and ditch the ones that are going nowhere. Sales pipeline health is directly tied to the quality of sales qualification, yet many teams continue to prioritize volume over discipline, allowing poorly qualified opportunities to enter and remain in the pipeline. When salespeople fail to understand buyer intent, the urgency to change, and the real drivers behind a decision, deals often stall in the middle of the sales process with no clear path forward. Strong sales qualification requires more than surface-level discovery; it depends on asking the right questions, identifying early warning signs, and accurately assessing whether an opportunity is real. By focusing on qualification early and consistently, sales teams can avoid low-probability deals, improve pipeline accuracy, and create a more effective and predictable sales process. @SalesTVlive @InstituteofSalesProfessionals #SalesQualification #InfiniteSales #QualifyOut #SalesPipeline #SalesStrategy #B2BSales #SalesProcess #Sales #SalesLeadership #LinkedInLive #Podcast ________________________________________ About SalesTV SalesTV.live is a weekly talk show created by salespeople, for salespeople. Each episode explores sales, sales training, networking, and social selling, bringing together sales leaders, enablement professionals, and practitioners from across the globe. About the Institute of Sales Professionals The Institute of Sales Professionals (ISP) is the world’s only body dedicated to raising standards in sales. Through its Sales Capability Framework, certifications, and global member community, the ISP works to elevate sales to the level of a recognized profession. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit salestv.substack.com

    23 min
  4. How To Communicate With Confidence In Sales Conversations

    MAR 24

    How To Communicate With Confidence In Sales Conversations

    In this episode of SalesTV, Joe Pelissier, a communications advisor and tutor at the University of Oxford’s Department for Continuing Education, explores what it really means to communicate with confidence in sales conversations. The discussion challenges the idea that confidence comes from talking, emphasizing instead the role of listening, curiosity, and asking the right questions. It explores how sales professionals can build trust, establish rapport, and adapt their communication style across different personalities, industries, and cultures. The conversation also examines how effective communication shapes business relationships and influences how value is perceived in both traditional sales environments and experience-driven industries like luxury. Chapters 00:00 Intro - Communicating with confidence in sales 01:45 How great communicators simplify ideas 04:45 How to recover from the wrong question 06:20 Saying “I don’t know” in Sales 07:42 Communication habits that build trust 09:34 Communicating across cultures and industries 11:57 Adapting to personality styles 13:29 What makes a business conversation effective 15:31 Handling resistance in training and communication 19:29 How luxury brands communicate value 21:48 The ONE Thing - Curiosity builds trust In this episode, we asked… * How can I communicate with confidence in a sales conversation? * How do great communicators make complex ideas easy to understand? * When should I use open versus closed questions in a sales conversation? * What communication habits help professionals build trust quickly? * What communication skills matter most when working across cultures or industries? * What can sales professionals learn from how luxury brands communicate value? Key Takeaways * Confidence in sales comes from listening, not talking. * Asking the right mix of open and closed questions drives better conversations. * Paraphrasing helps confirm understanding and keeps discussions on track. * Saying I don’t know builds trust when paired with honesty and follow-up. * Adapting to personality and cultural differences improves communication. * Curiosity leads to rapport, and rapport leads to trust and better outcomes. The ONE Thing Joe Pelissier wants you to take away - Curiosity is the foundation of effective sales communication, because it drives better questions, builds rapport, and ultimately earns trust. Sales communication skills are rooted in the ability to listen, ask effective questions, and adapt to different personalities, cultures, and business contexts. In sales conversations, confidence is not driven by talking more, but by understanding the other person through active listening, paraphrasing, and a balanced use of open and closed questions. Strong business communication skills help sales professionals build trust, establish rapport, and navigate high-pressure discussions without relying on scripted responses or overconfidence. Effective communication in sales also requires adapting tone, language, and approach based on whether the audience is more analytical or more emotionally driven, as seen in differences across industries such as technology and luxury. Ultimately, successful sales conversations depend on curiosity, as it enables better questioning, deeper understanding, and more meaningful connections that lead to stronger relationships and better outcomes. About SalesTV SalesTV.live is a weekly talk show created by salespeople, for salespeople. Each episode explores sales, sales training, networking, and social selling, bringing together sales leaders, enablement professionals, and practitioners from across the globe. About the Institute of Sales Professionals The Institute of Sales Professionals (ISP) is the world’s only body dedicated to raising standards in sales. Through its Sales Capability Framework, certifications, and global member community, the ISP works to elevate sales to the level of a recognized profession. @SalesTVlive @InstituteofSalesProfessionals #SalesCommunication #SalesSkills #SalesConversations #SalesTips #CommunicationSkills #Sales #SalesLeadership #LinkedInLive #Podcast This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit salestv.substack.com

