Two Tall Guys Talking Sales

Should Sales Leaders Reset Quotas at Midyear

20 min · 30 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Should Sales Leaders Reset Quotas at Midyear

Descripción

Midyear exposes the truth in every sales organization. In this episode of Two Tall Guys Talking Sales, Kevin Lawson and Sean O'Shaughnessey tackle a problem many business owners, sales leaders, and salespeople quietly face at the halfway point of the year: unclear goals, weak commission plans, soft pipeline discipline, and the temptation to reset expectations instead of fixing the sales processes that created the gap. This is a practical conversation about B2B sales management, quota accountability, revenue generation, pipeline prioritization, and the uncomfortable but necessary work required to improve sales success in the second half of the year. Key Topics Discussed * Midyear goal setting when the original plan was missing or unclear — 00:00 Sean explains why some companies reach July without properly documented sales goals or commission plans. The corrective action is not complicated, but it is often avoided: write the plan down, align compensation with company priorities, and make sure salespeople know exactly how they are being measured. * Why sales leaders should not casually reset the goal — 02:14 Kevin argues that adjusting the target downward can create a dangerous management precedent. If the number was the right number, the job is to solve the gap through better sales strategies, qualification, activity, referrals, and pipeline focus—not move the scoreboard. * The rare exception to keeping the original quota — 06:34 Sean adds an important leadership caveat. If the CEO or executive team built the number around a product launch, acquisition, market event, or business assumption that never materialized, that is not a salesperson's problem. That is an executive planning problem, and it should be handled honestly. * Pipeline rationalization and better qualification — 09:57 Kevin walks through the discipline of deciding which deals deserve time and which ones do not. Complex deals, unclear next steps, bad-fit opportunities, and stalled prospects all consume selling capacity. Better qualification improves pipeline velocity by giving salespeople time back to pursue better opportunities. * Time management, delegation, and protecting prospecting time — 13:43 Sean warns against the classic sales rollercoaster: closing current business while starving future pipeline. Whether a company uses SDRs, AEs, business development resources, or full-cycle salespeople, every stage of the sales process needs dedicated time. Revenue management requires knowing where the week actually went. Key Quotes * Sean O'Shaughnessey — 01:14 "You didn't get it done at the first of the year. That doesn't mean you can't do it now." * Kevin Lawson — 03:40 "You never adjust the goal. Your job as a salesperson is to hit the goal or your quota." * Sean O'Shaughnessey — 08:34 "Salespeople can't make their goals for things that are outside of their control." * Kevin Lawson — 10:22 "You've got to figure out which deals are aligned and which ones are not aligned to what you do." * Sean O'Shaughnessey — 14:03 "We were so busy selling that we forgot to sell." Additional Resources * EOS implementers — referenced as part of the broader business coaching and planning conversations happening at midyear. * FocalPoint and ActionCOACH — mentioned as examples of coaching organizations business owners may turn to when trying to catch up or plan ahead. * Microsoft PTAP — referenced by Kevin as "plan to exceed plan," a useful framing for quota planning and sales performance management. * MEDDPICCC, BANT, and SPICED-style qualification methodologies — referenced as examples of structured approaches to qualification, deal inspection, and sales process discipline. * Marketing-generated digital assets — discussed as one practical source of conversation creation when salespeople are behind and need to rebuild pipeline coverage. A Significant Actionable Item from this Podcast Audit your pipeline and calendar before changing the goal. Identify every active opportunity, mark which deals have clear next steps, remove or deprioritize poor-fit opportunities, and block time this week for prospecting, referral requests, outreach to past customers, and networking. Do not rely on optimism. If an opportunity does not match your ideal customer profile, lacks buyer commitment, or requires too much customization to win, it is likely stealing time from better revenue-generating work. Summary This episode is a timely midyear inspection for any B2B salesperson, VP of Sales, business owner, or sales management leader who is trying to protect the second half of the year. Kevin and Sean make a clear argument: missed goals are not solved by pretending the number changed. They are solved by stronger qualifications, clearer commission plans, better time allocation, disciplined sales processes, and more honest pipeline review. If you are behind, ahead, or unsure where you really stand, this conversation will help you decide whether you have a quota problem, a planning problem, a pipeline problem, or a leadership problem—and what to do next.

