Lenny's Podcast: Product | Career | Growth - The surprising truth about what closes deals: Insights from 2.5m sales conversations | Matt Dixon (author of The Challenger Sale and The JOLT Effect)
Episode Date: May 30, 2024Matt Dixon is one of the world’s foremost experts in sales and the author of The Challenger Sale, which sold over a million copies worldwide and was a #1 Amazon and Wall Street Journal bestseller. H...is most recent book, The JOLT Effect, focuses on overcoming customer indecision—one of the biggest challenges to closing deals. Outside of writing, Matt co-founded DCM Insights, a boutique consultancy helping organizations understand customer behavior, and is a frequent contributor to the Harvard Business Review, with more than 20 print and online articles to his credit. In our conversation, we discuss:• Why 40% to 60% of qualified sales opportunities are lost due to customer indecision• Why dialing up FOMO doesn’t work, and what to do instead• The “pings and echoes” technique to catch issues early• The JOLT method for overcoming indecision• Key lessons from The Challenger Sale• Practical examples of how to apply these principles to close more deals—Brought to you by:• Enterpret—Transform customer feedback into product growth• Webflow—The web experience platform• Heap—Cross-platform product analytics that converts, engages, and retains customers—Find the transcript at: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/p/close-more-deals-matt-dixon—Where to find Matt Dixon:• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthewxdixon• Website: https://www.jolteffect.com/—Where to find Lenny:• Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com• X: https://twitter.com/lennysan• LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lennyrachitsky/—In this episode, we cover:(00:00) Matt’s background(01:57) The research behind Matt’s books(06:08) Insights from The JOLT Effect(10:15) FOMO vs. FOMU(18:18) An example of selling software(26:04) The JOLT method Step 1: Judge their level of indecision(29:41) The “pings and echoes” technique(34:49) Step 2: Offer a recommendation(38:36) Step 3: Limit the exploration(41:43) Step 4: Take risk off the table(45:58) When to hit the pause button with a customer(47:27) Insights from The Challenger Sale(49:07) An example of a challenger sale(55:23) Where to find Matt—Referenced:• A step-by-step guide to crafting a sales pitch that wins | April Dunford (author of Obviously Awesome and Sales Pitch): https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/p/a-step-by-step-guide-to-crafting• The Challenger Sale: Taking Control of the Customer Conversation: https://www.amazon.com/Challenger-Sale-Control-Customer-Conversation/dp/0670922854• The JOLT Effect: How High Performers Overcome Customer Indecision: https://www.amazon.com/JOLT-Effect-Performers-Overcome-Indecision/dp/0593538102• Gartner acquires CEB: https://www.gartner.com/en/about/acquisitions/history/ceb-acquisition• Tiger King on Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/title/81115994• Why sourdough went viral: https://www.economist.com/1843/2020/08/04/why-sourdough-went-viral• Neil Rackham: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neil_Rackham• Status quo bias in decision-making: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Status_quo_bias• Omission bias: https://thedecisionlab.com/biases/omission-bias• Gartner Magic Quadrant & Critical Capabilities: https://www.gartner.com/en/research/magic-quadrant• Dunning-Kruger effect: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect• Stop Losing Sales to Customer Indecision: https://hbr.org/2022/06/stop-losing-sales-to-customer-indecision• Dentsply Sirona: https://www.dentsplysirona.com/• “We happy?” Briefcase scene from Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FGchDuOpbhE• Nupro Freedom Cordless Prophy System: https://www.dentsplysirona.com/en-us/discover/discover-by-category/preventive/hygiene-handpieces.html—Production and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@lennyrachitsky.com.—Lenny may be an investor in the companies discussed. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.lennysnewsletter.com/subscribe
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We collected 2.5 million sales calls and studied them with a machine learning platform at scale.
The big insight is that you're losing most of your sales deals, not to competition, but to indecision.
And that indecision stems from their fear of failure. Diling up the foam will backfires 87% of the time.
They're not afraid of missing out. They're afraid of messing up.
You just talk about how to actually leverage these insights to improve your sales process.
You have something I think you call it the jolt method.
Kind of jolt them forward. So the first thing is we've got to judge their level of indecision.
The second thing is we've got to offer a recommendation.
The third thing is we've got to get them to start trusting us.
We call limit the exploration.
And the T is we've got to de-risk the deal.
We've got to take some risk off the table.
Great segue to the challenger sale, which is basically this on steroid.
Most salespeople are trying to figure out what keeping the customer up at night.
The challenger approach is about showing the customer what should be keeping them up at
night.
What's a risk that they don't know about, but you do?
Holy moly.
This is going to be the most action-packed high-density podcast episode we've done.
Today, my guest is Matt Dixon.
Matt is one of the world's foremost experts in sales, known for his groundbreaking research
into what makes the best salespeople different from everyone else.
His first book, The Challenger Sale, was a number one Wall Street Journal bestseller
and has sold over a million copies worldwide.
His most recent book, The Jolt Effect, builds on his lessons and insights, and will
change how you do sales.
In our conversation, Matt breaks down what you're probably doing wrong in your sales process
based on research into millions of sales conversations
and then how to tweak your process to be a lot more successful.
This episode is for anyone that wants to improve their sales skills
or improve the rate at which they close deals.
With that, I bring you Matt Dixon.
And if you enjoy this podcast, don't forget to subscribe and follow it
in your favorite podcasting app or YouTube.
It's the best way to avoid missing future episodes,
and it helps the podcast tremendously.
Matt, thank you so much for being here.
Welcome to the podcast.
It's great to be here. Thank you for the invitation, Lenny.
It's great to have you here.
So first of all, a huge thank you to April Dunford for connecting us.
She's a huge fan of your work.
She mentioned you a number of times on the podcast episode that she did.
She's great. Yeah, she's very nice.
She's amazing.
Okay, so you basically spend your time researching salespeople
and digging into what makes the best salespeople different from all the rest.
And then synthesizing these lessons into these really actionable pieces.
of advice so that anyone can become better at sales, which to me feels like a dream come true,
even if I'm not a salesperson, even though many of us do sales part-time, but especially if
you're a salesperson. So first of all, just to give people a sense of the work that you do,
can you just talk a bit about the research that went into the books that we're going to talk
about? We're going to be focusing on the Challenger sale and the Jolt effect. What is the research
that you did? Yeah, sure. So to start with that Challenger, because that chronologically
came first. So we actually started that research study and I think it was in late 2008 actually.
