
30 Minutes to President's Club | No-Nonsense Sales
615 episodes — Page 6 of 13

#355 - Ask Tough Sales Questions Without Making it Awkward (Charles Muhlbauer, AlphaSense)
ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Instead of focusing on quantifying pain, ask deeper questions about the problem’s origins and previous solutions, this will naturally reveal the impact Find out if the problem is known and cared about across the company or just by one person Ask easy, non-pushy questions like “Why is that a problem?” to get the prospect to share the impact without feeling pressured Position involving decision-makers as beneficial for them, making it easier to get in front of power PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Founder @ DiscoveryCoach.io Sales Enablement Manager @ AlphaSense Lead Revenue Enablement Manager @ CB Insights Senior Sales Training Manager @ CB Insights RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#354 - Hall of Fame: Miles Kane
FOUR ACTIONABLE LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS When you are trying to clone that first rep, make sure that you don’t confuse personality with skill set. Your customers have the answers. Talk to your customers. Do not do the things that you're horrible at. Hire for the things that are not your strengths. Invest your time in enablement. You and your reps should track how you win each deal for ongoing development. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB VP, Sales @ Tenderly Founding Member, First Hires Program @ First Round Capital Director, Enterprise Sales @ Drift VP, Sales @ AltoCloud RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#353 - The Future of Outbound Sales (Topline Podcast)
bonusThis is an except from the Topline podcast with Sam, AJ, and Asad Check out their GTM podcast here: https://www.joinpavilion.com/blog/tag/topline-podcast Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#352 - Challenging Your Reps on Their Deal Risks (Chris Surdi, Ascend)
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Instead of lecturing a rep who hasn't followed expectations, ask what's preventing them from doing the task. This helps identify roadblocks or allows the rep to own up to the issue. When discussing reasons for making a change, focus on three questions: Why do anything? Why with us? Why now? The "why now" should have a specific date tied to an event. Link the urgency of change to concrete events, such as a software switch, new hire, market trends, or growth initiatives like entering a new market. Ask your reps key questions like when the economic buyer last bought something similar and who typically pays for software in their industry to ensure they understand the buyer’s decision-making process. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Head of Sales, Retail @ Ascend Strategic Account Manager @ Ascend Strategic Accounts @ Sourcegraph Head of Enterprise Sales @ Segment Enterprise Sales Executive @ Braintree (a PayPal company) RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#351 - How to Outplay Competitors and Win High-Stakes Rip & Replace Deals (Jason Bay, Outbound Squad)
FOUR ACTIONABLE LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS In rip-and-replace deals, start by asking why the existing solution was chosen to understand the problems and motivations behind it. Late in the deal, confirm with your champion if you’re their top choice. Use their guidance to strengthen your position against competitors. When prospects compare you to competitors, suggest specific aspects to evaluate that highlight your strengths and expose competitors' weaknesses. In rip-and-replace deals, emphasize key product gaps that significantly impact the business, and ensure decision-makers are committed to addressing them. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Founder & CEO @ Outbound Squad Owner @ Jason Bay Consulting Director of Marketing @ Chamber DS, Inc. Marketing Director & Corporate Sales Trainer @ National Services Group, Inc. RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#350 - Hall of Fame: Nick Casale
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Do not neglect internal research when you're preparing for a sales call. Find out if your company has spoken to them before and dig internally. Prep for your sales calls by understanding lookalike conversations your team has had in the past. Use the lighthouse email to engage someone at the top, mid-deal cycle. Don’t just pull them into the boat. Let them know that the boat is there and you have an awesome champion so they can affirm you’re in the right place. Don’t say “AI” in your sales call. Instead, focus on the problem they want to solve and what they want to do. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Co-Founder @ Handoffs Director, Sales @ Sendoso Manager, MM & ENT Sales @ Sendoso Founding Account Executive @ Sendoso RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#349 - How to Navigate Firing, Hiring, and PIPs as a Leader (Ken Amar, Agoge Prospecting School)