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Portada del episodio Should Sales Leaders Reset Quotas at Midyear

Should Sales Leaders Reset Quotas at Midyear

Midyear exposes the truth in every sales organization. In this episode of Two Tall Guys Talking Sales, Kevin Lawson and Sean O'Shaughnessey tackle a problem many business owners, sales leaders, and salespeople quietly face at the halfway point of the year: unclear goals, weak commission plans, soft pipeline discipline, and the temptation to reset expectations instead of fixing the sales processes that created the gap. This is a practical conversation about B2B sales management, quota accountability, revenue generation, pipeline prioritization, and the uncomfortable but necessary work required to improve sales success in the second half of the year. Key Topics Discussed * Midyear goal setting when the original plan was missing or unclear — 00:00 Sean explains why some companies reach July without properly documented sales goals or commission plans. The corrective action is not complicated, but it is often avoided: write the plan down, align compensation with company priorities, and make sure salespeople know exactly how they are being measured. * Why sales leaders should not casually reset the goal — 02:14 Kevin argues that adjusting the target downward can create a dangerous management precedent. If the number was the right number, the job is to solve the gap through better sales strategies, qualification, activity, referrals, and pipeline focus—not move the scoreboard. * The rare exception to keeping the original quota — 06:34 Sean adds an important leadership caveat. If the CEO or executive team built the number around a product launch, acquisition, market event, or business assumption that never materialized, that is not a salesperson's problem. That is an executive planning problem, and it should be handled honestly. * Pipeline rationalization and better qualification — 09:57 Kevin walks through the discipline of deciding which deals deserve time and which ones do not. Complex deals, unclear next steps, bad-fit opportunities, and stalled prospects all consume selling capacity. Better qualification improves pipeline velocity by giving salespeople time back to pursue better opportunities. * Time management, delegation, and protecting prospecting time — 13:43 Sean warns against the classic sales rollercoaster: closing current business while starving future pipeline. Whether a company uses SDRs, AEs, business development resources, or full-cycle salespeople, every stage of the sales process needs dedicated time. Revenue management requires knowing where the week actually went. Key Quotes * Sean O'Shaughnessey — 01:14 "You didn't get it done at the first of the year. That doesn't mean you can't do it now." * Kevin Lawson — 03:40 "You never adjust the goal. Your job as a salesperson is to hit the goal or your quota." * Sean O'Shaughnessey — 08:34 "Salespeople can't make their goals for things that are outside of their control." * Kevin Lawson — 10:22 "You've got to figure out which deals are aligned and which ones are not aligned to what you do." * Sean O'Shaughnessey — 14:03 "We were so busy selling that we forgot to sell." Additional Resources * EOS implementers — referenced as part of the broader business coaching and planning conversations happening at midyear. * FocalPoint and ActionCOACH — mentioned as examples of coaching organizations business owners may turn to when trying to catch up or plan ahead. * Microsoft PTAP — referenced by Kevin as "plan to exceed plan," a useful framing for quota planning and sales performance management. * MEDDPICCC, BANT, and SPICED-style qualification methodologies — referenced as examples of structured approaches to qualification, deal inspection, and sales process discipline. * Marketing-generated digital assets — discussed as one practical source of conversation creation when salespeople are behind and need to rebuild pipeline coverage. A Significant Actionable Item from this Podcast Audit your pipeline and calendar before changing the goal. Identify every active opportunity, mark which deals have clear next steps, remove or deprioritize poor-fit opportunities, and block time this week for prospecting, referral requests, outreach to past customers, and networking. Do not rely on optimism. If an opportunity does not match your ideal customer profile, lacks buyer commitment, or requires too much customization to win, it is likely stealing time from better revenue-generating work. Summary This episode is a timely midyear inspection for any B2B salesperson, VP of Sales, business owner, or sales management leader who is trying to protect the second half of the year. Kevin and Sean make a clear argument: missed goals are not solved by pretending the number changed. They are solved by stronger qualifications, clearer commission plans, better time allocation, disciplined sales processes, and more honest pipeline review. If you are behind, ahead, or unsure where you really stand, this conversation will help you decide whether you have a quota problem, a planning problem, a pipeline problem, or a leadership problem—and what to do next.

