
Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount 3 Account Expansion Habits of Top-Performing Account Managers
Reva Pellerin, an enterprise account manager at Vidyard with over 13 years of B2B experience, shares crucial insights for top-performing account managers. She emphasizes the shift from simple renewals to actively growing client relationships. Key strategies include leveraging existing accounts for new opportunities and maintaining consistent engagement. Reva introduces the 'compliment sandwich' technique for effective communication and highlights the importance of empathy and trust in fostering long-term customer relationships.
34:49
Map Value And Tier Accounts
- Practice value mapping and perspective-driven discovery before customer meetings.
- Tier accounts to know where to invest high-touch effort versus low-touch maintenance.
Retention Alone Won't Hit Quota
- Renewing a book of business at 100% is not the goal; growth is the target.
- Account managers must act like sellers and expand customers to hit quota.
Renew Early And Build Pipeline
- Start renewal conversations early, ideally 90 days ahead, to create runway to fix issues.
- Building pipeline inside accounts prevents being behind target at renewal time.
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Intro
00:00 • 4min
Navigating Account Management Success
04:30 • 12min
Navigating Objections with the Compliment Sandwich Technique
16:26 • 4min
Deepening Client Relationships
20:50 • 12min
Essential Skills for Account Management Success
32:35 • 2min

#641
• Mentioned in 39 episodes
Sales EQ
How Ultra High Performers Leverage Sales-Specific Emotional Intelligence to Close the Complex Deal

Jeb Blount Jr.
In 'Sales EQ', Jeb Blount emphasizes the importance of emotional intelligence in sales, highlighting that emotions play a crucial role in decision-making rather than just rational logic.
The book explains how top sales performers use four key pillars of Sales EQ: empathy, self-awareness, self-control, and sales drive.
It also discusses the alignment of sales, buying, and decision processes, the use of micro-commitments, and the answering of critical questions that stakeholders ask themselves during the sales process.
Blount provides practical advice on mastering the psychology of influence and managing emotions to achieve ultra-high sales performance.

#359
• Mentioned in 59 episodes
Fanatical Prospecting
The Ultimate Guide to Opening Sales Conversations and Filling the Pipeline by Leveraging Social Selling, Telephone, Email, Text, and Cold Calling

Jeb Blount Jr.
Fanatical Prospecting is a detailed guide that explains the importance and methods of prospecting in sales.
The book outlines innovative approaches to prospecting, including the use of social media, telephone, email, text messaging, and cold calling.
It emphasizes the need for a balanced prospecting methodology to avoid sales slumps and keep the pipeline full of qualified opportunities.
Key concepts include the 30-Day Rule, the Law of Replacement, the Law of Familiarity, the 5 C’s of Social Selling, and various frameworks for effective prospecting.
The book is designed to help salespeople, sales leaders, entrepreneurs, and executives improve their sales productivity and grow their income by consistently and effectively prospecting.

#950
• Mentioned in 30 episodes
Objection

Jeb Blount Jr.

#864
• Mentioned in 33 episodes
Inked
The Ultimate Guide to Powerful Closing and Sales Negotiation Tactics that Unlock YES and Seal the Deal