FOUR ACTIONABLE LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS Clearly communicate metrics, quotas, and potential performance improvement plans (PIP) during onboarding Design compensation plans that allow top performers to earn substantial rewards. To gain approval from finance, include decelerators where reps who don't reach 70% of quota earn no commission. When turning around an SDR team,iIntroduce new talent by hiring fresh SDRs and replacing underperformers to inject new energy into the team. Use a pod system (e.g., 4 AEs to 2 SDRs). This allows AEs to focus on key accounts while SDRs work on B and C tier accounts, generating additional meetings. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Consultant @ Agoge Prospecting School Director of Sales Development @ Vercel Senior Manager of Sales Development @ Outreach SDR Team Lead @ Outreach RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal Agoge Sequence

#348 - Mastering Multichannel Sales: How to Combine Cold Calls with Other Outreach (Sara Uy, Pareto)
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS If you make a mistake while recording a prospecting video, don't discard it. Send it anyway, as it can add authenticity and still lead to positive outcomes. When you feel the conversation winding down, go straight to asking for the meeting to increase your chances of booking it. After sending a LinkedIn video, start by asking, "What did you think of the video?" followed by "What didn't you like about the video?" to engage prospects. Leverage your last interaction—whether it's a video, voicemail, or previous call—as the reason for your next outreach to create continuity and context. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Sales Director @ Pareto Senior Business Development Manager @ Pareto Senior Account Executive @ Pareto Account Executive @ Pareto Business Development Representative @ Pareto RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#347 - Hall of Fame: Charles Muhlbauer
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS If you say yes to doing something for a prospect and then realize you shouldn’t have offered that, call them to apologize. If you are giving reasons to a prospect for why something they asked for is not the best idea, make those reasons about them and in their best interest. Don't chase tennis balls. Create equal footing by getting something before we just jump to giving. Be a guide, not a servant. Buyers are not looking for us to say yes to everything. Evaluate every ask through “is this actually the best way for the buyer to get what they're looking for?” PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Founder @ DiscoveryCoach.io Sales Enablement Manager @ AlphaSense Lead Revenue Enablement Manager @ CB Insights Senior Sales Training Manager @ CB Insights RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#346 - 5 Steps to Become the Sales Leader That Inspires Your Team (David Priemer, Cerebral Selling)
trailerFOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Delegate regular tasks, such as skill-building sessions in team meetings, to your reps to encourage leadership development and lighten your workload. When introducing new narratives or initiatives, provide a clear example of what good execution looks like, so your team knows what to aim for. Be transparent with your team about the reasons behind significant changes, such as quota increases or territory shifts, to help them understand and accept the decisions. Create a safe environment for reps by making it acceptable to forecast low numbers if that’s the reality, with categories for worst-case, most likely, and best-case scenarios. DAVID'S PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Founder @ Cerebral Selling Vice President of Sales @ Influitive Vice President Commercial Sales @ Salesforce RESOURCES DISCUSSED David's Book: The Sales Leader They Need Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#345 - Sell Playbook: The Definitive Objection Handling Guide (Jason Bay, Outbound Squad)
Jason Bay, Nick, and Armand walk through how to handle almost all the objections you can encounter on a cold call RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal The Book on Cold Calling Outbound Squad

#344 - Hall of Fame: Chase Macaione
FOUR ACTIONABLE LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS How engaged someone is on LinkedIn is a proxy of how good of a champion they'll be for you as a buyer. What you do in a call differs from what you want to get out of a call. The agenda is what you want to do, but make sure to explicitly say what you want to have coming out of the call. Have reps come in with a hypothesis or a POV based on what they see about the company. If the company is shrinking, the way you do discovery will be different from if it is growing. List out discovery questions to get people from high-level pain to deeper pain. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Director of Commercial Sales @ Zip Sales Director @ Celonis Strategic Account Executive @ Celonis Regional Sales Manager @ Oracle RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal Chase Macaione's Discovery Call Prep Sheet & Guide

#343 - Sell Playbook: The 5 Most Common Cold Call Objections
bonusGet our book on cold calling "Cold Calling Sucks (and that's why it works)" Nick and Armand walk through the five most common cold calling objections and run through ways you can overcome them. Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#342 - Proven Methods for Coaching AEs to Master Discovery and Close More Deals (Sean Gentry, WebFlow) (Sean Gentry, WebFlow)