30 de jun de 202620 min
Portada del episodio From Marine Recon to Venture Capital: Paul Claxton on Sales Strategy, AI, and Founder Readiness

From Marine Recon to Venture Capital: Paul Claxton on Sales Strategy, AI, and Founder Readiness

In this episode of Two Tall Guys Talking Sales, hosts Kevin Lawson and Sean O'Shaughnessey sit down with Paul Anthony Claxton of Digirati Investments for a sharp conversation on venture capital, founder readiness, sales architecture, and why early-stage companies cannot hide behind product obsession or incomplete data. Paul brings a rare blend of Marine Corps reconnaissance discipline, sales leadership, investment judgment, and AI perspective to the table. The result is a fast-moving discussion about Business acumen, customer conversations, market intelligence, Sales processes, and the practical realities of Revenue generation when founders are trying to build something the market may not yet know it needs. Key Topics Discussed Founder adaptability and the path from Marine to venture capitalist — 00:20 Paul explains how adaptability, opportunity recognition, and power networking shaped his move from the Marines into venture capital. His point lands hard for anyone in sales management: the best salespeople and founders do not simply follow the plan. They adjust when the market, the customer, or life changes direction. Why investors look beyond the product — 02:19 Paul discusses what he looks for when evaluating founders and companies. Product matters, but it is not enough. Founders need to understand macroeconomics, microeconomics, contracts, deal structure, customer impact, and the broader commercial environment. That is where Business acumen becomes a serious differentiator. Inventing necessity and creating surrounding market demand — 03:24 Paul introduces Digirati Investments' phrase "inventing necessity" and explains why strong products do more than solve one isolated problem. They create adjacent needs, new sub-industries, and additional opportunities for Revenue generation. This is a useful framing for founders, sales leaders, and anyone building Sales strategies around emerging markets. The danger of product-centric founders — 04:43 Sean pushes into a critical founder question: how often do companies believe they have a market-changing product before they have validated the market? Paul's answer is direct. Too many founders are product-centric instead of people-centric. Real Sales success starts with human conversations long before the product is fully built. Data, AI, and consultative selling in modern sales ecosystems — 05:33 Paul argues that strong data flow is essential, but data alone cannot replace human interaction. He connects AI, CRM automation, customer engagement, and consultative selling to a broader point: modern Sales processes need both high-quality data and high-quality conversations. Reconnaissance, competitor intelligence, and explainable AI — 09:15 Drawing from his Marine background, Paul explains why companies must gather intelligence from both customers and competitors. AI can support that work, but leaders must understand where the data came from and whether it reflects the actual market. Bad assumptions create bad Messaging, weak qualification, and flawed Revenue management decisions. Key Quotes Paul Anthony Claxton — 00:35 "The best salespeople are the most adaptable people." Paul Anthony Claxton — 05:33 "A lot of times I'll run across founders that are product-centric instead of being people-centric." Sean O'Shaughnessey — 08:41 "How do you know that what you're doing is going to work if you don't have salespeople out pre-talking and pre-building up what that problem is?" Paul Anthony Claxton — 09:15 "If you don't have people gathering reconnaissance, it's not just talking to who you think your prospective customers are, but it's also understanding how your competitors qualify." Kevin Lawson — 11:49 "Not only do we have to know as sellers who our total addressable market is, but our service obtainable market is, but it's important to keep that data current." Additional Resources Paul Anthony Claxton — Venture capitalist, U.S. Marine, sales architecture thinker, and guest on this episode. https://www.linkedin.com/in/businessmanathletemarine/ Digirati Investments — Paul's investment firm, discussed in the episode through the lens of "inventing necessity." Explainable AI — Paul's podcast, referenced during the conversation about understanding the origin, quality, and accuracy of AI-driven data. PaulClaxton.io — Paul's personal website, where you can learn more about his work, investments, and related ventures. A Significant Actionable Item from this Podcast Before investing more time, money, or sales effort into a product, schedule direct market conversations with prospective customers and competitive intelligence reviews. Do not rely only on internal conviction, CRM data, AI summaries, or founder enthusiasm. Validate the problem, study how competitors qualify and sell, and pressure-test whether your Value selling story connects to a real business need. This one discipline improves Sales strategies, sharpens Messaging, and prevents companies from building sales motions around assumptions the market has not confirmed. Summary This episode is a compact but high-value conversation for founders, investors, sales leaders, and anyone responsible for Revenue generation in an uncertain market. Paul Anthony Claxton brings a different lens to sales and investment evaluation: part Marine reconnaissance, part venture capitalist, part sales architect. Kevin and Sean guide the discussion into the practical questions that matter most: Does the founder understand the market? Is the product creating real necessity? Is the data explainable? Are customer conversations happening early enough to shape the business before money and time are wasted? Listen to this episode of Two Tall Guys Talking Sales if you want a sharper view of founder readiness, modern sales management, AI-informed selling, and the kind of Business acumen required for durable Sales success. B2B Sales Lab is a private, member-led community for sales professionals who want actionable insights, not theory. It's a space to ask real questions, share proven practices, and connect with others who are serious about improving revenue performance. Designed and led by veteran sales leaders, the Lab is where strategy meets execution. Join us at b2b-sales-lab.com You can reach out to Sean at New Sales Expert, LLC - Sean@NewSales.Expert [Sean@NewSales.Expert] - https://www.linkedin.com/in/soshaughnessey/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/soshaughnessey/] You can reach out to Kevin at Lighthouse Sales Advisors & Sales Xceleration - kevin@lighthousesalesadvisors.com [kevin@lighthousesalesadvisors.com] - https://www.linkedin.com/in/kwlawson/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kwlawson/] You can book time on Kevin's calendar at https://lighthousesalesadvisors.pipedrive.com/scheduler/JP7rZXH3/virtual-meeting-booking-time-with-kevin [https://lighthousesalesadvisors.pipedrive.com/scheduler/JP7rZXH3/virtual-meeting-booking-time-with-kevin] You can book time on Sean's calendar at http://newsales.expert/sean-oshaughnessey-calendar/