    23 min
  5. What Happens When Sales Defines Its Standards

    MAR 19

    What Happens When Sales Defines Its Standards

    In this episode of SalesTV, ISP leaders Helga Saraiva, Matthew Nicolle, and Dr. Ram Ramraghvan explore what changes when Sales begins to define and adopt shared standards. The conversation examines how clearer expectations impact training, hiring, and performance management, while also addressing the role of ethics, accountability, and global consistency in shaping the profession. It also considers how standards influence the way Sales is perceived both outside and inside the organization, and what that means for credibility, development, and long-term performance. Across these perspectives, the discussion surfaces the practical implications of moving from individual interpretation of what “good” looks like to a more consistent, shared understanding of Sales best practices. Chapters 00:00 – Intro - Why Sales Has Never Had Shared Standards 02:24 - When a Profession Begins Defining “Good” 04:28 - What Problems Sales Standards Actually Solve 06:53 - How Standards Build Trust Inside Sales Organizations 10:08 - Do Salespeople Care About Standards or Just Results 14:18 - Is Sales Ultimately About Money or Something More 18:52 - Culture Leadership and the Reality of Sales Behavior 24:10 - How Standards Impact Hiring Training and Retention 28:24 - The Future of Sales 10 Years After Standards In this episode, we asked… * How does a profession know when it’s time to start defining its standards? * What problems do shared standards solve for sales organizations? * How do professional standards influence trust? * Do sales professionals actually care about shared standards, or are results all that matter? * Is it all about the money in sales? * How do shared standards influence sales hiring and training? * Ten years from now, when global standards are widely adopted, what does the sales profession look like? Key Takeaways * Sales and standards are not at odds - higher standards are what drive better outcomes. * As buyers gain more access to information, the salesperson’s role shifts from provider to guide. * Professional standards shape not just customer interactions, but internal trust and culture. * Without shared standards, sales performance becomes inconsistent and difficult to scale. * When standards are adopted, sales becomes a profession of choice, not a fallback. Sales standards are becoming increasingly important as organizations look to improve sales performance, strengthen sales training, and create more consistent customer outcomes. Without clearly defined standards, sales teams often struggle with inconsistent coaching, uneven execution, and unpredictable revenue results. As the sales profession continues to evolve, companies are placing greater emphasis on structured onboarding, ongoing development, and ethical selling practices to better align with modern buyer expectations. Establishing shared standards helps organizations improve hiring, develop talent more effectively, and build scalable sales performance across teams. The Leaders of the ISP look forward to the day where Sales is no longer a job people fall into. Instead, Sales is pursued as a lifelong, valued career. About SalesTV SalesTV.live is a weekly talk show created by salespeople, for salespeople. Each episode explores sales, sales training, networking, and social selling, bringing together sales leaders, enablement professionals, and practitioners from across the globe. About the Institute of Sales Professionals The Institute of Sales Professionals (ISP) is the world’s only body dedicated to raising standards in sales. Through its Sales Capability Framework, certifications, and global member community, the ISP works to elevate sales to the level of a recognized profession. @SalesTVlive @InstituteofSalesProfessionals #SalesStandards #SalesTraining #SalesEnablement #B2BSales #RevenueGrowth #Sales #SalesLeadership #LinkedInLive #Podcast This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit salestv.substack.com