FOUR ACTIONABLE LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS Ensure every deal in your CRM includes the date, specific next step, and goal to make pipeline reviews more outcome-focused. Use one-on-one meetings with reps for targeted role plays to better prepare for upcoming meetings, rather than generic team-wide role plays. Assess early-stage deals by confirming if there's a recognized problem and if the prospect is willing to solve it with you. Focus on evaluating large early-stage deals first during pipeline reviews, as they are often more crucial than late-stage deals. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Sr. Manager, Corporate Sales @ Webflow Course Instructor & Founding Member @ pclub.io Customer-Led Growth Advisor @ Catalyst Software Dir. of Sales @ Outreach RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#341 - Live Book Summary: Cold Calling Sucks (And That’s Why It Works)
Hey folks, today's the day. The book is officially live and the digital version is only $1 until Friday. You can get the book here :) - From your two favorite 30MPC sales goons, Armand and Nick Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#340 - Master Parallel Selling Strategies to Speed Up Every Deal (Samantha McKenna, #samsales Consulting)
ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS: Schedule regular meetings with your champion to maintain deal momentum and reduce scheduling friction Schedule multiple next steps simultaneously if they're not dependent on each other to accelerate the deal. Determine whether the prospect will present, ask, or inform the board about the purchase, and prepare accordingly. Ask your champion questions that they might not know, prompting them to involve higher-ups who can provide answers. SAM'S PATH TO PRESIDENTS CLUB: CEO @ Sam Sales Head of Enterprise Sales @ LinkedIn Vice President North America Sales @ ON24 Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#339 - Hall of Fame: Will Padilla
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Call me in 6 months: Find the most relevant timing-based trigger for ANY time in the year to drive the evaluation. Not interested: Is it because you’re not interested in influencer software or is it something I said? Who is this: Run right back into the permission-based opener again. I hate cold calls: Try to set up a non-cold call and get out of their way. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Senior Account Executive @ Inveterate Sr. Account Executive @ GRIN Sales Coach @ CourseCareers Business Development Representative @ Connect Searh, LLC Business Development Representative @ Arrive Logistics RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#338 - Sell Playbook: Value Propositions on Cold Calls
Get our book on cold calling "Cold Calling Sucks (and that's why it works)" Nick and Armand walk through four cold call openers and suggest which ones are best backed by Gong's data from over 300 million cold calls Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#337 - How to Avoid Hiring the Wrong Sales Reps and Build a Winning Team (John Sherer, Growth Assistant)
FOUR ACTIONABLE LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS Ask why the candidate is leaving their current job and why they want to join yours. This assesses their storytelling ability, crucial for sales. Once you want to hire someone, sell them on your company but also highlight potential downsides. This builds trust and sets realistic expectations. If unsure about a hire, don't proceed. Second-guessing can lead to issues and regret. Offer positions without negotiating compensation. Emphasize performance-based pay; top earners prove it on the leaderboard. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB COO @ Growth Assistant VP of Sales @ Lattice Sales Director @ Lattice VP of Sales @ Appcues RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#336 - Asking The Right Questions on Cold Calls (Josh Braun, Braun Training)
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Start by assuming the prospect has researched your solution if they say yes suggest a common objection why they didn't pursue it, if they say no then ask a question to highlight a knowledge gap When explaining your solution, emphasize the before state and the problems associated with it to create contrast with your solution's end-state Ask about specific situations to accurately identify the exact problems the prospect is facing Learn and practice delivering problem stories that are tailored to each potential situation your buyers may be in PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Founder, Braun Training Former Head of Sales @ Basecamp Former VP of Inside Sales @ Jellyvision RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Josh Braun's Tongue Tied flashcards Things you can steal

#335 - Hall of Fame: Sara Plowman