23 de jun de 202616 min
Portada del episodio Stop Wasting Time on Bad Deals: Sales Management Lessons for a Cleaner Pipeline

Stop Wasting Time on Bad Deals: Sales Management Lessons for a Cleaner Pipeline

In this episode of Two Tall Guys Talking Sales, hosts Kevin Lawson and Sean O'Shaughnessey take on one of the most expensive problems in B2B selling: pipeline clutter. Sellers have limited customer-facing time, and too much of it gets wasted chasing deals that were never truly qualified, never aligned with the ideal client profile, or never likely to close. Kevin and Sean dig into the math, mindset, and sales management discipline required to protect selling time, improve forecast accuracy, and focus on the right opportunities. This conversation connects time management, Business acumen, Sales strategies, Sales processes, Value selling, Messaging, Revenue management, and Revenue generation into one practical question: Are you spending your limited sales time on deals that can actually produce Sales success? Key Topics Discussed Why seller time is the most valuable sales resource — 00:00 Kevin opens the episode by pointing out that only a fraction of a seller's week is spent directly with customers. The rest disappears into research, reporting, scoping, internal meetings, travel, and administrative drag. That makes time management a revenue issue, not a productivity slogan. How to identify deals that do not belong in your pipeline — 01:14 Sean challenges sellers to open their CRM and look honestly at the deals expected to close in the next quarter or six months. Do they fit the ideal client profile? Do they look like the kinds of customers the company wins? Or are they sitting in the pipeline because the seller hopes they might become something? Using quota math to evaluate opportunity cost — 02:45 Sean breaks the problem down to simple math: take the seller's annual working hours, divide by the quota, then adjust for actual customer-facing time. The farther a prospect is from the ideal client profile, the more time it typically consumes. That raises the real question: could the seller create more revenue by focusing on easier, better-fit deals? The danger of an aspirational pipeline — 04:12 Kevin explains how inflated pipelines create false confidence, poor forecasting, and bad leadership conversations. A pipeline full of hope does not create commissions. A pipeline full of qualified, workable, attainable deals gives sales leaders and sellers better data for decision-making. Discovery discipline and hard qualification questions — 07:07 Kevin emphasizes the importance of asking hard questions early. Budget, business pain, decision authority, and the pain of change must be tested before a deal moves too far forward. If a seller has issued a proposal to someone who cannot buy, does not control the budget, or cannot define the business problem, the sales process has already drifted. Becoming your own sales manager — 08:48 Sean pushes sellers to manage their own pipeline with the same honesty they would expect from a strong sales leader. The best salespeople ask themselves whether a deal is real, whether it is efficient, whether it has access, whether the buyer is engaged, and whether it belongs in this year's forecast at all. Key Quotes Kevin Lawson — 00:00 "As sellers, people who are chasing a quota every year, we have one thing that is so precious that it is absolutely paramount for us to pay attention to, and that's our time." Sean O'Shaughnessey — 01:14 "We all know that if we had more time to call on great customers, we'd probably make more money. So let's talk about calling on great customers." Kevin Lawson — 05:46 "Your commission is driven by your accuracy of closes, not your aspirations. Aspirational deals don't turn into commissions." Sean