And we published the initial results to, at the time I was working for a company called C.E.B,
which was acquired by Gartner Group in 2017, research organization. And I was running the group
that served heads of sales, business to business heads of sales around the world. We had
five or six hundred clients around the world. And we launched that study in 08. We published the initial
results for our clients in 09. We kept collecting some data.
And then we published the book in 2011.
The book was published off a data set of 6,000 salespeople.
So we did an in-depth survey with 6,000 salespeople as well as collected performance data on those 6,000 sellers.
It was a global cross-industry, different types of companies as well, product companies, services companies, large, small, slow growth, fast growth, you name it.
Over time, though, you know, that research has been ongoing.
So we've collected data, I think, to date on roughly a quarter million.
salespeople around the world that we continue to go back and not just validate the original
findings, but look at how things are changing and do cuts of the data now that the data set
so big. So that was a survey-based piece of research we did. The jolt effect, we started that
research in 2020, actually. It was actually in March of 2020, which I think is a time that everybody
remembers with probably mixed emotions, most of them bad. I think, though, but you remember
March was a time when people were getting into Tiger King and Baking,
Howard O'Brett. A few months later, that got really old. But in the beginning, it was kind of, you know, surprising and weird and, you know, this whole pandemic thing. But we actually thought, because we're huge nerds, that this would be an interesting time to do a sales research project. We had always been fascinated by what Professor Neil Rackham did back in the 70s and 80s and spin selling. And he and his research team sat in on 30-something thousand sales calls physically sat in on these meetings and took notes. They're a team.
of psychologists to produce the research that went into spin selling. And so we always kind of aspire
to get at the, if you will, at the coal face or where the rubber hits the road in sales, which is
the sales conversation when that salesperson sitting across from the customer. The problem with
that is it's really hard to get people to pay for that kind of research into that kind of undertaking,
and then let alone getting invited into those meetings. There's a lot of the really critical sales
meetings took place, of course, in the client's office until March of 2020, when that all changed
and the entire sales process for every company on earth went to Zoom and Teams and WebEx
and other virtual platforms.
And so we recruited several dozen companies across industry and around the world into a large
global study.
We collected two and a half million sales calls and studied them with a machine learning platform
at scale.
So that was a very different kind of research project.
And honestly, it's fun just as a researcher to look back on Challenger and, you know, the
manual kind of survey-based approach and the interviews and all.
The stuff to fast forward to like today being able to take advantage of large data sets and advanced technology to study, you know, millions of sales conversations is pretty cool.
Amazing. Okay. So the second book, the most recent book, The Jolt Effect, is based on these two and a half million sales conversations.
That's right.
I love insights that come from tons of data. So this is most excellent.
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Let's dive into the insights from the jolt effect.
So the way that I understand is the big insight is that you're losing most of your sales
deals not to competition, but to indecision.
Basically, customers preferring to do nothing versus choosing something because they are
afraid of making a mistake.
Good summary.
Yeah.
If you're busy,
you send it more succinctly.
I've been doing this for a while now,
and you said it way more succinctly than I can.
I think, you know, we,
just to back up for a little bit,
I think one of the data points I always start with
when I present the research on the Jolt effect
is that our analysis showed that
anywhere between 40 and 60%
of the average salesperson's qualified pipelines.
These aren't just leads,
you know,
sometimes bad leads that are thrown over to us by marketing.
These are qualified opportunities.
These are people we've met with, customers we've pursued, we've engaged, they're in the sales process.
40 to 60% of them will be ultimately marked as closed, lost, no decision.
That's actually, I think that number is actually on the rise, especially in places like SaaS and in the broader tech sector over the past year.
But that's a really painful thing, right?
If you think about as a salesperson, that for 46% of your deals, you're going to spend a lot of time, energy, resources, a lot of your company's money and their time and resources pursuing these.
opportunities where you eventually just get ghosted. And you don't really know what happened,
just like the customer, the opportunity evaporated on you, they ghosted you, they went radio
silent. You don't really know what happened there. And so we decided to take this two and a half
million sales call data set, which you could have used to answer lots of different questions,
but we were really fascinated by this question, maybe two, two questions. One is, why do customers
make no decision? Because you understand it's frustrating as a salesperson, but it's also puzzling for
customers to do that. They go through the entire process to evaluate a solution. And many of those
customers say, yeah, I want to buy. And then they go to the salesperson. And it's just, it's so
puzzling. Like, why would they waste their own time evaluating a solution and then doing nothing?
Then the more important question is probably, what are the very best salespeople do differently?
What if they figured out to avoid that outcome? Cool. And we're going to talk about that latter
part. To help people understand why, because it sounds like, okay, I guess this happens, but
Help people understand why this happens.
Like, why are people nervous to make a mistake and not make a decision at all?
So let me maybe take us a step back.
There was a reason we actually even asked that question that you just asked.
And the reason was this.
You know, when we looked at sales calls, if you think of the typical sales process or buying journey, it kind of moves through three phases.
Phase number one is the customer in their status quo.
It's what they do today, right?
They use your competitor's product.
Maybe they do use a homegrown solution.
maybe they never saw a need for a solution like yours, but that's their current state.
Step two is we've got to get them to agree that the current state is no longer acceptable,
and they've got to move forward in a new and different way.
We call that agreement on a vision.
We've got to get their intent to move forward and to change.
And that step number three is you've got to get them to buy something, right?
So that's the action step where they execute the docu sign,
they sign on the line that is dotted and they send the contract back.
It's a simple three-step process.
And what we found in our analysis is one of the big places where a lot of deals
fall out of that process is between intent and action. So it's after the point where the customer
says, yeah, Lenny, this sounds great, I'm sold, let's talk. But before the point where that
actually deal gets sold, a lot of deals kind of go sideways in that moment. And the way this comes
across in sales calls is that customers start, if you will, relitigating concerns that they
had asked and you thought you'd address much earlier, like what might go wrong? And is this really
the right answer for us? And these are things that are puzzling to
salespeople because it feels like this thing is slipping through my fingers, like right before my
eyes. I thought we had this close. I thought you said you wanted to move forward. And now you're
asking questions that we addressed three months ago, what's going on? And so what salespeople
tend to do because they've grown up in a world where they've been told, the only reason the customer
hesitates is because you haven't put to bed their status quo bias. So we all know, all human beings,
not just customers, but perhaps especially customers, are guilty of status quo bias, meaning we are
prone to laziness and doing nothing because it's easier, it's inertia, right? It's easier to
just keep doing more of the same than to change behavior. Change is really hard.
And salespeople been taught that the status quo is their biggest competitor. And if the customer
is starting to get cold feet, it's because they still think either what they're doing today
is good enough. What you are proposing is not a very compelling enough reason to change or maybe
it's just not a top hurry for them or their organization. It's got to be one of those reasons.