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Use “That’s exactly why I called.” When your prospect shares a problem or a priority that they have, make that your reason for booking a meeting and go right in for the close on the cold call. Call nine before nine, and five after five. Those early morning and evening dials can be some of the best ways to increase your connect rate with hard-to-reach prospects. After your opener, go through the parts of your pitch, but end with an open-ended question. You can either go into “That’s why we should meet” if they give you those three priorities or roll with the objection - “Let me tell you how we work alongside and supplement a recruiter.” PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Senior Business Development Manager @ Pareto Senior Account Executive @ Pareto Account Executive @ Pareto Business Development Representative @ Pareto RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#334 - Sell Playbook: Cold Call Openers
Get our book on cold calling "Cold Calling Sucks (and that's why it works)" Nick and Armand walk through four cold call openers and suggest which ones are best backed by Gong's data from over 300 million cold calls Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#333 - Founder-Led Sales: Taking Your Startup to Market (Peter Kazanjy, Atrium)
FOUR ACTIONABLE FOUNDER TAKEAWAYS Your first customers should come from the founder Avoid steering the discovery conversation in a preferred direction, let the conversation flow naturally and meet the customer where they are. If the conversation is going well and the customer acknowledges the problem and believes in your solution, consider bringing them on as a pilot customer. If you're not ready to solve the big problem yet, launch a customer advisory board. Offer a small amount of equity to early advisors who can help develop your product to the point where it can address a significant issue. PETER'S PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Co-Founder @ Atrium Founder @ Modern Sales Pros VP of Product @ Monster Founder @ TalentBin (Acquired by Monster) RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#332 - Get Ahead of Deal Killers by Asking Buyers the Hard Questions Upfront (Steven Bryerton, ZoomInfo)
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Gauge your prospect’s enthusiasm by asking where they fall on a scale from one to ten, providing more insight than a simple yes/no question. Ask your prospect what they discuss in internal meetings to tailor your pitch to resonate with their executive team. Avoid showing too much software to prevent prospects from associating the product with unnecessary features and higher costs. Recap previous conversations and then ask the executive what you might have missed, ensuring you address their specific needs while demonstrating your product. STEVEN'S PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB SVP of Sales @ ZoomInfo VP of Sales @ ZoomInfo Director of Sales @ ZoomInfo Manager, Enterprise Sales @ ZoomInfo RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#331 - Hall of Fame: Ryan Reisert
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Eat the frog by committing to prospecting first thing in the morning. Handle objections differently with a ledge (ledge > disrupt statement > ask). Handle ‘existing solution’ objections by offering value to keep the other guys honest. Get past gatekeepers with respect, giving specific value, and providing social proof. PATH TO PRESIDENTS CLUB Head of Growth @ NeonPixel CEO @ Phone Ready Leads CEO @ Student of Sales VP of Sales @ Booshaka RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#330 - The Daily Habits That Set Top Sales Leaders Apart (Jordan Chavez, Navan)
FOUR ACTIONABLE LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS Use calendar color coding to audit your time and ensure you're focusing on important tasks consistently Always be recruiting (ABR) - Regularly connect with potential talent on LinkedIn to build relationships before you need to hire. Designate specific days for different tasks - Monday for one-on-ones, Tuesday for outbound, Wednesday and Thursday for deal reviews, and Friday for forecasts. Run outbound days, have reps target top C-level prospects and maintain a 45-day forecast with outreach tasks. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Regional Director Mid-Market Sales @ Navan Manager Commercial Sales @ Navan Manager Growth Sales @ Navan Enterprise Account Executive @ Navan RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#329 - Unlocking Buyer Pain Points While Engaging Key Stakeholders (Maddy Jackson, Webflow)
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Explore two types of impact with your prospect: hard metrics (e.g., hours spent, money lost) and soft impact. Address pain points in other departments to accelerate deals and improve win rates. Turn situations into problems by asking questions that highlight known pain points with competitors. If ghosted late in the deal cycle, offer to email the next key contact directly to prompt a response. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Account Executive @ Webflow Account Executive @ SafeGraph Account Executive @ Procore Technologies RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#328 - Hall of Fame: Talha Husayn