O'Shaughnessey — 09:09 "The best salespeople are great independent sales managers of themselves." Kevin Lawson — 12:09 "Simply quota, close rate, number of deals, average deal size. That's really all you need, and it's all stuff that's in your pipeline now." Additional Resources B2B Sales Lab — Sean mentions that sellers can use the B2B Sales Lab to pressure-test pipeline questions, get peer feedback, and discuss whether specific opportunities deserve more time and attention. Join the Lab at b2b-sales-lab.com CRM pipeline review — The episode repeatedly encourages sellers to use their CRM as the source of truth for examining deal fit, timing, stage accuracy, close probability, and forecast quality. Ideal Client Profile — Kevin and Sean reinforce the importance of understanding which prospects fit the company's best customer profile and which ones sit too far outside the target to justify the time required. Customer Interaction Hours episode — Kevin refers listeners back to a previous discussion in which Sean explained customer interaction hours and why increasing time in front of the right buyers improves the win position. Quarterly Business Reviews — Kevin notes that past customers and QBRs can help sellers and sales leaders identify strategic conversations, referral opportunities, and ways to generate more of the right pipeline. A Significant Actionable Item from this Podcast Before your next pipeline review, identify three deals in your CRM that do not clearly fit your ideal client profile, lack decision-maker access, have weak urgency, or keep slipping from one forecast period to the next. For each one, decide whether it should stay active, move to a future follow-up task, or be disqualified. Then have the direct conversation with the buyer: "It does not seem like this is a priority right now. Should we pause this and revisit it later?" That single question protects your time, improves forecast accuracy, and forces cleaner revenue management. Summary This episode is a practical reminder that sales success is not created by carrying a bigger pipeline; it is created by carrying a more honest one. Kevin and Sean show why bloated pipelines waste time, damage forecasts, and distract sellers from the deals most likely to generate revenue. The conversation is especially useful for salespeople, sales managers, and company leaders who want better sales processes, sharper qualification, stronger messaging, and more disciplined value selling. If your pipeline looks impressive but does not reliably convert, this episode will challenge you to stop admiring the number and start managing the reality. B2B Sales Lab is a private, member-led community for sales professionals who want actionable insights, not theory. It's a space to ask real questions, share proven practices, and connect with others who are serious about improving revenue performance. Designed and led by veteran sales leaders, the Lab is where strategy meets execution. Join us at b2b-sales-lab.com You can reach out to Sean at New Sales Expert, LLC - Sean@NewSales.Expert [Sean@NewSales.Expert] - https://www.linkedin.com/in/soshaughnessey/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/soshaughnessey/] You can reach out to Kevin at Lighthouse Sales Advisors & Sales Xceleration - kevin@lighthousesalesadvisors.com [kevin@lighthousesalesadvisors.com] - https://www.linkedin.com/in/kwlawson/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kwlawson/] You can book time on Kevin's calendar at https://lighthousesalesadvisors.pipedrive.com/scheduler/JP7rZXH3/virtual-meeting-booking-time-with-kevin [https://lighthousesalesadvisors.pipedrive.com/scheduler/JP7rZXH3/virtual-meeting-booking-time-with-kevin] You can book time on Sean's calendar at http://newsales.expert/sean-oshaughnessey-calendar/