So what salespeople have been armed to do is go out and dial up the phomo, right?
and kind of make the customer sweat a little bit.
So the first thing they do is they say,
you know, Lenny, remember the demos and the proof of concept trial,
how excited you were and like those benefits,
like you got to pay for it.
Like you're not going to get all those great benefits for your organization
unless you sign the agreement.
If that doesn't work,
I'll try to kind of scare you into action
by dialing up the fear, uncertainty,
and doubt and saying, Lenny, you know,
you told me about these problems in your business.
You guys are really struggling right now.
By the way, I mentioned we're working with all of your competitors
and they're seeing tremendous benefits from our product
and you're going to be left in the dust.
Those problems you brought up with me,
they're not going to solve themselves.
So I'm trying to create that burning platform
a little bit for the customer.
And get them to realize the cost of their inaction.
Like there is a cost of doing nothing.
And if those two things don't work,
what most salespeople go to is the 10% discount
that's only good at this quarter.
So it's like the price-driven urgency.
Like maybe this will be the thing you need
to just get you over the finish line.
What we were so surprised by,
which led us to the question you asked Lenny,
was that 87% of the time when salespeople do that dial up the FOMO in those moments,
especially with a customer who says that they're ready to move forward,
but they start to backpedal and waffle and waver and become hesitant.
Dialing up the FOMO backfires 87% of the time.
In other words, it increases the odds.
The deal will be lost in no decision.
If it weren't for that finding,
we never would have even bothered asking the question about,
like, why do people end up, why do we lose deals in a decision?
Why do customers make no decision?
But this was really puzzling because it flew in the face of everything we talked about, including, you know, in Challenger, to be totally candid, we talk about how Challenges are exceptional at breaking the customer status quo bias by showing them the pain of same is worse than the pain of change.
And again, overcoming that inertia that not just individuals, but organizations suffer from.
Challenges are really good at that.
And so here we see that the tactics that you might associate with challenging actually kind of backfire, which was as the author of the Challenger, still a little bit troubling to me.
but we'll come back to that.
But I think what we realized was we got it right,
but we got it kind of half right.
And so we went back into the data,
and we asked a slightly different question,
which is why are deals lost in no decision?
What drives that?
And we found that actually there are a lot of deals
that are lost because the customer does actually prefer their status quo.
So that is status quo bias.
Like they believe what they're doing today is good enough,
what you're talking about is not a compelling enough reason to change,
or this is not a top priority.
These are all status quo preference reasons.
but it turns out those are only 44% of the no decision losses.
56% of no decision losses are customers who want to buy but can't buy because they're
stuck in this no man's land of indecision.
And that indecision itself stems from their fear of failure, which you put your finger on
earlier.
And this is the part I found so fascinating.
So we dug into the psych research.
We read probably 30 years of cognitive psychology journal articles.
of them from Dutch universities, which I find very interesting, but I'm fairly very big into this stuff.
You know, a lot of the condominance ofversky work around loss ofversion and prospect theory,
etc. In one of the big findings we came across is that there's actually a more powerful human
bias, even more powerful than status quo bias, that rears its ugly head and causes indecision.
And that is called the omission bias. The omission bias is, if you get down to it, is the fact
that people don't want to be blamed for making decisions that lead to a loss.
In the human mind, there are two types of loss that we think about.
We all like to avoid loss, but not all loss is created equal.
There are losses that happen when we do nothing, and then there are losses that happen
because we did something.
So we made a decision.
We picked a vendor.
We executed a contract and then something bad happened.
And it turns out that in the human mind, people are okay with missing out.
They are not okay with messing up and being blamed.
And this is really powerful.
It's even more powerful than status quo bias, as I said.
And so the shorthand for salespeople is this.
Dialing up the FOMO can be very effective to overcome status quo bias.
But knowing that every human being, including all of your customers,
who I'd include in that definition of human beings,
are definitely afraid of being personally blamed if things go wrong.
The FOMU actually matters more than the faux mo.
The FOMU is the fear of messing up or in the not safe for work version of your podcast,
I'd say Fou Fu, but your listeners.
to figure out what that stands for on their own. But this is really powerful for
salespeople, right, to understand, look, if you are trying to scare your customer into action,
you're going to miss out on these benefits, you're going to miss out in solving these problems.
You're just going to pay more later if you don't say yes now. What you're really doing is using
scare tactics, but you're trying to scare somebody who's already afraid. The problem is they're
not afraid of the thing you think they're afraid of. They're not afraid of missing out. They're afraid
of messing up. And so we've got to address that as salespeople. We've got to help instill the confidence
in the customer that you're making a great decision.
I've got your back.
You're going to look like a hero, not like a fool.
And that's really what the jolt effect is about,
is about how the very best salespeople execute that.
So it wasn't that we were wrong with challengers,
just the story was kind of incomplete.
You got to break status quo bias.
If you don't do that, you're never going to have an indecision problem.
But even once you overcome the customer's indifference in their status quo bias,
you've got a second battle.
You've got to instill the confidence and make them feel good about this,
frankly, leap of faith they're about to take and their fear, you got to deal with the fear that
if something goes wrong, they're worried that they're going to be blamed for it.
We're going to talk about this method you developed for how to actually do all the things
you're talking about.
But first, to make this even more real, what I'm thinking about is an example.
So is a good example, maybe a CRM, like a better CRM product.
Say someone has Salesforce installed and now they're like, there's probably something better
out there.
We should probably evaluate.
And then I'm thinking from the perspective of a startup trying to build a better
serum. There's always this advice. You have to be 10 times better for anyone to pay any attention.
And I think that feeds into exactly what you're showing. It needs to be so much better that the sphere is
reduced. You just talk about maybe an example, whether it's that one or a different one to make this
more concrete. We encountered a ton of examples. It's so interesting. You mentioned startups.
And I think sometimes I was actually with a big enterprise software company. And I think when I
presented this research to some of their sales leaders, and one of the folks in the,
room said, I'm really glad we are who we are, that we are the 800-pound gorilla,
especially in a market like we're in right now, because it was the old adage, it was an IBM,
but the old adage is that nobody ever got fired for buying from IBM, right?
This company is like the IBM of their space.
They're the 800-pound gorilla.
They've got the brand strength, the reputation.
They're the safe choice, right?
And so this team felt kind of comfortable or comforted, I should say, by that fact,
especially in a tight environment where it's a battle for deal.
and for mind share and for wins out there in the market right now, especially in tech.