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Call your below-the-line org. contacts to gather intel that you can bring up when having above-the-line conversations. Try to get a direct referral to your target persona, next best would be “permission to mention X’s name”, next best would be using the information from X’s conversation when contacting the target. Use “[X] said we should speak” as a simple, attention-grabbing subject line for the target persona. Document all your conversations in your CRM notes at the prospect AND account level for easy recall in future outreach. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB VP of Sales @ Orum Account Executive @ Teamable Software Head of Sales @ Neptune.io Manager, Sales Development and Operations @ CloudVelox [Acquired by VMware] RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#327 - Sell Playbook: The Ultimate Cold Calling Masterclass
To celebrate the launch of our book on cold calling "Cold Calling Sucks (And That's Why It Works)" we've dropping this special playbook edition that covers (almost) everything there is to know on how to cold call. From handling objections to organizing your calendar, this episode has got it all. Pre-order a copy of our cold calling book and get it FIRST when it launches on August 14th, 2024

#326 - Interview Smarter: Using Roleplays to Identify Top Sales Talent (Brooke Freedman, Chameleon)
FOUR ACTIONABLE LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS Sales leaders need to stop observing from the sidelines and actively participate in deals as player-coaches, even if they are CROs. Giving candidates extensive preparation materials for role plays allows for a more accurate evaluation of their abilities. Replaying specific parts of a role play multiple times can effectively demonstrate a candidate's coachability. Hiring decisions should be unequivocally positive or negative, avoiding the temptation to settle for average candidates. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB VP of Sales @ Chameleon Senior Director of Sales @ Drift Senior Director of Sales @ Litmus Sales Manager @ Litmus RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#325 - The Perfect Deal Negotiation Process (Armand Farrokh, 30MPC)
TOP ACTIONABLE SALES TAKEAWAYS: Act surprised and maintain confidence when faced with resistance on price; don't normalize discounts or concessions easily. Make each concession painful for the customer; show that every request comes with effort and negotiation, preventing them from expecting easy wins. Act as if achieving approvals for concessions is difficult and uncertain, emphasizing the rarity and challenge of gaining internal approvals. Finish negotiations in two parts if necessary, using options to force a final trade-off that emphasizes the value of each choice, encouraging a more strategic decision-making process. ARMAND'S PATH TO PRESIDENTS CLUB: Founder @ 30MPC VP of Sales @ Pave Director of Sales @ Carta RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#324 - Hall of Fame: Will Padilla
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS When asked for pricing early, give a range but hold the other key pricing details until you get feedback. If you’re getting ongoing buying objections, suggest that it may be too early to be talking. Get to the true objection when someone asks to be sent more information. Before giving any discounts, get clear commitment on timing. And make it clear that if there’s a slip, it starts back at standard pricing. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Senior Account Executive @ Inveterate Sr. Account Executive @ GRIN Business Development Representative @ Connect Search, LLC Business Development Representative @ Arrive Logistics RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#323 - Lead Playbook: Fixing Your Pipeline Problem
FOUR ACTIONABLE LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS Ensure there is a financial plan that walks through the pipeline conversion assumptions to keep your team and your partnering teams accountable Do not try and fix something that's working in order to compensate for low metrics, look at the indicating metrics and fix those Have Account Executives dedicate 20% of their time to prospecting a set list of walled off (named) accounts Break out your inbound and outbound metrics to make it easier to diagnose the problem if one of those two metrics is falling behind RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#322 - Set Yourself Up for Negotiation Success by Crafting Your Business Case Early (Spencer Ivey, Webflow)
FOUR ACTIONABLE SALES TAKEAWAYS During demos, connect features shown to insights gathered during Discovery. Address confusion promptly and facilitate discussions rather than relying on your Solutions Consultant. Make your effort visible to prospects when working on the business case. Let them know you're actively involved and invite collaboration, which fosters reciprocity. Refine and finalize your business case incrementally. Use the demo to make the case tangible and save detailed financial discussions for the final business case meeting. When negotiating and faced with a request for a discount, refrain from immediate responses. Silence can be powerful as it prompts the prospect to reconsider or elaborate on their request. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Enterprise Account Executive @ Webflow Senior Account Executive @ Webflow Account Executive @ Webflow Senior Corporate Account Executive @ Udemy RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#321 - Hall of Fame: Stevie Case