16 de jun de 202617 min
Portada del episodio Are Your Salespeople in the Wrong Roles? How to Match Talent to Revenue Growth

Are Your Salespeople in the Wrong Roles? How to Match Talent to Revenue Growth

Two Tall Guys Talking Sales takes a practical look at one of the most common sales management mistakes: assuming all salespeople are built for the same job. Sean O'Shaughnessey and Kevin Lawson use a basketball analogy to unpack the difference between hunters, farmers, lone wolves, challengers, relationship sellers, transactional sellers, and trappers. This episode challenges owners, sales leaders, and frontline sellers to examine whether their sales processes, compensation plans, and revenue management expectations actually match the type of salesperson required for Sales success. If your team is underperforming, the issue may not be a lack of effort. It may be role design. Key Topics Discussed 01:00 — Why Sales Roles Need Clear Definitions Sean opens with a basketball analogy: if you do not understand the positions, the game becomes harder to follow. The same is true in sales. Confusing labels like hunter, farmer, challenger, lone wolf, and trapper can create bad hiring decisions, poor coaching, and broken sales strategies. 02:50 — Do Not Confuse Seller Type with Business Model Kevin draws an important distinction between the kind of salesperson you have and the kind of business you operate. A transactional sales model, a relationship-driven sales model, and an enterprise sales model each require different selling behaviors, messaging, and support structures. 06:20 — Hunters, Farmers, and the Cost of Misalignment Sean explains why a one-time ERP-style sale usually requires a hunter, while repeat-purchase relationships often require a farmer. Asking one type of salesperson to behave like another may be possible, but it is rarely efficient. Sales leaders need Business acumen to know what role the business actually requires. 08:25 — Lone Wolves, Challengers, and Unsupported Sales Teams The discussion turns to lone wolves and challengers, especially in organizations that give salespeople little infrastructure, weak marketing, poor sales processes, or minimal sales enablement. If leadership expects sellers to "just figure it out," they may be selecting for independence while unintentionally creating risk. 09:50 — How to Reshape a Sales Team Without Blowing It Up Kevin warns against the instinct to immediately replace the team. The better move is to take an intellectually honest look at the team's structure, upskill where possible, and decide whether the business needs account managers, customer service support, hunters, or relationship-focused sellers. 12:50 — The Trapper: Building Toward Enterprise Revenue Generation Sean closes by describing the trapper: the salesperson who can hunt, farm, lead, challenge, and plan proactively for larger future opportunities. This is where Value selling becomes more than a technique. It becomes a disciplined approach to expanding from a pilot project to departmental adoption, divisional traction, and eventually enterprise-level revenue generation. Key Quotes Sean O'Shaughnessey — 01:07 "Not knowing what the roles are is a big deal. So that same kind of thing happens in a sales arena, where you may not understand what type of salesperson you have or what type of salesperson you need." Kevin Lawson — 02:51 "It's important to note that just because somebody looks like something doesn't mean that's actually what they are." Kevin Lawson — 03:51 "You, as a seller, need to understand your business model so that you know how to sell." Sean