
Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount How to Negotiate Sales Compensation Without Burning Bridges (Ask Jeb)
In this engaging conversation, sales professional Brady Thompson seeks expert advice on negotiating his compensation amid tempting job offers. Brady shares his dilemma of wanting a raise without jeopardizing his current relationships. Jeb Blount emphasizes the importance of framing the conversation positively, highlighting loyalty over ultimatums. They also explore balancing higher commissions versus base pay, negotiating commission structures, and weighing money against company culture. A must-listen for anyone navigating tough salary talks!
14:43
Bring Offers As A Conversation Not An Ultimatum
- Tell your boss you want to stay but have a competing offer that's compelling and you need to discuss it before deciding.
- Frame it as seeking a solution, not issuing an ultimatum, to keep the relationship intact.
Weigh Loyalty And Resume Impact
- Loyalty matters when an employer rescued you during a hard time and you owe some reciprocity.
- Short jumps early in your resume can signal risk to future employers even if pay is higher now.
Ask For Bigger Opportunities First
- Speak your boss's language: ask for bigger accounts, better leads, or larger opportunities before demanding higher base pay.
- Show you want to produce more revenue instead of just asking for more money for the same work.
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Intro
00:00 • 39sec
Brady's Compensation Question
00:39 • 36sec
Framing an Offer Without Threats
01:15 • 1min
When Loyalty Should Matter
02:16 • 2min
Speak Your Boss's Language
03:48 • 2min
Assessing Commission Versus Base
06:05 • 3min
Negotiate Commission Structures
08:59 • 2min
Weigh Money Versus Freedom
11:07 • 2min
Outro
13:31 • 54sec
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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.

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How Ultra High Performers Leverage Sales-Specific Emotional Intelligence to Close the Complex Deal

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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.
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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.
Here's a question that keeps salespeople up at night: How do you ask for more compensation when you're getting competitive external job offers without sounding like you're issuing an ultimatum?
That's the question posed by Brady from Arkansas. Brady's been getting legitimate job offers from recruiters, and he's wondering how to leverage these opportunities into better compensation at his current company without burning bridges or coming across as disloyal.
If you've ever found yourself in this position, you know it's a delicate dance. You want to be paid what you're worth, but you also don't want to destroy the relationships and goodwill you've built. So how do you navigate this conversation?
The Right Way to Have the Conversation
If you're getting external job offers from legitimate companies with strong brands, the key is in how you frame the conversation with your boss.
Here's the approach: "I really like working here, and I want to stay at this company. I love it. But I've got another company out there that's a good company. They're a great brand, they're well known, and they're making this job offer to me at a significantly higher level of compensation. It's hard for me to say no to that. I feel like I need to bring this to you before I make a decision because I like working here."
Notice what you're NOT saying. You're not walking in with an ultimatum saying, "If you don't give me this, I'm leaving." Instead, you're saying, "I want to stay here. I like it here. I'm just in a situation where they're offering me enough that it's turning my head and I'm looking their way."
This approach keeps the door open for a productive conversation about what might be possible without threatening your current employer or damaging your relationship.
When Loyalty Actually Matters
Now, before you go schedule that meeting with your boss, you need to ask yourself a hard question: Do you owe this company some loyalty?
If you were down on your luck, lost a job, and they came along and gave you something that saved you, you probably owe them some loyalty for that. Not forever, but there's a little bit of honor in not just jumping to the next place immediately.
You also need to think about your resume. If you've just got there and a year later you're jumping to another place, that's on your resume. And believe it or not, even in today's world, that still means something. I won't hire people who jump from job to job every year. I don't care how good they are because they're probably going to jump again.
So think long term: Am I demonstrating to a future employer that I'm worth investing more money in? The answer is yes when you gave them three years of your life, performed at a really high level, and now you're going to leverage that to go level up elsewhere.
Speaking Your Boss's Language
Here's what most salespeople get wrong when asking for more money: They forget to speak the language their boss understands.
If you walk into your sales leader's office and say, "I want to make more money," you know what they're going to tell you? "Go sell more." And they're right. If you've got a great compensation plan with no limit on how much commission you can make, the answer is simple: crank out more sales.
So before you ask for more base salary, ask yourself: Do I have a limit on how much commission I can make? If the answer is no, then your first conversation should be about getting bigger opportunities.
Try this approach: "I can sell. I'm hitting numbers, but I'm not making the money I want. What can you do to give me bigger accounts, bigger opportunities, bigger customers? Give me better leads. What can you do to get me in a situation where I can earn more?"
This is speaking the boss's language. You're showing that you want to produce more, not just get paid more for the same work. If you get shut down in that situation, then you have another conversation.
The Commission vs. Base Salary Play
If you're a baller and you've proven you can sell, here's a move most salespeople never consider when negotiating compensation: Ask for a higher commission percentage instead of a higher base salary.
I honestly don't care about base. I think a base matters when you're getting started, and it's nice to have, but I would much rather have a higher commission percentage than a higher base.
Here's how you position it: "In the open market, I can take a similar job and make $400,000. I want to make the same thing here. Now there's two ways we could do this. One is that you can increase my base salary. Two is you give me a higher commission rate, and I think the commission rate should be this. I think I'm worth that."
What you're basically saying is that your cost of sales is going to be variable. They only pay you if you sell it, so their carrying costs stay the same.
In my company, the people who don't take a base salary make more than double in commission what people who do take a base salary bring home. There's a massive difference because the people saying "pay me more commission" are saying "I'm willing to put skin in the game in order to make more."
Now, this doesn't work if you're at a massive company with a thousand salespeople and rigid HR policies. But if you work for a smaller organization where people can make decisions, have an honest conversation around this approach.
You might even propose a tiered structure: "You can pay me your base commission on everything up to the quota you gave me. But once I cross that quota, I want my commission to roll up so that if I get over this number, the rate scales." That's a conversation most entrepreneurial leaders will entertain because it's putting your money where your mouth is.
What Money Can't Buy
Here's the thing most people miss when they're chasing the next big paycheck: There's always money out there you can chase. You have an obligation to yourself and your family to make as much as you possibly can in sales.
But there's also the value of working in a place that values you. There's more than just the money. There's the freedom, the flexibility, and the opportunity to be part of something that gives you purpose.
I had somebody come to me recently and ask this question, and I said, "This job that you're moving to that's going to pay you all this money, suddenly you're going to have someone who's micromanaging and telling you what to do every single day. In your current role, you're not making as much money, but you call the shots on your day every single day. Nobody even messes with you. Are you willing to sign up for that?"
They said their wife told them the exact same thing. Maybe that's a sign that having the freedom and flexibility is more valuable than making a lot of money but being miserable because everything you do is being micromanaged.
The Bottom Line
When it's time to ask for more money, remember these principles:
Bring the conversation to your boss before making a decision. Frame it as wanting to stay, not threatening to leave.
Consider what you owe in loyalty. If they gave you a chance when you needed one, factor that into your decision.
Speak your boss's language. Ask for bigger opportunities before asking for more base pay.
Consider the commission play. If you're confident in your abilities, asking for higher commission rates can be more lucrative than base salary increases when looking at total compensation.
Weigh the intangibles. Money isn't everything if you're trading freedom and fulfillment for a micromanaged existence.
The best compensation conversations happen when you approach them with confidence, gratitude, and a clear understanding of your value. That's how you get paid what you're worth without burning bridges along the way.
Want to learn more about leveraging your personal brand to create more career opportunities? Check out Jeb's newest book, The LinkedIn Edge, and discover how to turn your LinkedIn profile into a powerful career and sales tool.