Jeb Blount
INKED is a sales-specific negotiation primer that addresses the challenges faced by sales professionals in today's market.
The book provides strategies, tactics, techniques, and human-influence frameworks to level the playing field against savvy buyers.
It emphasizes the importance of emotional discipline, preparation, and understanding power, leverage, and motivation dynamics in negotiations.
The book includes actionable advice and real-world examples to help sales professionals improve their closing rates and negotiate more effectively.
In today's economy, being the account manager who keeps clients happy and renewals steady simply isn’t enough. Every budget line item is under the microscope. Customers want proof of ROI, so you have to show measurable value while driving growth.
Reva Pellerin, the #1 enterprise account manager at Vidyard, puts it bluntly: "If you simply renew your book of business at 100%, that's not your target. Your target is to grow the customer base."
The best account managers aren't just order-takers. They're hunters—finding new opportunities, building pipeline, and actively selling within their own territory. They expand their influence before competitors slip in.
So, how do you trade in your passive approach for a hunter's mindset?
The Three-Step Hunter’s Playbook for Account Managers
Top account managers share one thing in common: they work their accounts daily. They’re intentional, consistent, and always looking for ways to help clients solve new problems. Here are three steps on how to adopt the same approach.
1. Prospect Your Own Accounts
Prospecting isn't just for new business reps—your current accounts are the richest hunting grounds you have. You already have access and credibility; now you need to leverage them. Even a 30-minute weekly block can uncover new revenue.
Map the organization: Use tools like LinkedIn Sales Navigator to map the client's company beyond your primary contacts. Look for new hires, promotions, or departures. A new executive often means new initiatives and budgets, creating a prime opening for you. Set alerts so you’re the first to know.
Search for adjacent pain points: Don't just focus on the problems your solution already solves. Talk to your contact and ask them about what other departments are struggling with. A simple question like, "I'm curious, what's the biggest challenge the operations team is facing this quarter?" can lead to an introduction to a new buyer and a new opportunity.
Send targeted outreach: When you identify a new potential buyer, don't cold call them. Send a personalized email referencing your existing relationship with their colleague and the value you're already providing.
For example: "Hi [New Contact Name], your colleague [Existing Contact Name] and I have been working together to help their team achieve [Specific Result]. I wanted to see if the challenges you're facing in [Their Department] are similar, as we might be able to help."
2. Master the Expansion Sale
Expansion sales aren’t about pushing more products—they’re about solving more of your customers’ problems. The best account managers think like consultants: they uncover needs, tailor solutions, and connect them to strategic objectives.
Ask penetrating questions: Instead of asking, "Do you need more licenses?" try asking questions that reveal a need. For example:
"I know you're focused on improving efficiency. Where are your biggest bottlenecks, and what’s the cost of those bottlenecks?"
“What’s the next big initiative you’re planning?”
“What are you under the most pressure to deliver this quarter?”
Link to measurable outcomes. If your solution saves time, estimate the cost savings. If it improves output, quantify the gain.
Position the expansion as risk reduction. Many leaders will spend to avoid failure before they’ll spend to chase success. Show how the additional product or service reduces operational risk, customer churn, or missed revenue.
Collaborate with your champions. Work with your existing advocates inside the account to co-create the expansion pitch. They know how decisions get made internally, and they can help you frame the opportunity in language that resonates with leadership.
3. Leverage Your Success for Referrals
Referrals are one of the most underused growth levers in account management. The key is asking at the right time—after you’ve delivered a clear, measurable win.
Earn the right first. Advocacy follows impact. When you’ve helped your client hit a major milestone, save significant costs, or achieve a strategic goal, that’s your moment.
Make it easy for them to say yes. Draft a short email or LinkedIn message they can forward. Give them a specific ask, like an introduction to someone in a similar role at another company.
Example: Hi [Peer’s Name], I thought you’d benefit from connecting with [Your Name]. They helped us achieve [Specific Result] and might be able to do something similar for you
Offer value in return. If they introduce you to a peer, share insights, benchmarks, or make a connection they’ll value.
Leverage public platforms. Encourage satisfied clients to share their success story on LinkedIn, in an industry forum, or in a peer review. These public endorsements carry significant weight with decision-makers you haven’t met yet.
Owning Your Pipeline as an Account Manager
To be a top-performing account manager, you must own your pipeline. This means you are responsible for filling it with new opportunities, not just waiting for them to appear. It's a fundamental shift from service to sales.
By adopting the mindset of a hunter—prospecting within your accounts, actively seeking expansion sales, and leveraging your network for referrals—you’ll not only protect your current book of business, but you'll also become an indispensable revenue driver for your company.
Top account managers master every conversation. Download the free ACED Buyer Style Playbook to identify buyer styles fast and adapt your approach for maximum impact.