O'Shaughnessey — 08:08 "Asking one type of salesperson to be another is really difficult to do. That's like asking that point guard to be the center." Kevin Lawson — 10:39 "Change people before you have to change people." Sean O'Shaughnessey — 14:15 "How do you become proactive? How do you plan for the deal that's going to happen in nine months?" Additional Resources The Challenger Sale — Referenced during the discussion of lone wolves and challengers, especially the idea that some sellers succeed by taking control of complex customer conversations. Eliminate Your Competition by Sean O'Shaughnessey — Sean refers to the "trapper" concept from his book as the more complete sales archetype for complex, enterprise-level selling. B2B Sales Lab — Kevin mentions that this topic will be explored further in B2B Sales Lab office hours, where sellers and sales leaders can dig into the practical work of assessing team fit, role design, and sales execution. A Significant Actionable Item from this Podcast Audit your current sales team against the sales motion your business actually requires. Do not start with personality labels. Start with the business model. Are you selling once and moving on? Are you expanding accounts over years? Are your deals transactional, relationship-driven, enterprise-level, or a mix? Then map each salesperson against the role the business needs: hunter, farmer, account manager, challenger, lone wolf, or trapper. The decision that follows is the real work. Some people need coaching. Some need a different seat. Some roles need compensation redesign. Some teams need additional support around account management, customer success, prospecting, or CRM discipline. Sales success improves when the revenue management system fits the people, the process, and the customer buying motion. Summary This episode of Two Tall Guys Talking Sales is a useful listen for any owner, VP of Sales, sales manager, or seller who has ever wondered why a capable salesperson still struggles in the wrong role. Kevin Lawson and Sean O'Shaughnessey make the case that sales performance is not only about talent. It is about fit, structure, expectations, and leadership discipline. If your sales strategies are not producing the results you expected, this conversation will help you look beyond activity levels and ask the more important question: Do we have the right people in the right sales roles for how our customers actually buy? B2B Sales Lab is a private, member-led community for sales professionals who want actionable insights, not theory. It's a space to ask real questions, share proven practices, and connect with others who are serious about improving revenue performance. Designed and led by veteran sales leaders, the Lab is where strategy meets execution. Join us at b2b-sales-lab.com You can reach out to Sean at New Sales Expert, LLC - Sean@NewSales.Expert [Sean@NewSales.Expert] - https://www.linkedin.com/in/soshaughnessey/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/soshaughnessey/] You can reach out to Kevin at Lighthouse Sales Advisors & Sales Xceleration - kevin@lighthousesalesadvisors.com [kevin@lighthousesalesadvisors.com] - https://www.linkedin.com/in/kwlawson/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kwlawson/] You can book time on Kevin's calendar at https://lighthousesalesadvisors.pipedrive.com/scheduler/JP7rZXH3/virtual-meeting-booking-time-with-kevin [https://lighthousesalesadvisors.pipedrive.com/scheduler/JP7rZXH3/virtual-meeting-booking-time-with-kevin] You can book time on Sean's calendar at http://newsales.expert/sean-oshaughnessey-calendar/