    33 min
  6. How to Negotiate in a Transparent Sales Era

    MAR 17

    How to Negotiate in a Transparent Sales Era

    In this episode of SalesTV, multi-time Chief Revenue Officer and award-winning author Todd Caponi explores how B2B sales negotiation must evolve in a transparent sales environment where buyers compare pricing and trust is easily lost. The conversation examines modern negotiation strategy, including how to present pricing with confidence, handle price objections without defaulting to discounting, and apply value-based tradeoffs to create a consistent, defensible pricing model. Grounded in both sales history and current buyer behavior, it outlines a practical approach to protecting margin while strengthening long-term customer relationships. Chapters 00:00 Intro - Why Traditional Sales Negotiation Breaks Trust 01:08 Why B2B Negotiation Hasn’t Kept Up with Modern Sales 02:47 How Transparency and Buyer Behavior Changed Negotiation 04:55 What Changed in Sales Negotiation After 1975 06:19 What Negotiation Looks Like in a Transparent Sales Era 08:03 How to Negotiate Without Discounting Using Four Levers 10:41 How to Create a Consistent Pricing Strategy in B2B Sales 13:05 How to Present Price with Confidence in Enterprise Sales 16:47 How to Handle Competitors Who Are Cheaper 19:26 Why Discounting Slows Deals and Erodes Margin 23:18 The ONE Thing About Truth and Service in Sales In this episode, we asked… * Why is traditional sales negotiation outdated in modern B2B sales? * What does negotiation look like in a transparent sales environment? * How do I negotiate without defaulting to discounting? * How do I present pricing with confidence in enterprise sales? * How should I respond when a competitor is cheaper? * Why does discounting slow deals and damage long-term revenue? * How do I create a consistent, defensible pricing strategy in B2B sales? Key Takeaways * In modern B2B sales, negotiation must extend the sales conversation, not contradict it. * In a transparent market, inconsistent pricing erodes credibility in sales negotiation. * Discounting slows deals down and trains buyers to wait for concessions. * Buyers compare pricing more than ever - assume information is shared. * Confidence in pricing comes from clarity, not pressure. * Value-based tradeoffs replace arbitrary concessions; every discount must be tied to measurable value in return. Sales negotiation in a transparent B2B environment requires a shift away from discount-driven tactics toward a structured, value-based approach to pricing. As buyers increasingly compare pricing, share information, and rely on AI to evaluate options, inconsistent pricing models become harder to defend and erode trust at the most critical stage of the sales process. A modern negotiation strategy centers on establishing a clear “sound basis” for pricing, where value-based tradeoffs - such as volume, timing of cash, length of commitment, and deal predictability - replace arbitrary concessions. This approach not only strengthens credibility and protects margin, but also reduces negotiation anxiety, improves deal velocity, and supports long-term customer relationships built on transparency and consistency. The ONE Thing Todd Caponi wants you to take away – Your role is not to convince. It’s to help buyers see what’s possible and help them get there. About SalesTV SalesTV.live is a weekly talk show created by salespeople, for salespeople. Each episode explores sales, sales training, networking, and social selling, bringing together sales leaders, enablement professionals, and practitioners from across the globe. About the Institute of Sales Professionals The Institute of Sales Professionals (ISP) is the world’s only body dedicated to raising standards in sales. Through its Sales Capability Framework, certifications, and global member community, the ISP works to elevate sales to the level of a recognized profession. @SalesTVlive @InstituteofSalesProfessionals #FourLevers #SalesNegotiation #B2BSales #PricingStrategy #Sales #SalesLeadership #LinkedInLive #Podcast This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit salestv.substack.com

    26 min
  7. Are We Hiring the Wrong Salespeople for the AI Era?

    FEB 24

    Are We Hiring the Wrong Salespeople for the AI Era?

    In this episode of SalesTV, Dr. Peter Kerr, Chair of Applied Research in Sales at the University of New Brunswick, shares research drawn from LinkedIn hiring data and quantitative performance studies to examine how salesperson analytical skills directly influence sales performance and strengthen the effort-to-results relationship. The conversation explores whether sales leaders should optimize for both soft interpersonal skills and hard analytical skills, why working smarter often outperforms working harder, and how job design, hiring strategy, and training must align when navigating trade-offs in the AI-driven sales environment. Chapters 00:00 – Are We Hiring the Wrong Salespeople for the AI Era02:01 – What Skills Actually Drive Sales Performance07:24 – LinkedIn Data Reveals Analytical Skills Surge08:58 – Direct and Moderating Effects on Performance09:54 – Two Dimensions of Analytical Skill12:03 – Will AI Replace Analytical Skills13:21 – Should We Hire for Both Soft and Hard Skills15:48 – The Compromise Candidate Problem18:09 – Analytics Dashboards vs Analytical Thinking19:26 – Working Harder vs Working Smarter20:16 – The One Thing Sales Leaders Must Decide In this episode, we asked… * What job are buyers actually hiring salespeople to do? * Why does pressure-based selling make decisions less safe? * Why do so many deals end in no decision instead of lost? * Where does buyer risk really live inside organizations? * What happens after the meeting, in the “second room”? * Why do internal incentives sabotage trust and judgement? * How do sellers unknowingly increase buyer anxiety? * Why does supplier selection matter less than people think? Key Takeaways * Why analytical skills are now one of the top skills appearing in sales hiring data * The direct relationship between analytical skills and sales performance * How analytical ability strengthens the effort–performance link * Why working harder is not the same as working smarter * The risk of hiring “the compromise candidate” * Why sales leaders must consciously choose which dimension to optimize * Why analytical skills are trainable - and why that matters The ONE Thing Dr. Peter Kerr wants you to take away – Sales leaders must decide whether to prioritize soft skills or analytical strength - and then design the job, training, and systems to support that choice. Trying to maximize both when hiring often results in average on both. About SalesTV SalesTV.live is a weekly talk show created by salespeople, for salespeople. Each episode explores sales, sales training, networking, and social selling, bringing together sales leaders, enablement professionals, and practitioners from across the globe. About the Institute of Sales Professionals The Institute of Sales Professionals (ISP) is the world’s only body dedicated to raising standards in sales. Through its Sales Capability Framework, certifications, and global member community, the ISP works to elevate sales to the level of a recognized profession. @SalesTVlive @InstituteofSalesProfessionals #SalesAnalytics #AnalyticalSkills #SalesPerformance #AISales #Sales #SalesLeadership #LinkedInLive #Podcast This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit salestv.substack.com

