loader from loading.io

The Salesperson’s Time, Treasure and Talent

THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Release Date: 03/03/2026

Bait Your Hook In Sales show art Bait Your Hook In Sales

THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Salespeople lose deals when they drown buyers in features and forget to make the benefits feel urgent, relevant, and irresistible. That mistake shows up everywhere in modern selling. Across Japan, Australia, the US, and wider Asia-Pacific markets, too many sales conversations still revolve around product detail, technical depth, and execution mechanics. Buyers do need to know how a solution works, but that is rarely why they decide to buy. They buy because they can see how the solution closes an important gap, reduces risk, creates speed, or improves results. Great salespeople do not just...

info_outline
A Different Value Based Selling show art A Different Value Based Selling

THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

“Value-based selling” gets talked about as if it is some shiny new commercial breakthrough. Usually, it is not. In many cases, it is simply good sales practice with a fresh coat of paint. The more interesting question is not whether a salesperson can describe value. It is whether they actually live values the buyer can trust. That distinction matters in every market, from Japan to Australia, the US, Europe, and across Asia-Pacific. Buyers are already wary of polished pitches, smooth talkers, and rehearsed claims. They do not just want a supplier who can match a need to a solution. They...

info_outline
Package Up The Value In The Sales show art Package Up The Value In The Sales

THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Price-only conversations are usually a trap. When buyers push you to “just send the price”, they are often turning your offer into a commodity before you have had any chance to establish value. That is where many salespeople lose control of the sale. In Japan, Australia, the US, and across B2B markets globally, procurement teams, compliance departments, and line managers often compare vendors in spreadsheets built to highlight the cheapest option. If you enter that process too early, you get dragged into a race to the bottom. The stronger move is to shift the discussion from price to...

info_outline
The Big Sales Audio Landgrab show art The Big Sales Audio Landgrab

THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

If you are in sales today and you are not actively building your visibility through audio, video, and social media, you are making it harder for buyers to find you. That is the real sales landgrab now. The old model said success depended on how many people you knew. The modern model says success depends on how many relevant people know you, recognise you, and trust your expertise before they ever speak to you. In Japan, the US, Australia, and across Asia-Pacific, sales professionals are competing in crowded digital markets where organic discovery, personal branding, content marketing, and...

info_outline
Handling Post Purchase Mistakes show art Handling Post Purchase Mistakes

THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Even the best laid plans go astray. The deal is done, the money is paid, and then something goes wrong in delivery—minor or catastrophic. The buyer doesn’t care which department caused it. They expect you to fix it and take accountability, because in their eyes you are the firm.  In Japan, this is amplified because you are the tanto—the designated person responsible for the account—so “I’m busy” is not an acceptable answer. They expect you to be available, and if mistakes happen, they expect you to move fast and make it right.  If delivery goes wrong after...

info_outline
Closing show art Closing

THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

“Closing” can sound like you’re ending something, when the reality is you’re starting the partner relationship with the buyer. In modern selling—especially in Japan—many people prefer to call it getting “commitment.” I’m fine with either term. What matters is that closing doesn’t have to be scary, complicated, or aggressive. In fact, the less drama you create, the easier it becomes for the client to say yes.  There’s also a major cultural difference here: a lot of American closing techniques are forceful and direct, and that style generally won’t work in Japan. So...

info_outline
Painting a Word Picture of Why They Should Buy Now show art Painting a Word Picture of Why They Should Buy Now

THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Most salespeople think the sale is won or lost in the solution. It isn’t. By the time you get to “Would you like to go ahead?”, the buyer is still deciding emotionally whether saying yes now feels safe, smart, and personally rewarding. That’s where a word picture becomes your unfair advantage: you help them see the future after they’ve chosen you—and feel what that future means for them.  Is a logical solution enough to get a buyer to say “yes” today? No—logic explains, but emotion decides when the buyer will act. You can have rapport,...

info_outline
Four Powerful Japanese Mindsets For Sales show art Four Powerful Japanese Mindsets For Sales

THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Sales can feel like a battle, but most of the fighting isn’t with the buyer—it’s inside your own head: imposter syndrome, negative self-talk, quota pressure, price pushback, and the grind of rejection.  Drawing on traditional karate training (and the kind of repetition that creates real calm under pressure), four Japanese “warrior” mindsets map beautifully onto modern selling—especially in a post-pandemic, AI-saturated, time-poor buying environment.  Is sales really a battle happening inside your head? Yes—sales is often a psychological war of confidence versus...

