Zach Thompson and Jack Frimston, both directors at We Have a Meeting and co-authors of 'Sales as Therapy', dive deep into self-awareness as the ultimate sales skill. They argue that lacking self-awareness can derail sales efforts, highlighting how it leads to over-talking and missed cues. The duo stresses that genuine listening fosters trust, while overconfidence can blind sellers to their own shortcomings. They discuss ethical sales practices and the importance of connecting with clients on a deeper level to drive successful outcomes.
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question_answer ANECDOTE
Sales Feels Like Therapy
Sales conversations can feel like therapy sessions where deep listening unveils real problems.
Prospects often appreciate when sellers genuinely explore intrinsic motivations rather than push products.
insights INSIGHT
Motivation Lies in Personal Impact
Understanding the personal impact of business problems reveals true motivation for change.
Sellers should dig deeper beyond symptoms to emotional and practical consequences that drive decisions.
volunteer_activism ADVICE
Softening Questions and Overcorrection
Soften direct questions by asking permission first to encourage prospects to open up.
Use overcorrection by deliberately making a minor error to prompt detailed corrections and information.
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Here's the brutal truth: Self-awareness is the ultimate sales skill.
We obsess over skills like closing techniques, objection handling, and prospecting cadence. But self-awareness is the real make-or-break. Self-awareness is the lever that separates ethical, high-performance sellers from out-of-touch order takers.
If you’re not self-aware, you’re leaving money on the table and damaging trust.
Sales Without Self-Awareness is a Wrecking Ball
Let’s get honest. Lack of self-awareness is a deal-killer. It’s what causes reps to:
Over-talk and under-listen
Project their objections onto the buyer
Miss subtle cues because they’re too focused on a static script
Push when they should pause
This isn’t just a skill gap—it’s a blind spot. When you don’t know how best to connect with your prospect because you’re not listening—that’s a dangerous place to sell from.
Self-awareness is your internal compass. Without it, you can’t navigate objections, establish trust, or conduct a real discovery conversation. You can’t be consultative without being conscious.
The Ego Trap: Overconfidence Kills Awareness
It might seem counterintuitive, but your biggest blind spot in sales might be your own ego.
Close a few deals, and suddenly you stop prepping, shortcut discovery, and assume you know the buyer. That’s when self-awareness can tank.
Confidence is good until it turns into arrogance. When you stop reflecting, stop asking questions, and stop listening, you lose your edge. Sales is a what ’s-happening-today game. Yesterday’s win doesn’t guarantee today’s deal.
Top sellers stay humble enough to ask:
“Did I connect, or just perform?”
“Am I guiding, or just trying to sound impressive?”
“Does my solution fit their problem, or am I just trying to land a quick deal?”
The most crucial part of self-awareness? Checking your mindset—and your overconfidence—before it derails a lucrative deal.
Ego says you’ve got it handled. Self-awareness asks if that’s really true.
Only one of those gets you to President's Club.
The Two Lanes of Emotionally Intelligent Awareness
Awareness in sales isn’t just about having “emotional intelligence” and keeping arrogance in check. It’s about two critical lanes:
1. Seller Self-Awareness
You must know how your tone, presence, and mindset affect the buyer. That means recognizing when:
You’re chasing approval instead of guiding decisions
You’re hesitating out of fear of rejection
You’re overexplaining because you're insecure
You're emotionally reacting instead of staying neutral
Top sellers audit themselves for these moments constantly. They ask:
"Was I too defensive there?"
"Did I listen or just wait to talk?"
"Am I showing up with certainty or neediness?"
A self-inventory is no picnic. But this self-audit allows the elite to stay composed, curious, and in control—especially when things get tense.
2. Buyer’s State Awareness
A self-aware seller is tuned in. They're not just listening to what is said, but why it’s being said, and what isn’t being said at all.
Consultative selling is all about sensing, so it’s:
Knowing when a buyer’s guard is up
Being alert to when they’re overwhelmed
Learning when they’re intrigued but afraid to say yes
Watching the micro-expressions
Noticing the shift in tone
The best lead by aligning with the buyer’s state. By understanding the buyer’s motivations, emotional triggers, and decision-making pace, self-aware sellers engage in deal-making, not manipulation.
Self-Awareness Might Be New to You
So there’s no doubt self-awareness nets meetings and closes deals. But here’s the problem: Most sellers have never been coached to insightfully reflect.
They’re trained on scripts, not self-regulation. They’re told to “just make the calls,” but not how to manage the emotions that come with rejection, hesitation, or being ghosted.
It’s easy to understand the challenges.