FOUR ACTIONABLE LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS Burndown: Every day before the end of the month, make your team put all open deals in a spreadsheet with a two-line update. When you’re rolling out a methodology like command of the message, you can’t stop at the initial training. Every single new product launch needs to be trained in that framework, otherwise, it’s forgotten. Make sure your reps tell you what role you need to play on calls! Your CRO can always freestyle, but they much prefer you tell them what to do. 80% of the upward communications should be focused on the problems you need to solve. Often times your CEO just wants to know that you’re aware of the problems. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB CRO @ Vanta Founding Partner @ 20SALES Founding operator at @ Coalition Postal Vice President, Mid-Market Sales @ Twilio RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#320 - Driving Accountability and Empowering Sales Teams for Peak Performance (Jason Bay, Outbound Squad)
FOUR ACTIONABLE LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS Hold regular one-on-one meetings, set public goals in team meetings, and use midweek check-ins to monitor and adjust prospecting efforts to ensure accountability and goal achievement. When implementing new initiatives, enlist team members who excel in those areas as champions. Their involvement and sharing of experiences will enhance adoption and effectiveness across the team. Utilize top-performing team members to shape and structure enablement sessions. This ensures that training content is practical, comprehensive, and directly applicable to real-world scenarios. Calculate the number of opportunities and meetings needed to meet sales quotas based on win rates and conversion rates. This systematic approach provides clarity and a roadmap for achieving sales targets effectively. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Founder & CEO @ Outbound Squad Owner @ Jason Bay Consulting Director of Marketing @ Chamber DS, Inc. Marketing Director & Corporate Sales Trainer @ National Services Group, Inc. RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#319 - Nail Your Cold Calls by Handling Objections and Following Up Like a Pro (Lylle Ryals, RocketReach)
TOP FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Incorporate GIFs or Venn Diagrams in prospecting emails to capture attention effectively. When prospects mention a competing solution, ask how long they've used it and what prompted their choice to uncover their unresolved needs. Direct prospects back to email in voicemails; keep initial messages brief and contextual, saving detailed information for follow-ups. Structure emails to expand on voicemail content, addressing specific pain points or presenting case studies to encourage engagement. LYLLE'S PATH TO PRESIDENTS CLUB Senior Manager, Business Development @ RocketReach Manager, Business Development - Enterprise @ Shopify Manager, Business Development - Enterprise @ Angi SMB Account Executive @ Angi RESOURCES DISCUSSED 8 Ways to Triple Your Phone Connects and Email Opens Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#318 - Hall of Fame: Shay Keeler
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Monday morning opportunity hit list: create a list of opportunities that don’t have next steps or told you to call back around this time. If someone’s shopping competitors, plant landmines for them to ask for specific pitfalls during the competitive demo. When you’re waiting for them to finish the competitive evaluation, make a goodwill introduction to a resource that will help them. Review your pipeline by asking: What’s the persona? Do I understand the decision? What’s my next step? If there isn’t one, what am I doing to get one? PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Sr. Director of Global Commercial NL Sales @ Outreach Sr. Regional Sales Manager @ RealSelf Sr. Sales Manager @ Yelp RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#317 - How to Lead Sales Managers and Address Underperformance (JD Miller, Kantata)
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS: Introduce frontline manager talent pulse meetings involving key stakeholders (yourself, frontline manager, HR partner, and sales ops) to comprehensively review both quantitative and qualitative seller performance data. Maintain frontline manager capacity at optimal levels (typically up to eight sellers per manager) to ensure effective control and stability in sales force management. Implement a structured 90-day ramp-up process for new hires, progressing from training to practical tasks like territory familiarization, prospecting, and live calls, to consistently exceed sales plan expectations. Clearly articulate and differentiate between commitment (worst-case scenario) and forecast (expected performance) figures when reporting to stakeholders, ensuring transparency and accuracy in sales projections. JD'S PATH TO PRESIDENTS CLUB: Chief Revenue Officer @ Kantata Chief Revenue Officer @ Motus Managing Director @ Bravo Solution Vice President, Americas @ Workplace Systems RESOURCES DISCUSSED: How to Forecast Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#316 - Building Champions Who Will Get The Deal Done (Joe McNeill, Influ2)
ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Embrace Silence: Don't fear pauses in conversations. It's natural to take a moment to think about your next question or response during a conversation with a prospect. Setting Conditions for Progress: When faced with a contact unwilling to advance your connection, you have two options: Explicitly ask them what conditions need to be met for them to introduce you to a higher-level contact, like a VP of Marketing. Decide whether to follow their criteria or to prospect directly to reach your goal. Groundswell Motion Strategy: In scenarios where a sales cycle starts with an Account Executive (AE), begin by offering assistance to the AE. This approach often leads to reciprocal help, allowing you to eventually ask for an introduction to your champion. Understanding Motives: It's crucial to discern and address two types of motives, your champion's personal motives and the business or executive motives. Educate your champion on these motives and align them with the broader business objectives to facilitate successful sales efforts. PATH TO PRESIDENTS CLUB Chief Revenue Officer @ Influ2 Vice President of Sales @ Siteimprove Vice President of Sales @ Apruve Vice President of Sales @ Siteimprove Director of Sales @ Siteimprove RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#315 - Hall of Fame: Vin Matano
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Pick 5-10 accounts per week and focus all of your energy on them. That might look like sending emails Monday and Wednesday, then going multichannel on Friday. Use email as your hub and other channels as your spokes with your CTA on the other channels pointing back to your email. The email channel can get flooded; get creative with other channels like Twitter. Vin was able to book a meeting off of a backward jump shot. Use email to keep threading throughout your sales cycle. One way to do this is through direct mail. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Sr. Account Executive IC-5 @ Demandbase Strategic Advisor @ Aligned Strategic Partner @ Outplay RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal Download Vin's 5 Emails from Prospecting to Close

Product Roadmap: Q3 2024 (Book launch, care package, 5 weeks of phones, host change)
Here's and update on our reflections from Q2 and what we have planned for July-September 2024 on 30 Minutes To Presidents Club. ❏ Cold Calling Sucks (And That's Why It Works) ❏ ➥ Get your Cold Call Care Package: https://30mpc.com/coldcall ➥ Sign up for the preorder release event on objections: https://tactics.30mpc.com/how-to-handle-any-objection-on-a-cold-call ➥ Subscribe so you don't miss "5 Weeks Of Phones": https://tactics.30mpc.com/newsy ➥ Join us in the release and live book summary: https://tactics.30mpc.com/live-book-summary-cold-calling-sucks-and-thats-why-it-works ❏ More 30MPC ❏ ➥ Follow Armand on Twitter: https://twitter.com/armandfarrokh ➥ Follow Nick on Twitter: https://twitter.com/NickCeg ➥ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@30MPC ➥ Tactic Teardowns: https://www.30mpc.com/teardown ➥ Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/30minutestopresidentsclub/ #30Minutestopresidentsclub #30mpc #bookoncoldcalling Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#314 - Identifying & Coaching Deal Blockers on Sales Teams (Levi Thomas, CaptivateIQ)
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS: Review call recordings to gain insights into why deals are being lost, refining approaches based on observed best practices. Implement a weekly automated report that evaluates closed lost deals, identify recurring themes or challenges, which can then be addressed in trainings with the team. Customize training programs based on the required duration and intensity, choosing between short-term focused sessions or extended programs with periodic reinforcements Secure commitment from managers and top-performing reps by involving them in training delivery, ensuring their endorsement and active participation to enhance overall effectiveness and adoption among the team. LEVI'S PATH TO PRESIDENTS CLUB: Strategic Sales @ CaptivateIQ Director of Global Commercial Sales @ Outreach Sales Execution Manager @ Outreach Sales Manager, APAC @ Outreach Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#313 - Prospecting Technical Buyer Personas and LinkedIn Outreach (Robin De Vries, MongoDB)
FOUR ACTIONABLE SALES TAKEAWAYS When looking for intel on an account, consider reaching out to ex-employees for insider info Record simple videos, dont be corny, send them natively on LinkedIn Don't over-do personalization, weigh the cost/benefit of putting in extra work into your outreach All personas exist on LinkedIn, don't write it off as a prospecting channel PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Regional Sales Director @ MongoDB Snr Team Lead High Tech Account Executive @ MongoDB High Tech Account Executive @ MongoDB Enterprise Account Executive @ Ivanti RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#312 - Hall of Fame: Discovery
