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messaging consistency

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!


Instant Follow-Up in Field Sales: How AI Eliminates Post-Meeting Lag

Field sales doesn’t lose deals in the meeting. It loses deals after the meeting when a buyer asks a high-stakes question, you promise to “get back to them,” and the response shows up after the moment has passed. That delay kills momentum and quietly downgrades you from advisor to administrator.

In 2026, the buyer often has access to comparable information. Your differentiation is contextual insight delivered with speed. If your follow-up arrives hours later (or worse, it arrives days later), you’re not doing value selling, you’re doing cleanup. That’s the Administrative Tax: notes, recap emails, CRM updates, and retrieval work that should not be done manually by your highest-paid revenue generator.

Artificial intelligence changes the operating model. The goal isn’t “better summaries.” It’s an Instant Field Response: capture what matters in the room, retrieve the right internal assets, and draft a precise follow-up while you’re still in the parking lot. When AI handles the science (capture, entity recognition, semantic search, and drafting), you reclaim the art: listening, reading intent, and leading the decision.

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From Leads to Clients: How Aligning Sales and Marketing Fuels Sustainable Growth

There’s a common sentiment among sales teams this time of year: a sense of urgency. The calendar flips, Q4 starts, and suddenly it feels like you’re already behind. Sound familiar? That mid-Q4 pressure is real. But before you sprint into outreach and activity, step back and assess what’s actually fueling your pipeline? More importantly, is it aligned with long-term growth?

Sales leaders and CEOs often default to lead generation as the focal point. It’s understandable. More leads, more conversations, more deals, right? But that mindset skips a critical first step. You can’t scale what isn’t aligned. If your marketing message doesn’t match your sales conversations, you’re wasting time and budget. If your sales team is chasing poorly qualified leads, you’re burning cycles. And if your customers can’t articulate why they bought from you, you’ve got a positioning problem.

The foundation starts with clarity. What value do you truly deliver? Why do customers choose you over alternatives? If you can’t answer that in a clear, 50-word statement, your team is likely improvising in the field, and that’s costing you revenue. This is where sales and marketing alignment becomes more than just a buzzword. It’s operationally necessary.

Sales enablement isn’t only about tools and training. It’s about empowering sales with the right message at the right time. That starts with defining three core customer states:

  1. leads,
  2. prospects,
  3. clients.

Each phase requires different messaging, timing, and expectations. Most organizations blur those lines. That’s where inefficiency creeps in.

Leads sit at the top of the funnel. They are either unaware or only lightly aware of your offering. At this stage, marketing owns the responsibility. However, marketing without sales feedback is akin to shooting in the dark. Sales needs to inform marketing what makes a lead qualified.

  • What signals intent?
  • What common objections surface early?

Without that feedback loop, marketing tends to optimize for volume rather than quality.

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