info_outline
The Salesperson’s Time, Treasure and Talent show art The Salesperson’s Time, Treasure and Talent

THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Sales is a rollercoaster: one month you’re flying, the next you hit a wall because a client changes their mind, a supply chain hiccup wipes out the order, or someone inside your own organisation drops the ball. What we can control, completely, is our time, our talent, and our treasure—and that’s where the real leverage sits. In a post-pandemic market (and especially as of 2025), buyers are time-poor, inboxes are brutal, and competitors are one click away. So the question is simple: are we making the most of the three things that are actually ours?   Why is a...

info_outline
Become A Master Of Handling Objections show art Become A Master Of Handling Objections

THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo Japan

Objections are not the enemy — they’re signals. In complex B2B and high-ticket selling, an objection often means the buyer is still engaged, still evaluating, and still leaving the door open. The difference between “this is going nowhere” and “we can win this” is whether you follow a disciplined process instead of reacting emotionally. Below is a practical, repeatable objection-handling framework you can run in real time — in Australia, Japan, the US, Europe, in-person or on Zoom — without sounding scripted. Why are objections actually a good sign in sales conversations?...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Sales is a rollercoaster: one month you’re flying, the next you hit a wall because a client changes their mind, a supply chain hiccup wipes out the order, or someone inside your own organisation drops the ball. What we can control, completely, is our time, our talent, and our treasure—and that’s where the real leverage sits.

In a post-pandemic market (and especially as of 2025), buyers are time-poor, inboxes are brutal, and competitors are one click away. So the question is simple: are we making the most of the three things that are actually ours?

 

Why is a salesperson’s time the most expensive asset?

Time is the one asset you can’t replenish, and it dictates your pipeline, your reputation, and your commission. If you spend your week “busy” but not building relationships, you’re basically renting stress.

As a buyer, I see it constantly: poor follow-up. And it’s bizarre, because we all know acquiring a new customer costs far more than expanding an existing customer’s purchase profile (land-and-expand is not a buzzword—it’s survival). Yet many salespeople stop after three rejections in cold calling, then wonder why the quarter looks like a horror movie. Compare that with high-performing teams in the US and Japan who run disciplined cadence systems using Salesforce, HubSpot, or Microsoft Dynamics—touchpoints are planned, tracked, and measured like a production line at Toyota.

Do now: Block recurring weekly follow-up time and treat it like a client meeting—non-negotiable.


How do you stay “top of mind” without spamming people?

You stay top of mind by being useful, personal, and consistent—not by blasting a weekly email and hoping for miracles. Most “newsletters” end up in junk, clutter, or the “unsubscribe and forget forever” bin.

Staying top of mind takes effort, but the upside is massive—especially if your competitor is lazy. Think in terms of buyer psychology: people choose the option that costs them the least mental energy. If they already know you, trust you, and can predict your quality, you become the easy decision. This is why professional services firms—translation agencies, consultancies, training providers—win on relationship continuity. In Japan, where trust and reliability are weighted heavily in B2B decisions, sustained contact beats flashy pitch decks.

Do now: Replace “email blast” with a simple cadence: 1 helpful note + 1 relevant insight + 1 human check-in each month.


What does “good follow-up” look like in the real world?

Good follow-up is a system, not a mood—and it works even when you’re busy. The best example is when a supplier meets you once, then keeps in touch thoughtfully for years, so when you need them, they’re already in pole position. 

That’s not luck. That’s process. It’s logging touchpoints, setting reminders, and sending value that matches the buyer’s context: a short video, a case study, a relevant event invite, a quick “saw this and thought of you.” Compare startups versus multinationals: startups often have hustle but no system; large firms have tools but suffer from internal handoffs. Your job is to combine both—human warmth plus operational discipline.

Mini checklist

  • One CRM record per decision-maker
  • Next step dated and owned
  • 3 channels: email + LinkedIn + one “real” touch (call/voice)

Do now: Set CRM tasks immediately after every interaction—no “I’ll do it later.”


How do you future-proof your sales talent as the market changes?