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Have a prep call with your champion before the demo. Identify who is in the room, what they want to get out of the call, and how past demos have gone. Connect what you’re selling to something that hits the P&L. Get one deep business impact, and tell one story that shows people that you can solve their problem. Get your prospect to tell you a story by using “typically” language to help prompt them with ideas that typically come up. Ensure the problem you are solving is not an isolated incident. Ask: Is this happening frequently, or just a one-off? PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Founder & Host @ 30 Minutes to President’s Club VP of Sales @ Pave Director, Sales @ Carta Sr Associate, Corporate Strategy & Venture Investments @ Flex RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#311 - Running Sales Team Meetings That Actually Move The Needle (Armand Farrokh, 30MPC)
FOUR ACTIONABLE LEADERSHIP TAKEAWAYS When you do a training introduce a topic then run 3 meetings to go deep on that topic, A.K.A. "The 1/3" Consider running team training on Fridays to give reps the weekend to digest and when there are fewer distractions The mantras of the Monday morning meeting, if it's the beginning of the month you're talking about top of funnel, if it's the middle of the month you're talking about multithreading, if it's the end of the month you're talking about contracts When doing coaching always ask the rep for their feedback before you give your own so it doesn't feel like an attack and you don't tell them what they already know PATH TO PRESIDENT'S CLUB Founder @ 30MPC VP of Sales @ Pave Director of Sales @ Carta RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#310 - Unconventional Approaches to Cold Calling (Matthew Mazankowski, Boomerang
Free Guide: 3 Tactics to Drive Mid-Funnel Deals to Close FOUR ACTIONABLE SALES TAKEAWAYS Do not spend excessive time researching when sometimes calling the account may be the fastest way to get information Be like the restaurant that is calling you to make a reservation to avoid no shows, send reminders, and set an agenda ahead of time When telling a customer story describe the persona who felt the problem, the annoyances they felt, the scenery they were in when they felt the problem, and the emotions they felt If confirming a meeting within one week send a reminder the day before if confirming a meeting more than a week out do a 1 week and day before reminder PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB VP of Sales @ Boomerang Chief Revenue Officer @ Table Needs VP of Fundraising & Business Development @ Table Needs Head of Sales & Business Development @ Table Needs RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#309 - Hall of Fame: Kevin "KD" Dorsey
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS PPI (Problem, Pain, Impact): Get agreement on a problem, understand the pain the problem causes, and identify what that means for the buyer and the business. Use bucket questions to get problem agreement. Weave the top 3 problems into your opening questions. When someone tells you what they want, restate it as a pain point. Turn solutions into problems. The transition between discovery and demo is the perfect time for “might make sense”. PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB SVP of Sales and Partnerships @ Bench Accounting Practice Lead, Revenue Leadership @ Winning by Design VP of Inside Sales @ PatientPop Inc. Head of Sales Enablement & Development @ ServiceTitan VP of Sales @ SnackNation RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#308 - Coaching SDR Teams and SDR Leaders (Melissa Lui, AirGarage)
FOUR ACTIONABLE TAKEAWAYS Structure your SDR 1:1 as follows, start with their agenda and what's top of mind for them, then do a pipe review for accounts they intend to book, then review a good & bad call, finally talk about their career goals Set the expectation with your SDR they need to drive the agenda from onboarding onwards Do a SDR forecast by reviewing cold (not contacted), warm (contacted and qualified), and hot (contacted, qualified, and some interest) Train team on process, probing, and provoking GAP Questions by asking them to write down all the problems their buyers may be facing, then work backwards to outline the questions they can ask to uncover them PATH TO PRESIDENT’S CLUB Head of Sales Development @ AirGarage Director of Sales Development @ ServiceTitan Senior Sales Manager @ ServiceTitan Sales Development Manager @ ServiceTitan Sales Development Manager @ ChowNow RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal

#307 - Sell Playbook (Part 2): How to Structure an Effective Discovery Call (Nick & Armand)
FOUR ACTIONABLE SALES TAKEAWAYS Do 90 seconds of rapport building, launch off with a business related question that highlights you've done some research Set a PPO agenda, coving the purpose, plan, and outcomes of the call Ask the prospect why they took the call, if they don't give you a good answer offer them a high-level overview to anchor their expectations At the end of the call run the 5-minute drill which includes 3-questions, do you want to buy? When do you want to buy? How do you buy? RESOURCES DISCUSSED Join our weekly newsletter Things you can steal Early access to The Book on Cold Calling