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AI and sales jobs

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!


The Producer Mindset: Tech-Led, Human-Centric Selling for Faster Pipeline Velocity

Administrative drag is not an inconvenience. It’s a structural failure in modern B2B sales that quietly taxes performance, slows pipeline velocity, and degrades your ability to show up sharp for buyers.

The pattern is predictable. You earn a hard-won meeting with an executive. You know you need a tailored deck that speaks to their priorities. Then reality hits: marketing is backlogged, design is unavailable, and you’re left formatting slides at night like a part-time desktop publisher. That’s the sales tax: time and energy spent on non-selling work that steals capacity from revenue generation.

This is the Tollbooth Effect in action. You build momentum in discovery, then you hit the system’s plaza: CRM updates, meeting notes cleanup, searching old folders for case studies, and wrestling with presentation software. The deal cools while you “pay.” Your edge dulls, not because you can’t sell, but because the operating model forces you into manual labor at the worst possible moment.

The fix isn’t working harder. It’s changing the role you play in the workflow.

In the Producer Mindset, your highest value isn’t typing, formatting, or slide layout. Your highest values are judgment, strategy, and human connection, and those can’t be automated. Technology should lead on mechanics while you stay accountable for truth, tone, and impact. This is a tech-led, human-centric approach: AI accelerates the work, but you control the meaning.

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