Talent is time-bound—if your skills don’t evolve, your results won’t either. Being a

Modern selling is a blend: consultative discovery, social credibility, and content that proves you can solve problems. Are you comfortable using LinkedIn, YouTube, short-form video, webinars, and a breadcrumb trail of useful insights? In 2025, buyers often “pre-qualify” you before they reply—your digital footprint becomes your silent salesperson. This is where markets differ: US sellers may lean harder into personal brand and outbound automation; Japan often rewards consistency, humility, and proof over hype. Either way, the basics still matter: questioning, listening, objection handling, and clear next steps—Dale Carnegie fundamentals don’t expire.

Do now: Pick one skill to upgrade this month (video, discovery, negotiation) and practise it weekly.


Is investing in sales training still worth it when so much is free?

Yes—free information is everywhere, but disciplined learning and application are rare. You can binge podcasts, hoard books, and still stay average if you never implement. 

Back in 1939, Dale Carnegie made world-class training accessible through public classes. The logic still holds: if your company doesn’t train you well, invest a microscopic part of your treasure and go get the best. Today, you’ve got Coursera, LinkedIn Learning, Dale Carnegie programs, specialist coaching, and industry conferences across Asia-Pacific, Europe, and North America. The difference between top performers and everyone else isn’t access—it’s commitment and execution. Top sellers learn, apply, customise, refine… then repeat.

Do now: Spend treasure where it changes behaviour: coaching, role-plays, and frameworks you’ll actually use in live deals.


What separates top salespeople from everyone else over the long run?

Top salespeople don’t stop learning—and they don’t just “consume,” they apply. They stay current through market shocks, tech shifts, and buyer behaviour changes, then tailor what they learn to their patch. 

They also protect their time like a dragon guarding gold. They’re intentional about: prospecting blocks, client follow-up, pipeline hygiene, and skill practice. They understand cause-and-effect: no follow-up → no trust → no deal. No talent upgrades → commoditisation → price pressure. No treasure invested → stalled growth. This is true whether you sell SaaS in Singapore, industrial equipment in Osaka, or professional services in Sydney. And as work norms shift—think hybrid work and tighter labour conditions in parts of Asia, including Japan’s evolving workplace reforms in recent years—buyers want clarity, speed, and reliability. Be that person.

Do now: Audit your week: cut 2 low-value activities, add 2 relationship touches, and schedule 1 learning/practice session.


Final wrap

Sales will always throw curveballs—clients change, supply chains wobble, internal delivery misses happen. But time, talent, and treasure are your controllables, and they compound when you manage them like a pro. Build a follow-up system, evolve your skills for modern selling, and invest in learning that translates into behaviour. Then you’ll stop riding the rollercoaster with your eyes closed—and start driving.


Optional FAQs

Is cold calling dead in 2025? Cold calling still works when paired with a cadence (LinkedIn + email + calls) and a clear value hook, not random dialling.

How often should I follow up with a prospect? Monthly is a strong default for warm prospects, with tighter weekly touchpoints during active deal stages.

What’s the best CRM for follow-up? The best CRM is the one you actually use daily—Salesforce, HubSpot, and Dynamics all work if your cadence is disciplined.

Next steps for leaders and salespeople

  • Build a minimum follow-up cadence and measure it weekly
  • Run monthly role-plays on discovery, objections, and closing
  • Set learning KPIs (hours practised, not hours watched)
  • Coach on personal brand: one useful post per week
  • Review pipeline hygiene every Friday

Author bio

Dr. Greg Story, Ph.D. in Japanese Decision-Making, is President of Dale Carnegie Tokyo Training and Adjunct Professor at Griffith University. He is a two-time winner of the Dale Carnegie “One Carnegie Award” (2018, 2021) and recipient of the Griffith University Business School Outstanding Alumnus Award (2012). As a Dale Carnegie Master Trainer, Greg is certified to deliver globally across all leadership, communication, sales, and

Greg has written several books, including three best-sellers — Japan Business MasteryJapan Sales Mastery, and Japan Presentations Mastery — along with Japan Leadership Mastery and How to Stop Wasting Money on Training. His works have been translated into Japanese, including Za Eigyō (ザ営業), Purezen no Tatsujin (プレゼンの達人), Torēningu de Okane o Muda ni Suru no wa Yamemashō (トレーニングでお金を無駄にするのはやめましょう), and Gendaiban “Hito o Ugokasu” Rīdā (現代版「人を動かす」リーダー). 

Greg also publishes daily business insights on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter, and hosts six weekly podcasts. On YouTube, he produces The Cutting Edge Japan Business ShowJapan Business Mastery, and Japan’s Top Business Interviews, followed by executives seeking success strategies in Japan.