And what I said is you've got to remember, though, that may be true.
And I would argue, and I think you're right, that for a startup, yeah, you've got to be 10 times
better to get that mine share.
It may be even better than that to get somebody to take a leap of faith with you.
And so there is inherent risk in going with the unproven player.
But I caution these folks, and I said, now remember, what are the things that drive fear or failure?
in indecision. It turns out there are three big ones. The first one is, have I made the right
choice? I know I want to work with this vendor, but did I configure the solution, the proposal
the right way, the right contract length, the right implementation, the right use cases, the right
integrations, all that professional services are DIY, all those big questions. The second thing
that customers worry about, their second fear of failure, is that they're going to learn something
after the contract assigned that's going to make the decision look like not such a great
decision. I'll give you a really specific example about this.
spoke to a tech company not too long ago, maybe a month ago, and they landed their biggest deal
of their existence. It was an early stage company, seven-figure deal, game changer for this
organization, and they beat out some big established competitors. It's a huge win. They went out,
they celebrated. It was just totally amazing. Their first big enterprise win and their first seven-figure
deal and their first victory against some of these incumbents. Unfortunately, about two weeks after
they won this deal, the new Gardner Magic Quadrant on their space came out. And they were shown to be
kind of, eh, right? They weren't the leader, but they were sort of middle of the pack. And all of a sudden,
the client who signed the agreement, the CTO, just got like crap rained up from everybody saying,
did you see the Gardner Magic Quadrant? It looks like the company we just plunked down seven figures with
was kind of seen as so-so by the Gardner analyst. Have we talked to these guys and those guys? And why are we
going with the leaders and blah, blah, blah, they ended up backing out of the contract because the
CTO said, I'm spending every day talking to all the other key stakeholders trying to convince them
that, yes, we did all of our due diligence.
But I just, life is too short and we're probably going to end up going with one of the big players.
We're sorry.
I mean, that's such a painful story, right?
But that's the customer who's like, they're going to keep doing research because they don't want
to be surprised when some new piece of information comes to light.
So it's the second big fear failure driver or failure driver.
the third one is that the customer is worried they're just not going to see the ROI.
They're not going to get the full benefits.
You might project for them a 5x improvement in sales productivity.
What if it comes in at 2 or 3x?
And my name's on the agreement and the CFO comes asking why we didn't get the benefits we thought.
You know, in today's environment, that's not just egg on your face.
You can get fired for that stuff.
So, you know, this is the client who's really looking for that vendor to have their back and to assure them that they're going to see the benefits that are being projected.
promised through the sale. So what I said to this big enterprise tech company was, look,
you guys, yes, it's tough to be a startup right now, early stage company. There's a lot of
risks there. But who's offering more choices? Them or you guys? You guys have a partner ecosystem.
You have like 20 different cloud products. You bought like seven companies in the past three years.
You have a cornucopia of options, which adds to the buyer's anxiety that they haven't chosen the right
thing. Second, do you think there's more written about you guys or
about them. You could fill a football stadium with all the coverage on you guys and, you know,
are your competitors. I mean, there is, everybody's got an opinion about you because you are the
800-pound grill and everybody's worked with you before. And they have opinions good and bad.
And people want to leave no stone and turn. And then lastly, it turns out you guys are a lot more
expensive because you're trying to move from selling simple products like these ankle biters out there,
these startups into selling big enterprise solutions. You guys are selling like not seven-figure
deals, eight-figure deals, nine-figure deals your customers. That increases the customer's
anxiety that I really have to see return on this. And so you in many respects are getting whipsawed
by these factors in a way that the startups are not, because they're not, they don't have as
many choices, right? There's not as much coverage about that. The investment is lower. And so there's a
little bit less risk for the customer. So you're not, you guys aren't immune just because you're the
big brand. You're doing a great job making it clear why it's so nerve-wracking to buy new software.
There's just so many things that could hurt you as a person at a company. It
done for it. I think she, I think this is barred from your language that she talks about how it's
actually more stressful these days to buy software than to sell software because of all these
things you've talked about. Yeah, I think she's, I think she's on point on that. I mean,
it's a, your customers are, yeah, they're really, really afraid of this not panning out. And it was
so interesting. And salespeople can think of so many different occasions where the purchase,
buying your product just made all the sense in the world for the customer.
It would make things so much better.
It would solve such big problems for them.
They're so dissatisfied with their current approach.
It's just a no-brainer.
And the customer will look at that and they will agree with you and they still won't make a decision because of the what-ifs, right?
Yeah.
This has got to be very frustrating for founders to listen to you and be like, come on, our product is so much better.
What are you doing?
But I think this explains a lot of the challenges they're probably having.
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It's a great segue way to talking about how to actually leverage these insights to improve your
sales process. You have something I think you call it the jolt method.
Yes. Awesome. Let's get into it.
The jolt is an acronym. It's an acronym. It just so happened. It worked out that way.
But I like it because it's memorable, but it also speaks to what's happening.
Our customers stuck in their indecisive state. They want to buy from us, but they just
can't because they're worried about what might go wrong. You've got to jolt them forward.
We got jolt them into action.
Beautiful.
So how do we do it?
So the first thing is we've got to judge their level of indecision.
We've got to figure out what we're dealing with.
The second thing is we've got to offer a recommendation.
The third thing is we've got to get them to stop doing endless research and start trusting us and limiting, we call limit the exploration.
And the T is we've got to de-risk the deal.
We've got to take some risk off the table.
And we've established that safety net for the customers so they feel like we've got their back.
So maybe we talk about each of those.
I'll start with the J because it's first.
But also, I think the way I, while it's kind of linear, I wouldn't, I would encourage listeners don't think about this as a process where it's like I do step one, two, three, four, JOLT.
Think of it as it starts with the J and the J tells you what the next step is.
Is it the T? Is it the L? Is it the O? And then we got deal with T. Then we got back to the O because it comes up again.
So think of it as sort of the divining rod. So how do we figure out what's got the customer nervous?
And this is a really, really, really tricky thing.
because, and I've likened indecision to like the carbon monoxide poisoning of sales.
It's everywhere, but it's odorless, it's tasteless.
You can't, you know, but you need a carbon monoxide detector, and that's what the J is.
So how do we get fear of failure on the table?
