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A Formula for Daily Motivation | Building Resilience (3 of 5)

Reclaiming Sales

Release Date: 07/12/2021

How to Approach MSP Marketing | Derek Marin show art How to Approach MSP Marketing | Derek Marin

Reclaiming Sales

When it comes to new MRR, every MSP will say they need more leads. They'll say, "When we get the at bat, we usually win... but we need more at bats." While this might be true, it's usually not the whole story. When it comes to sales and marketing, there is a difference between a referral and a marketing lead. Just because you close a lot of referrals, doesn't mean you're going to close your marketing leads... so don't blame the marketing guy until you've listened to this episode.

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The Feel Good Close, Part 2 | Brian Gillette show art The Feel Good Close, Part 2 | Brian Gillette

Reclaiming Sales

"As soon as you hit an objection, you just go back and change a bunch of stuff [in your tech stack], rather than learning how to overcome the objection... You change the external factors as to why you're not selling, rather than addressing the internal factors: which is that you don't know how to sell."

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The Feel Good Close, Part 1 | Brian Gillette show art The Feel Good Close, Part 1 | Brian Gillette

Reclaiming Sales

"You know I had a lot of confidence in you when you started here. That confidence has been dashed. I don't actually believe in you. I don't think you know how to do this. But your sales manager seems to think that you can so I'm gonna let you keep trying." —Company COOBrian knew that this was in his blood, but he'd succeed one month and fail the next. No consistency. Turns out there was something on the inside that was not at peace with the outside. How do you get over that kind of self sabotage?

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Douglas Cole, author of The Sales MBA show art Douglas Cole, author of The Sales MBA

Reclaiming Sales

Douglas Cole has been working at LinkedIn since 2019. He sold enterprise software, and eventually ended up leading a team of salespeople. We talked about his new book The Sales MBA, and one of my favorite topics of achieving Plausible Objectivity.

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Season 1 Capstone | What Comes Next? show art Season 1 Capstone | What Comes Next?

Reclaiming Sales

I started this podcast over a year and a half ago, and it has been an amazing journey so far. Listen to this update episode to get an idea of what's coming next, and where you might be able to get more!

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If You Have a Brain, You Have a Bias | Matthew Cahill show art If You Have a Brain, You Have a Bias | Matthew Cahill

Reclaiming Sales

Matthew Cahill is the President & Principal Consultant at The Percipio Company. He's one of my favorite people, and one of the few people who sells bias advice that cultivates belonging. In this episode, we'll cover the 5 most common biases that salespeople fail to recognize and compensate for. Most insidiously, they serve us well up until the moment they fail us... then they fail us completely.

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What I Learned Selling Door to Door | Ray Kim show art What I Learned Selling Door to Door | Ray Kim

Reclaiming Sales

Ray Kim is the Director of IT Strategy, and one of the owners of Simplified IT Consulting. He started his career with what I imagine is one of the hardest sales jobs in the world: selling Encyclopedias door to door, commission only, in the Mid-West at the height (and humidity) of summer.

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The Beast is Always Hungry | Sean Kline show art The Beast is Always Hungry | Sean Kline

Reclaiming Sales

In a perfect world, every prospect that becomes a client is a perfect client. But since we don't live in that perfect world, sometimes we end up bringing in clients that aren't perfect. Listen in as Sean and I discuss that tension.

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A Day in the Life of Duncan Bruce show art A Day in the Life of Duncan Bruce

Reclaiming Sales

If you're anything like me, you're getting a bit tired of influencers and gurus. I've sort of lost my appetite for self proclaimed experts who may or may not be successful, but can't seem to find any humility. That's why I loved my conversation with Duncan Bruce, an understated success who's been in sales long enough that if he wasn't good he'd be unemployed. Enjoy a refreshing, down to earth interview to start off your year.

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Selling Mortgages in the 2008 Housing Crisis | Arjun Dhingra show art Selling Mortgages in the 2008 Housing Crisis | Arjun Dhingra

Reclaiming Sales

Ask around in any industry, and you'll find someone who claims they have the toughest sale. I think what I do is hard, but certainly not selling mortgages in the middle of the 2008 financial crisis. For those stories, you'll have to talk to Arjun...

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More Episodes
This is the third episode of a five part miniseries on Building Resilience, you can find episode one here. Spinning 'round in Circles You may have heard, it said that those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it. What goes around comes around. The pendulum swings both ways... and obvious cliches. But realistically, we all know that this is true. Humans live and run on cycles: annual holidays, birthdays, new year's monthly bills, weekly routines work, rest rinse, repeat as salespeople. We live and die by monthly, weekly, or annual sales quotas; but we make money one day at a time.A day is just the chunk of time can, most meaningfully control. Minutes and hours... they're just too small, too fleeting; and too subject to the fate and will of another. Weeks are also hard to grasp. You can review a week when the week is over, but on any particular day, you're just focusing on that day. You're not thinking about the week in total. Each day seems to be filled with opportunity and purpose. They just seem to be the smallest chunk of time that we can reasonably manage. Clichés for a Good Reason Every day can be a new day. The sun can rise and it can be the first day of the rest of your life. Today can also be the last day you ever drink, or the first day you stop letting that thing from your past, hold you back. Every moment in history started on a day. Every great victory was won on a day. The greatest events of your life may sweep across many years or weeks building up to that day, but we always measure it back to a day. It's apropos that I'm releasing this episode right after a holiday weekend, 4th of July. We blow stuff up. We eat too much. Maybe we drink too much, and then we have a tough week to get through where no one's really in the office anyways. So we going out our numbers and we trudge through. But now is the week after, and we're in the middle of the summer, and it's very tempting to slack off on any one day. One of the greatest challenges we have in sales is that our success feels like powerful highlights in the midst of long gray dullness, a series of wins and losses spread over a lifetime. The Value of Any Single Day But that's not what it really looks like. In reality, a successful sales career is a series of performing the right activities over thousands of days. That's what discipline, and consistency are for. And for a few glorious days, every month or year, you will reap the benefit of that consistent work, that consistent discipline. You'll close a deal and you'll celebrate. But you didn't close the deal just on that day, there was a lot of work that went up to that. It will seem like these wins, fall out of the sky or reward by fate or chance, but that's not how it works. A successful career can be measured by successful days.Unfortunately, the opposite is also true. Each day, affords us an opportunity to waste the resources we've been given. Each day gives us a chance to be one day further away from success. Every day we waste can be rust gathering on the ball-bearing, which slowly grinds your career to a halt. No single day of sprinting or no single day of laziness will lead to your total success or failure.It's a sum total of the efforts spent over time. It is therefore very important to spend your days wisely. One who is wise realizes that there are only so many hours in the day that can be spent working. One must sleep. One must rest. One must be more than a sales person. You have to pay bills, and go to the DMV, and buy groceries, and cook food. Setting aside specific hours for work and protecting those hours is one of the most efficient ways to have a successful day. Protect your working hours by creating bookends around them. Creating and Using Bookends Bookends are probably going the way of the Rolodex. But in the same way a bookend can hold books up on the shelf, a morning and evening ritual can keep your hours propped up throughout the day.