Sales quota achievement has declined over the last 5-6 years due to increased competition, informed buyers with internet access, and choice paralysis from too many options causing buyer confusion and indecision.
A Vantage Point study of 600 sales managers revealed a 39% performance gap between top performers achieving 115% of quota and bottom performers at 76% of quota, demonstrating the measurable impact of effective sales coaching.
The SPEED coaching model provides a structured approach: Situation (review numbers/pipeline), Problem (identify 1-2 issues), Explore (brainstorm solutions), Execution (create action plan), and Data (measure with KPIs).
To shorten long sales cycles, require all key decision-makers present for in-person presentations or use video/phone conferencing instead, as having complete decision-maker participation increases probability of closing faster and eliminates wasted time.
The global economy and internet have intensified competition and made product differentiation harder as features become quickly commoditized, making sales coaching critical for success in crowded markets.
Break, Bond, Build formula creates trusted advisor status: break customers by revealing knowledge gaps in market trends and product differentiation, bond through empathizing with their challenges, build by presenting actionable solutions for career or business growth.
In B2B sales, the break phase specifically targets showing customers they lack complete understanding of market trends, product differentiation, and underlying business issues before positioning yourself as the solution provider.
Managers apply the formula to salespeople by breaking through showing performance shortcomings to get admission of need, bonding via sharing personal struggle stories, then building with structured 30-90 day improvement plans.
Victor Antonio's Sales Velocity Academy already integrates the Break, Bond, Build storyline into its hero story course, providing structured training on this connection methodology.
Jonathan Sprinkles developed this approach through years of presentation power and connectology techniques focused on establishing connections and improving stage presence across professional contexts.
Master five core metrics to establish credibility: quota, pipeline deals, close/win rate, average deal size, and sales cycle length - knowing these numbers enables data-driven conversations and positions you as a trusted advisor rather than just a vendor.
Create a visual competitor map with price on vertical axis and product/competitor on horizontal axis to identify your market position and enable persuasive conversations about where your offering stands relative to alternatives.
When customers claim lower competitor pricing, use detailed knowledge of specifications and value differences to demonstrate why it's not an apples-to-apples comparison and justify your pricing through specific feature breakdowns.
Understanding industry and market norms allows you to gauge customer performance against benchmarks and identify improvement opportunities - if customers don't know their own numbers, it reveals their lack of business understanding.
Top salespeople master three dimensions: personal numbers (own metrics), customer numbers (client performance), and market numbers (industry benchmarks) - this comprehensive knowledge allows them to effectively guide the sale as trusted advisors.
When someone says "So you're saying that", pause and analyze their intent by listening to both words and tone—they may be seeking minimization, clarification, or misrepresentation of your statement.
Sarcastic tone behind "So you're saying that" reveals a hidden agenda to trap you rather than genuine clarification, signaling a verbal bully attempting to ridicule or misrepresent your position.
Taking a pause before answering, even when it feels like an eternity, demonstrates you're giving their statement serious thought and positions you as a trusted advisor and expert rather than appearing defensive.
When trapped by misrepresentation, respond with full clarification and detailed explanation instead of yes or no—control the conversation by rephrasing their question and asking if your restatement makes sense.
Practice active listening to detect tone behind words as an extra layer of information, because responding to the tone can be more effective than addressing content alone when handling verbal bullies.
Host Victor Antonio emphasizes the critical role of non-verbal communication in building rapport and closing deals. He argues that high-performing sales professionals must listen with their eyes by observing physical shifts, such as posture and eye contact, to gauge a client's true intentions. Since body language often reveals subconscious truths that spoken words may hide, paying attention to these visual cues helps identify hesitation or urgency. Antonio suggests practicing these observational skills in everyday settings, like elevators, to better assess a person's mental state through their attire and belongings. Ultimately, mastering the ability to read physical signals allows a salesperson to adjust their approach and connect more effectively with their audience.