And the problem with this is that, and I think most of your listeners will be familiar with this,
everybody, especially customers suffers, and senior executives especially,
especially suffer from what's called the Dunning Kruger effect, which is they think they are
better at things than they really are. And decisiveness is one of those things that buyers will think,
they will say they're decisive effect. If you surveyed your customers, not they recommend this
and you add 100 of them if they consider themselves to be decisive folks, like 99 out of 100 will say,
absolutely, yes, I make the tough calls, I manage from the gut, you know, I live on the edge as an executive,
making those big calls. But the research tells a very different story. It turns out that 87% of buyers
in our two and a half million sales calls we studied,
either showed moderate or high levels of indecision.
The folks who are not worried about fear or failure were 13%.
So, yeah, those people do exist.
And by the way, if you find one of those people,
you should sell them everything as soon as possible.
They're making the decision quite literally
on the dollars and cents and the ROI and, you know,
whether it makes sense for their business.
It's a rational decision for them.
But for the rest, they're dealing with a lot of emotion
and that emotion is all, you know,
wrapped up with fear of failure.
And what's so tough about this is that it's not just Dunning Kruger, like we think we're more decisive than we really are.
Even if your customer knows that they're indecisive or they're worried about failing or how their boss is going to perceive them, if this purchase doesn't pan out, they don't like talking about it because it's embarrassing.
They don't want to talk about like, God, I got to tell you, like, this better pay off because it doesn't.
I'm already on thin ice with my boss.
She doesn't like me already.
This is going to be the last straw, you know?
Nobody's going to say that stuff.
And so how do we get on the table?
One of the things we don't think works particularly well
are kind of classic open-ended questions.
Like, Lenny, do you find when you go to the cheesecake factory,
do you leave satisfied or hungry?
Because you can't decide what to order.
Like it's not great approaches with customers.
You'll end the sale pretty quickly.
Because again, your customers find that kind of offensive.
They'd like to think of themselves as decisive people.
And so we found a technique.
This is actually not in the book.
We found it after we wrote the book called Pings and Echoes.
that high performers use.
So think of like the way a surface ship might detect a submarine in the water using sonar.
They send a ping out into the water,
and they're listening, if you will, using sonar for the reflection back.
And the reflection tells them, is it a friendly submarine, an enemy submarine?
Is it just a whale?
Is it heading towards us away from us?
At what speed are they about to torpedo us?
All that good stuff.
And we want to do the same thing in sales.
So the way this works is that a salesperson will try to articulate,
but in a non, not to out the customer,
but to get confirmation or refutation, if you will,
that what they've articulated is actually a concern for their buyer.
So hypothetically, let's imagine we're talking about a purchase
and we've had a lot of great conversations,
showing you a lot of demos,
you guys have liked everything we've shown,
we showed you partner options,
we showed you different configurations,
we did POC over here, we did a pilot over there,
you know, you guys are just eating it all up.
But I'm kind of getting the sneaking feeling
that you guys actually don't know what you want.
And we've shown you a lot.
We've probably made that problem worse.
And so what I might say to you is,
Lenny, I'm just curious,
if we could calibrate here for just a moment,
and there's a reason I'm asking this,
which is a lot of the customers at this point in our process of working together,
they get almost overwhelmed with all the options.
And look,
I probably made this worse.
We're very proud of what we do.
I want to show you the art,
paint the art of the possible.
But I also know if we're going to do business together,
You told me right away, budgets are limited and you can't have it all.
So you've got to decide what's nice to happen, what's need to have.
I'm just curious, are you and your team clear on what would be in and out of the proposal?
And what's going to happen is one of two things.
One, you might say, or a few things, you might say, you know what?
No, we don't know.
And we have liked everything shown us.
But as you said, we can't have it all.
So we'd be really curious to know, what do other companies like us start with?
You know, how do we get going?
what are the things we can do without and we can maybe add later on down the road?
Or you might get the customer who says, no, no, no, we were just being polite.
There's a lot of stuff you showed us that we're not actually that interested in.
It's cool, but it's just not for us.
We are very clear on what we want.
So let me share that with you now.
However, what I'm really concerned about is once we get this kind of speced out and
configured and priced, I'm going to take it to the CFO because I've got to get her approval on this.
And I can't build our business case on the claim you guys make about improvements.
improving sales productivity by 10% because she'll laugh me out of her office. And so help me get grounded
in what's a believable outcome for us, right, so that I can sell it and I can be confident we're
going to actually hit it. So it's, again, it's not designed to embarrass the customer. It's designed to
get this on the table so it can be recognized, it dealt with and contextualized. You're not, you're
totally normal. Everybody struggles with this. You know, there's a lot of stuff we throw in front of people
and they, you know, it ends up doing some harm. They don't know what to pick. Let me be of service
and value to you. And so that's the first thing that we point to. And that's going to tell us,
okay, is it a choice problem? They're overwhelmed. They don't want to choose like that example we just
used. Is it that they're just doing endless research and they feel like they haven't really come down
the learning curve yet around this purchase? Or is it, no, I don't actually know that we're going to get
what we're paying for here. And we'll, we screw this stuff up every day of the week and twice
and Sunday. And I don't think it's going to be a different. And then I'm going to get blamed.
So help me manage the downside risk. But it tells us kind of where to go next on that.
on that journey, if that makes sense. Yeah, awesome. So the advice there is basically get a sense
of how clear they are internally on knowing exactly what they want that will help them make a
decision. So there's kind of this like moment of, okay, let's just help me understand. I think
question the way you phrased it. Are you and your team clear on what would be in or out of this
proposal? Yeah. And that's just a one example. That's if I hypothesize that you're really
struggling with what to choose. Now, my hypothesis might be, you know what you want.
you've done plenty of research, but you're really worried about the ROI, right? And you're just worried
like you just aren't going to be able to accomplish that. So that ping might sound very different.
It might be, you know, we've been having a discussion about like you've been asking for
multiple terms of the ROI calculation and changing parameters and really trying to make it
bulletproof. But, you know, a lot of customers struggle with that a little bit because that's a big
thing. You're putting your name against that. And so maybe we should have a conversation about
whether that's a concern for you. Is there a believability gap? Is there a,
an execution gap you're worried about on your side or on our side.
Let's have a conversation about that so I can set the proper expectations so you feel
really confident going to the CFO and lobbying for investment here.
So that ping could go and but it's based on what I think is holding you up.
Got it.
So it's just like at this point, many customers have this question and that maybe comes from
the thing that you think is probably blocking them.
Yeah, I think that's perfect language.
At this point, most customers like you are thinking.
about this or they're kind of worried about that or they're getting a little anxious about this.
Let's have a conversation about it. Awesome. Okay. Cool. Let's go to step two. Offering your recognition.
Oh, yeah. So this is right with that example we talked about before. You know, options are
really a double-edged sword. What we know from the research is that options are great early on.
