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What An MBA Didn’t Teach You About Sales

The sales profession is challenging. You need to work hard at it to succeed. You need to learn from the best. You need to improve your skills continuously. If you think you can sell since you are a hit at parties and have a lot of friends, you may soon find that you are a failure as a salesperson. Blunt truth:

because the sales profession is so hard, you have to focus on doing everything in sales very well, or you will be considered a failure.

I call this blog, Skinned Knees because I try to relate all of the learning that I have done over the past 4+ decades (while skinning my knees in the learning process).

I hope that you learn from my mistakes so that your business will grow!


Reclaim Selling Time: How AI Eliminates the Sales Tax and Restores Pipeline Momentum

Most sales leaders are trying to solve a 2026 productivity problem with 2010 management logic. They hire more people, increase activity targets, and apply pressure to the same system. The system doesn’t respond because the constraint isn’t an effort. It’s architecture.

The operational reality is brutal: administrative work is consuming the day and choking selling time. Reps are stuck doing low-level research, logging notes, and stitching together follow-ups across disconnected tools. That “sales tax” creates a momentum gap between good conversations and slow execution. The outcome is predictable: fewer high-quality touches, slower deal movement, less accurate forecasting, and a pipeline that looks busy yet remains fragile.

The fix is not another round of tactical efficiency. It’s a structural reversal: move from a human-led, tech-assisted model to a tech-led, human-centric model. In that design, AI does the machine work—data extraction, workflow orchestration, logging, drafting, hygiene—and the human seller does the work that actually wins deals: judgment, stakeholder navigation, risk reduction, and credibility in the moments that matter.

Think of it as building a Cognitive Revenue Engine. Your reps stop being the engine. They become the orchestrators of an automated engine that produces consistent execution at scale.

This shift has two pillars.

Tactical Efficiency is your time reclaimer. Automate the tollbooth moments: post-call notes, CRM updates, basic research, and first-draft follow-ups. This is not about saving a few minutes. It’s about reclaiming hundreds of hours per rep per year and converting them into customer-facing time.

Strategic Intelligence is where the advantage compounds. AI should be used as a decision partner, not a faster typewriter. The questions change from “Can you write this email?” to “Given this account’s context and our past wins, what risk is most likely to stall this deal, and what’s the next best action?” That is the difference between activity and impact, and it’s the difference between noise and revenue generation.

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