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buyer journey

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!


From CRM Debt to a Cognitive Revenue Engine: Reclaiming Selling Time with AI

Most B2B sales teams don’t have a talent problem. They have a capacity problem.

Administrative drag is quietly stripping selling time: CRM updates, stakeholder mapping, duplicate cleanup, meeting summaries, and the constant “what should I say next?” work that should not be consuming a senior seller’s day. The downstream damage is bigger than annoyance. Forecast accuracy declines, coaching becomes reactive, and revenue management turns into a negotiation with incomplete data.

Artificial intelligence can fix this, but only if you use it with the right operating model.

Benjamin Todd’s articleHow not to lose your job to AI” makes the point that AI doesn’t simply eliminate jobs; it shifts where value concentrates. As routine tasks become cheap, the remaining human bottlenecks become more valuable. Todd’s ATM example is the cleanest version of the idea: ATMs reduced the need for “money counting,” but the overall demand for human banking roles didn’t collapse. The job shifted toward customer-facing work and higher-leverage conversations.

In B2B sales, our “money counting” is CRM entry, list building, and manual research. Our high-leverage work is business acumen, strategic influence, stakeholder alignment, and value selling. The problem is that most teams have it backwards: humans do the hardest input work (research, logging, hygiene), then AI writes the customer-facing messages. That combination produces drained sellers and generic messaging.

A better model is: Automate the input, humanize the output.

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