So if you're meeting at the trade show and the customers swinging by your booth or you're doing a
first demo or first, like, let a thousand flowers bloom. But if you want the customer to actually
make a decision, you've got to get the weed wacker out and like call it down to a manageable
set of choices. And the science is very clear on this, that too many choices at some point
will overwhelm the customer and at least a lot of bad outcomes. It leads to the customer not making a
decision at all because they don't want to make the wrong decision. I want to work with you,
but you put so many options in front of us like, I don't want to be blamed if I choose the wrong
one. And it leads to things like post-decision dysfunction, which is I thought I made the right
decisions, but now I'm learning more and people are asking hard questions and maybe I need to go
revisit this and hey, Lenny, we're going to, we're going to have to scrap that agreement and start
over because I don't think we can figure this right way. So we have to be, we have to, there's a time
in a place to offer options and there's a time and place to narrow choices up. The simple guidance
here for salespeople is that you've got to shift your posture from asking the customer what
they want and just diagnosing their needs to actually recommending to them what they should do. And
And salespeople get a little bit anxious about this, I find, because they don't want to be seen as like, I told you to do A, but you're like, I don't want to do that. I want to do B. And now I feel like we're at odds. And so they worry about that. And so salespeople have grown up in this world that like it's the customer's choice. The customer's always right. Let me just guide them, but they're the ones should make this decision. But sometimes the customer can't. And they don't know enough about these decisions. Like we know the stuff was we eat, sleep and breathe it every day as salespeople. We work in this industry. They don't. And so we are in a.
much better position to be able to guide them toward like, you know what, you don't really
need X, Y, and Z.
You can leave that out of the proposal.
Companies like you, they get started in this way.
Let me put three options in front of you.
I would go to the middle one because I really think that's going to be the best for you in the
first year, and then we can expand from there.
Here's an analogy.
I'll often tell people to think about the last time they went to a fancy restaurant and
they looked at a menu with like some expensive entrees and everything looked delicious, right?
But they didn't know what to order.
So you ask the wait person what they're.
they recommend, how helpful is it if that weight person says to you, well, what are you in the
mood to eat tonight? Like, it's no help at all, right? You're no closer to a decision. They basically
just dump the problem back on your lap. But what great way people do is they say, you know,
if you want my opinion, I love this dish and I'd probably say it's our most popular. We sell out of
it every night. We've still got it. So you're in luck. It's a lot of food, though, it's a big portion.
If you're in the mood for something lighter, there's a vegetarian option. It doesn't get as much play
on Yelp, but I love this one. It's absolutely delicious. It's one of our kind of dark horse favorites,
if you will. But remember, everything we make here is delicious. So if you don't like those choices,
you're not going to go wrong with any of them, but those are just my favorites. Now, what happens
in that moment is what psychologists call the delegation effect, which is rather than the burden of a
bad decision being solely on the shoulders of the decider, that burden is now shared. Now, think about it.
If you order the dish the way person recommended and you don't like it, whose fault is it? Well, technically,
it's your fault because you ordered it. But it's also kind of their fault because they recommended it.
And so you feel like there's some safety in getting that recommendation, that endorsement.
It's a really simple example, but it works in complex sales as well.
Customers are looking for somebody to share in the risk and the burden of making a bad decision.
And having that, you know, partner who's guiding them toward what they should care about and what they shouldn't care about,
what they should consider and what they should take out of the proposal is actually very reassuring and comforting them
it increases the odds of getting some kind of decision from them.
Amazing.
This is a great segue to the challenger sale, which we're going to talk about.
But let's get through the last two steps.
And then we'll talk about the challenger sale, which is basically this on steroids,
this idea on steroids.
The last two.
So L is about, you know, this customer who's doing endless amounts of research.
Every salesperson has seen this customer.
Like, they're never happy with the number of reference calls or the, you know,
the amount of research they've done.
They want to talk to more and more people.
They're just in information overload mode.
and or what we might call analysis paralysis mode because at some point they're just they're never satisfied with.
They always feel like all the answers will be in the next white paper they read or the next reference call they do or the next person on LinkedIn they talk to.
And so what salespeople need to do to stop that.
You've got to understand, I think, why customers do that.
They don't want to be surprised.
That is the main reason.
But they also don't trust the salesperson to be forthcoming.
So they believe the salesperson is paid to.
sell them more than they need to put one over on them, hide the dirty laundry, only talk about
the things that work in the platform, not the things that don't work. You're not going to do
you. You're not going to get introduced to any of the customers who hate you. You're only going to
introduce the customers who love you. And we know we're going to say great things about us. So
that's what the customer thinks, right? That is what is in the customer's mind. And so you've got
to actually shift, get the customer to stop trying to be an expert and start trusting you as an expert.
And they're two keys to that. The first one is you've got to establish some trust. And I know
that sounds like a platitude, but we found in the analysis there are specific things that sales,
great sales people do very early on. They are brutally transparent with customers about like,
hey, I know you were interested in this capability. I got to be honest, it's, you know, we get mixed
reviews on that. It's kind of an early capability for us. We're still trying to iron out the kinks.
Or I know you are interested in this use case, but I have to be honest, we're actually not the
best in the market at that. Our competitor is much better at that than we are. You know, so these
kinds of moments show the customer that you're not here to put one over on them, you're here to
get them to a great decision. It kind of makes no difference to the salesperson, whether the customer
buys from them, doesn't buy from them, it buys from a competitor. You just want to help them
get to a great decision. So that's step number one is building that trust. The step number two is
you've got to demonstrate some expertise. And what we see in so many sales interactions,
especially in tech, is that salespeople will show up with the clown carve experts, the
subject matter experts, the solutions engineers, the product people, the executive sponsors,
and then they will just punt to these people. And what happens in that moment is dangerous for the
salesperson. The customer, it sounds like they're loving it, right? They're loving that I'm talking
to people who really know their stuff. But what's also happening in that moment is the salesperson is
actively getting delegated down to the person they sound like. And if they don't sound like any more
than a glorified MC or a coordinator, then that's kind of all the customer will perceive them at. So,
what right or ability would you have to guide the customer on what to choose if you've offered no value or expertise?
You've got at least you don't have to be as deep as the product people.
You're not going to be.
You're a salesperson.
You're not a product person.
But you do have to be deeper rather than the customer.
And you do have to demonstrate that expertise.
And so those are the keys to gain the customer to stop trying to be an expert and start trusting you as their expert.
And then the T is taking risk off the table.
Two keys to doing that.
I think the first one happens really early, actually.
and that is resetting the customer's expectations.