9 de jun de 202618 min
Portada del episodio When Buyers Don't Care: Stop Selling Features and Start Selling Value

When Buyers Don't Care: Stop Selling Features and Start Selling Value

Opening a prospecting conversation with "we have 180 million contacts" may sound impressive inside the seller's company, but it often misses the buyer's reality. In this episode of Two Tall Guys Talking Sales, Kevin Lawson and Sean O'Shaughnessey challenge salespeople and sales leaders to stop confusing features with value. They unpack why strong Messaging starts with the buyer's problem, how Value selling creates separation, and why better sales management requires sales teams to understand what customers actually buy—not just what sellers think they sell. Key Topics Discussed Why "more data" is not the value proposition — 00:00 Sean opens with a sharp critique of prospecting tools that lead with database size. A salesperson does not need 10 million contacts. They need the right four people inside the right account. That distinction is central to effective Sales strategies because activity without relevance does not generate Revenue. The buyer does not buy your product; they buy the outcome — 01:56 Kevin reframes the discussion around the "why" behind value propositions. Customers rarely wake up wanting sales infrastructure, fractional sales leadership, or backend data aggregation. They want reliability, growth, better decision-making, and improved business performance. That is where real Business acumen enters the sales conversation. The hospital cleaning example: selling safety, not cleaning supplies — 04:21 Kevin shares a memorable story about a janitorial services salesperson who understood the true value of his work. In a hospital, the outcome was not a clean room. It was a safe, sterile environment for children receiving serious care. That example lands because it shows how Value selling moves beyond product language into buyer consequence. Sean's college selection story: outcomes beat features — 07:02 Sean explains how his college won his attention not by selling class size, curriculum, or facilities, but by emphasizing employment outcomes. For a young person entering a difficult economy, "graduates get jobs" mattered more than institutional features. The lesson applies directly to modern sales processes: speak to the outcome the buyer is trying to achieve. Using PONI to uncover what customers really value — 09:33 Sean introduces PONI: Project, Old way, New way, Improvement. It is a simple but powerful way to build case studies, sharpen Messaging, and identify what your product actually does for customers. The improvement is the story. The product is only the mechanism. Stop training buyers to shop you on price — 10:52 Kevin gets practical about a common sales mistake: opening with "I can save you money." That may feel buyer-friendly, but it teaches the customer to evaluate you on price alone. Strong Revenue management depends on protecting margin, defending value, and guiding the buyer toward profit, growth, reliability, and strategic impact. Key Quotes Sean O'Shaughnessey — 00:32 "I have never needed 10 million people that I need to talk to. What I needed was the four people at that company." Kevin Lawson — 04:21 "You all have the need to sell your product, but your customer may not need to buy your product. They need what your product does for them." Sean O'Shaughnessey — 09:57 "What was the improvement? Go figure that out, and then from that point on, always talk about the improvement." Kevin Lawson — 11:13 "If all you can do is save them money, you're not adding any other value." Kevin Lawson — 13:39 "Revenue feeds ego, profit feeds family." Additional Resources B2B Sales Lab — Kevin invites listeners to join the B2B Sales Lab for office hours, peer discussion, and deeper work on real-world sales challenges. Visit b2b-sales-lab.com. PONI Framework — Sean's practical structure for turning customer stories into stronger sales conversations: Project, Old way, New way, Improvement. CIH and Metrics — Kevin references prior podcast discussions on CIH and metrics as foundational to improving sales execution, qualification, and the probability of success in major opportunities. A Significant Actionable Item from this Podcast Interview your five best customers and ask them to show you how they use your product or service. Do not ask what features they like. Ask what changed. What was harder before? What is easier now? What risk disappeared? What cost came out? What revenue opportunity opened up? Then rewrite your primary sales message around the improvement rather than the product. That single exercise will expose whether your current Messaging supports real Sales success or merely describes what you sell. Summary This episode is a direct challenge to lazy positioning. Kevin and Sean are not arguing against features, data, tools, or price discipline; they are arguing against making those things the center of the sales conversation. Buyers care about outcomes, risk, growth, profit, reliability, and internal justification. If your sales management system, Sales strategies, and sales processes do not force sellers to uncover and communicate those outcomes, your team will drift toward feature dumping and price defense. Listen to this episode if you want a sharper way to explain value, protect margin, improve Revenue generation, and turn customer outcomes into sales conversations that actually matter. B2B Sales Lab is a private, member-led community for sales professionals who want actionable insights, not theory. It's a space to ask real questions, share proven practices, and connect with others who are serious about improving revenue performance. Designed and led by veteran sales leaders, the Lab is where strategy meets execution. Join us at b2b-sales-lab.com You can reach out to Sean at New Sales Expert, LLC - Sean@NewSales.Expert [Sean@NewSales.Expert] - https://www.linkedin.com/in/soshaughnessey/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/soshaughnessey/] You can reach out to Kevin at Lighthouse Sales Advisors & Sales Xceleration - kevin@lighthousesalesadvisors.com [kevin@lighthousesalesadvisors.com] - https://www.linkedin.com/in/kwlawson/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kwlawson/] You can book time on Kevin's calendar at https://lighthousesalesadvisors.pipedrive.com/scheduler/JP7rZXH3/virtual-meeting-booking-time-with-kevin [https://lighthousesalesadvisors.pipedrive.com/scheduler/JP7rZXH3/virtual-meeting-booking-time-with-kevin] You can book time on Sean's calendar at http://newsales.expert/sean-oshaughnessey-calendar/

2 de jun de 202618 min