    23 min
  8. Buyers Hire Sellers to Reduce the Risk of Choosing Wrong

    JAN 28

    Buyers Hire Sellers to Reduce the Risk of Choosing Wrong

    In this episode of SalesTV, Marcus Cauchi, founder of Principled Selling and creator of The Ally Method, joins us as we examine how buyers make decisions in complex B2B sales environments and why sellers are often hired not to persuade or pitch, but to reduce buyer risk and decision uncertainty. The conversation breaks down how pressure-based selling increases buyer anxiety, triggers self-protection, and contributes to stalled deals and no-decision outcomes. We explore where buying decisions actually break down - inside internal politics, reputational exposure, approval committees, and post-meeting conversations - and why traditional sales processes overlook these realities. The episode also unpacks how incentives, speed, and quota pressure cause sales teams to unintentionally undermine trust, distort judgement, and make decisions feel unsafe for buyers long before supplier selection ever occurs. Chapters 00:00 – Introduction – Buyers HIRE Sellers 02:10 – Why trust is misunderstood in modern sales 04:07 – What buyers actually hire sellers to do 05:45 – Why most deals end in no decision 06:45 – How pressure triggers buyer self-protection 08:20 – How incentives distort sales behavior 10:35 – The second room and internal buyer politics 12:40 – When good deals die in allocation committees 15:45 – How sellers create anticipatory buyer’s remorse 18:10 – Why speed turns into haste in sales teams 21:05 – The buyer journey before sales ever shows up 24:30 – Why traditional sales methods fail buyers 27:55 – What decision safety really means 30:45 – The ONE Thing - Buyers hire sellers to reduce risk In this episode, we asked… * What job are buyers actually hiring salespeople to do? * Why does pressure-based selling make decisions less safe? * Why do so many deals end in no decision instead of lost? * Where does buyer risk really live inside organizations? * What happens after the meeting, in the “second room”? * Why do internal incentives sabotage trust and judgement? * How do sellers unknowingly increase buyer anxiety? * Why does supplier selection matter less than people think? Key Takeaways * Buyers are managing personal, political, and reputational risk, not just evaluating solutions. * Pressure-based selling increases anxiety and slows decisions rather than accelerating them. * Most sales failures happen after the meeting, inside internal buyer conversations. * No-decision outcomes are usually a signal of unmanaged buyer risk, not buyer apathy. * Trust is created by making decisions safer, not by persuading harder. The ONE Thing Marcus Cauchi wants you to take away – Buyers hire sellers to help them make decisions they can live with, and when sellers focus on reducing risk instead of applying pressure, decisions move forward with clarity rather than regret. About SalesTV SalesTV.live is a weekly talk show created by salespeople, for salespeople. Each episode explores sales, sales training, networking, and social selling, bringing together sales leaders, enablement professionals, and practitioners from across the globe. About the Institute of Sales Professionals The Institute of Sales Professionals (ISP) is the world’s only body dedicated to raising standards in sales. Through its Sales Capability Framework, certifications, and global member community, the ISP works to elevate sales to the level of a recognized profession. @SalesTVlive @InstituteofSalesProfessionals #BuyerRisk #WhyDealsStall #NoDecisionDeals #B2BBuyingProcess #TrustInSales #Sales #SalesLeadership #LinkedInLive #Podcast This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit salestv.substack.com

    31 min

About

SalesTV.live is a weekly talk show created by salespeople, for salespeople. Each episode features insightful conversations with sales leaders, practitioners, and educators who are shaping the future of the profession of sales. Our discussions explore the skills, behaviors, and mindsets that define modern selling: leadership, enablement, ethics, professionalism, communication, social selling, and customer value. Every episode delivers one clear takeaway viewers can apply immediately to elevate their performance and professional credibility. SalesTV produces multiple series, including Mid-Day and Early Editions, plus special Spotlight features and co-produced episodes with the Institute of Sales Professionals. Together, these programs connect a global community of sales professionals, students, and business leaders committed to excellence and Elevating the Profession of Sales. #Sales #Professionalism #SalesLeadership #LinkedInLive #Podcast salestv.substack.com