Average salespeople love when they get an inbound lead from a customer who says,
hey, I saw that case study on your website of the customer who got the 10x improvement
and sales productivity, and we want that.
That sounds great.
And that companies in our industry, amazing.
Like, that's a slam-dunk business case for us.
The average salesperson is thinking, like, if you're excited about that,
I'm not going to talk you out of it because that means you're going to be excited to take
the CFO and excited to sign the agreement and get going.
What great salespeople do, though, was they know that,
while they'll stand by those claims, those case studies, those proof points, they try to kind of
under-promise and over-delivered. And they might say something along the lines of, you know, Lenny,
absolutely, that is a great case. I was involved in that sale. But we also need to understand
is everything went perfectly. They resourced it to the hilt. They had no integration issues,
no hiccups. It was beautiful and seamless. And I don't think you and I can think of many technology
implementations that happened that way. And so what I'd rather we do is build your business case
around a 5x improvement in sales productivity because we see that at least that in 100% of our
implementations. And then let's set up to over deliver against that because I think we're going
to do better than that based on what I know about your organization. Easily 6, 7, 8, 9%, maybe even 10,
but I don't want you to just walking in and promising 10x improvement sales productivity if we
finish the year and we're at 7x in the CFO is now asking her questions when in absolute
terms she should be thrilled with 7x, right? So let's make sure we set ourselves up for success.
The other thing you've got to do, though, is establish some safety net options.
So there are lots of different shapes and forms these can take.
Everything from, you know, before the deal is closed, pulling the implementation team
onto the caller, the customer success team or the account management team.
So we can start road mapping.
Hey, as soon as we get signature, here's how we're going to spend our next six months together
to make sure you guys are getting all the value you expect, if not more.
Here's what we've got to do.
Here the stage gates.
Here are the owners.
Here are the metrics we're going to monitor.
here's how often we're going to connect with each other.
It instills a lot of confidence with the customer because it feels like,
oh, you guys have done this before, right?
You've been there, you've done that.
You've helped other customers like me get value.
Everything from that kind of stuff to adding in professional services support,
especially like you think about a tech purchase.
I'm not saying give it away for free,
but you will find that high performing salespeople will also add on professional services,
but it's not just because they're selling more,
which they are because they're high performing salespeople.
It's the way they position that.
They usually position it as an insurance policy.
hey, Lenny, I know you guys want to DIY.
This is one of the great things about our solution.
You totally can.
You get all the training support, all the videos,
you got all the enablement content you need.
But I know this is a big priority for you,
and I think it would be really smart to carve out a slug of professional services hours.
That way our A team is lined up in case anything slips.
And if it does, we get you back up on track.
Because the last thing we want is for you guys to be upset that you're losing ground
and you're not going to deliver on the outcomes that you promised to your boss.
So let's set up.
So there's lots of different ways we can create.
Those opt-out clauses in some industries are an option, not very common in B2B, but in some cases you can offer those or specialized contract carve-outs, for instance.
So, you know, there's lots of different things we can do to create that safety out where the customer doesn't feel like they're jumping out of an airplane by themselves, but you are the tandem skydiving instructor that's going to guide them safely to the ground.
Amazing.
And all of this, especially this last step, is coming from, they are probably not going to decide anything that that's what you're fighting is to help them be less worried about messing up.
Yeah, that's right.
I especially love this point about under-promising and over-delivering because so much of, and most of this is B-to-B SaaS software that you're working with, right, like B-DB SaaS companies.
We are data set cut across.
I think that it might just be that SaaS is the place where we're seeing the most indecision these days.
But it doesn't not suggest it's kind of an easy target, but it is rife with indecision these days.
And unfortunately, I think it's also rife with a lot of these missteps that salespeople make that actually make things worse.
But we had data from manufacturing, firm, services, businesses that cut across.
So this was pretty prevalent and consistent across industries.
So with the underpromising over delivering, I think that's especially powerful for where most
companies want to get to is net revenue retention being higher than 100% where you can expand
larger within the org.
And it makes sense to help them feel like, wow, this is so much better than we even thought
it was going to be versus it's non-delivery.
It's not delivering what we thought.
Amazing.
Okay.
Any last piece of wisdom to leave listeners with around the jolt effect before we move on to the challenger sale?
You know, the only thing I would suggest is that for anybody, I mean, I think it could just do it as this, is that you should hit the pause button when that customer, because the customers we all know are going to get cold feet, often late stage, and it can be very frustrating.
And the knee-jerk reaction for almost every salesperson out there has happened like in our analysis, 75% of salespeople we studied.
would immediately go out to dialing up the thomo.
Like, go back to doing that.
Like, you're not going to get these benefits.
You're going to be, you know, stuck in this,
this terrible state of affairs you're in right now,
dial up the cost of inaction,
or let's try to use some price-based or other,
like, delivery window-based urgency driver
to get the customer to move forward.
But just remember that if the customer's already convinced
that the status quo is suboptimal,
and you've already got the intent,
that you're basically, again,
you're using fear on top of a customer,
you know, selling into a customer's already afraid,
and you're actually making it worse.
So hitting the pause button
and just reflecting a little bit
on what's really going on here.
Is it that they're indifferent
or is it that they're indecisive?
And those are actually two very different things.
Amazing.
I know you have a meeting in 10 minutes.
So this is going to be the most action-pass
high-density podcast episode we've done.
We've got 10 minutes talking about Challenger Sale.
First of all, how many copies of this book
have you sold at this point?
I think it's about a million.
Holy moly.
Yeah.
So it's insane.
Yeah.
Okay.
So it's a legendary book in the world of sales.
I imagine many people have heard of it, at least some people know the teachings.
Let's spend a little time there.
If I were to summarize the big insight of the book,
basically it's the best salespeople challenge their prospects thinking and teach them
about the market and what they should be doing versus just helping them get what they want.
Yeah, very well said.
I think one of the, just like the FOMO, FOMU kind of shorthand,
here's a shorthand that gives the salespeople.
It's like most salespeople are trying to figure out what's keeping the customer up at night.
Right. It's classic solution selling, needs diagnosis, etc. The challenger approach is about showing the customer what should be keeping them up at night. What is the thing you know that they need to know? What is the way that other customers are using your solution to generate returns and benefit for their organization? What's the risk that they don't know about but you do? Because by the way, you're going to talk to, you know, 10 times more customers than they, or I say you're going to talk to like 10 of that customer in a week than, you know, 10 times more than a week than they.
they will all year. So you are a window into the outside world for them. And that's what
challengers really understand. It's not free consulting, though, because if you remember from
the Challenger sale, it's not just about bringing these provocative ideas that reframe the
customer's understanding of the world. It's about leading to your unique benefits. What you're
really trying to do is kind of create a fire and then be the only person in town who sells the
fire extinguisher that'll put it out. Is there an example you could share of a Challenger's
sale type of sale. Yeah, we wrote a sequel to the Challenger sale called the Challenger customer.
And in that book, we talk about a case from a company called Dents Sply. Densply, as the name would
suggest, manufacturers produce as dental supplies. So they sell equipment and product into
dental practices and dental offices. And years ago, Dents Sply had developed, we all know, I think
your listeners can all relate to this. When you go to the dentist and the hygienist is, you know,
polishing your teeth or they're using the water pick or unfortunately maybe the dentists using the drill
and that wand has a very heavy like power cord that's attached to it and it's attached to this power base
and in that it feeds water through there and electrical current and all those things
dense apply had developed the world's first lightweight ergonomic cordless wand that drill bits
could be attached to you know cleaning cleaning implements etc and it was a total breakthrough they actually
when they unveiled it it was pretty interesting they gave
you remember the scene in Pulp Fiction where they opened the briefcase and it emanates like a light emits from it.
So they gave all their salespeople like this little aluminum briefcase thing with this eggshell foam and a wand in there.
I can't remember what it's called.
It's called the XP9,000 wand.
But it had one demo wand in there and they would go around to dental offices and be like, ah, and it was lit.
Literally, like light, it had blue lighting inside and it was really cool, the reveal.
And they'd take it out and they give it to the dentist or the head of the dental office.
and they would hold it and be like, what?
Like, it's so much lighter and it's ergonomic.
And this thing is cordless.
It's amazing.
It's a revolution.
And then the first thing they would ask is, how much is it?
And when they told them, it costs like three times more than the current old-fashioned wands they're using with the heavy cord,
they would gently put it back in the briefcase, closed the briefcase, say, can you give me a price on new drill bits or new like polishing attachments?
And so they couldn't get anybody to want to pay for this thing.
that was much more expensive than the old one.
So they did a lot of work and they figured out,
they knew that this was unique.
They knew this was a unique product.
Nobody else in the market made this.
They were the only supplier who had figured this out.
Total innovation.
But they hadn't given the customer a reason
to want to pay a premium for that innovation
until they figured out the connection
between the equipment that hygienists use
and absenteeism and workers' comp.
It turns out that one of the biggest
professions that where you get carpal tunnel syndrome, shoulder and neck and lower back
injuries is being a dental hygienist. And the reason is that they're standing, holding that
heavy wand, being dragged down by that heavy cord at an awkward angle all day long.
So that's why dental offices really struggle to keep hygienists showing up, not calling in sick,
not out for months at a time for reconstructive shoulder surgery, not with exorbitant health
benefits claims and workers' comp claims.
And so they came in and they revised their sales pitch.
And now when they come into the dental office, they sit down and they say,
I'd like to talk to you about your hygienist workforce.
Are you guys seeing higher turnover?
Have you seen any absenteeism due to carpal or lower back or neck or shoulder injuries?
What are you guys doing about that?
What's the cost to your business?
And they get the dentist talking and the way they start talking about it is not just the insurance
and workers' comp costs.
It's stuff like, you know, when my hygienists get injured, and this is a repetitive motion business and job, and when they get injured and they call in sick, I've got to reschedule all these cleanings and all these appointments.
And that's a bunch of upset customers who end up then going to the practice down the street or saying bad things about me on Google reviews or what have you.
So there's all kinds of ripple effects for the dentist.
The cost of losing a hygienist is massive.
And the market for hiring them is very, very tight.
So what Densfly does is start the conversation there.
And then they say, you know, one of the things that we figured out is the primary, based on our own independent research,
one of the primary drivers of all these bad outcomes, absenteeism, repetitive motion injuries, is related to the equipment that hygienists use.
It's because they're holding that old-fashioned heavy wand attached to that big, heavy power cable at an awkward angle doing repetitive motion all day.
But what if you could solve for that?
What if that was no longer a problem?
The dentist says, well, how would you solve for that?
There's no other technology.
That's what we got.
We've had the same equipment for 30 years.
Let me show you the new XP-9,000s, world's first cordless, lightweight, ergonomic drill.
And we can show you that it is far preferred by hygienists because they don't get injured as often,
because it's much easier to hold and it doesn't put stress on the joints and kind of pinch points,
if you will, where hygienists tend to experience these injuries.
So it's just a simple example, but you see, again, they're still selling a fancy, fancy wand, right?
But before they were leading with it, let me show you this and talk about the features and benefits.
And that led to how much is it cost.
Now they're leading to it.
They're starting with an insight and giving the customer a reason to care about solving this business problem.
And it turns out the only way to solve it is buying this XP-9,000 drill from DentSply.
So the key lesson from this book, and I know we don't have a ton of time to dig into it, is start with,
an insight they may not be aware of, give them a sense of where the things are going,
help them learn something about the future and the problems that they need to know about
that they may not be aware of, and then how transition to here is how we can solve that for you.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
And make sure those connections are really tight, right?
Getting this right starts with answering the question, why should the customer buy from you
instead of your competitor?
And it's not because you're more customer-centric or more innovative and possible to prove
your competitors claim the same thing.
It's not that you're the leading global solution provider of whatever you,
you sell, it starts with the product or the way you deliver the product or something about
your service delivery that only your company does. You are only capable. Nobody else can touch
with the barge pole. And then the second question is, what would have to be true for the
customer to want to pay us for that, to pay a premium ideally? And that's kind of the,
that's the core components, if you will, of a challenger conversation. Amazing. Okay. Matt, I promised
I let you out of here in time. So final questions. Working folks. Find your books.
if they want to dig in further.
And how can listeners be useful to you?
Well, I thank you for the offer.
I love being, you know,
I love being connected with folks who heard me on shows like this one.
So if you heard me on the podcast,
Hey, Ergen-Lenny's show, shoot me a LinkedIn,
invite them pretty active there.
I love being connected with folks.
So please reach out to me.
If you want to learn more about Jolt Effect,
so we do a lot of workshops and training around that,
that methodology, visit joltifact.com.
There's a ton of, there's also a lot of free tools on there that you can download,
that help you put some of these concepts into practice with your sales teams,
or if you're an individual seller.
And then, of course, the books are available everywhere.
Good books are sold, which I think is on the Internet these days.
Amazing.
Matt, thank you so much for being here.
It was a blast. Thank you.
Bye, everyone.
Thank you so much for listening.
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