Yoram Solomon, a leading trust-building expert and host of The Trust Show podcast, dives deep into the pivotal role of trust in sales. He emphasizes that self-trust and conviction are fundamental for closing deals. Learn how a lack of self-belief can undermine your efforts and how authentic connections can foster innovation. Solomon shares personal anecdotes and practical strategies to cultivate trust, including the concept of 'trust habits' and the importance of understanding consumer behavior in prioritizing trust over price. Trust is not just a concept; it's a game-changer in B2B sales.
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insights INSIGHT
Trust Fuels Innovation Culture
Trust is the foundation of innovation culture and organizational creativity.
Leaders must grant autonomy to employees, which depends on their trustworthiness, to foster risk-taking and innovation.
insights INSIGHT
Trust Bridges Risk Gap
Trust bridges the gap between perceived risk and willingness to act.
Customers trust suppliers to minimize negative outcomes before accepting risks in decisions like investments.
volunteer_activism ADVICE
Build Trust Through Behavior Change
Start building trust by learning, assessing, planning, and executing behavior changes.
Understand the customer's unique trust drivers and adjust your behaviors accordingly.
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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[1][3][5].
The Thin Book of Trust
An Essential Primer for Building Trust at Work
Charles Feltman
The Thin Book of Trust by Charles Feltman provides a simple yet powerful framework for building trust in the workplace. The book is based on the idea that trust is a competency that can be learned, improved, and practiced. It defines trust through four key assessments: sincerity, reliability, competence, and care. These assessments help individuals understand how to build and maintain strong trust with their colleagues and contribute to a high-trust culture at work. The third edition includes new resources, a study guide, and a resource download page, making it a valuable tool for leaders, coaches, consultants, and HR professionals[1][3][5].
Atomic Habits
James Clear
Atomic Habits by James Clear provides a practical and scientifically-backed guide to forming good habits and breaking bad ones. The book introduces the Four Laws of Behavior Change: make it obvious, make it attractive, make it easy, and make it satisfying. It also emphasizes the importance of small, incremental changes (atomic habits) that compound over time to produce significant results. Clear discusses techniques such as habit stacking, optimizing the environment to support desired habits, and focusing on continuous improvement rather than goal fixation. The book is filled with actionable strategies, real-life examples, and stories from various fields, making it a valuable resource for anyone seeking to improve their habits and achieve personal growth[2][4][5].
Unkilled Creativity: How Corporate America Can Out-Innovate Startups
Unkilled Creativity: How Corporate America Can Out-Innovate Startups
Yoram Solomon
Culture Starts with YOU, Not Your Boss
Culture Starts with YOU, Not Your Boss
Yoram Solomon
The Trust Premium
The Trust Premium
Yoram Solomon
Worst Diet Ever
Worst Diet Ever
Yoram Solomon
Sales is a trust game. Always has been; always will be.
It’s not about features, price points, or flashy presentations. It’s about conviction. And conviction is born from trust: deep, unshakable trust across four critical fronts.
Ignore even one, and you’re leaving deals on the table.
The First Deal You Close Every Day is YOU
Before you ever make a cold call, send an email, or walk into a meeting, you’ve got to sell you to you.
Self-doubt is a silent killer. It creeps in, erodes confidence, and betrays you in your voice, your body language, and that split second when you hesitate to ask for the close.
Top performers don’t have fewer fears—they just trust themselves to push through them. They build self-trust the hard way: doing the reps, facing objections, pushing through rejection until they're bulletproof.
Self-trust isn’t optional. It’s the launchpad for everything else you do.
Trust in Your Product
If you don't believe in what you're selling, neither will your prospect.
Prospects can smell when you’re bluffing. They pick up on the hesitations, the weasel words, the way you tiptoe around weaknesses instead of confronting them head-on.
When you know your product solves real problems—and you’ve seen it do so again and again—you sell with conviction. You don’t overpromise. You stop folding under pressure, and stop chasing price shoppers.
Trust in your product doesn’t mean it’s perfect. It means you know where it fits, what it does well, and who it helps—and you’re not afraid to walk away when it’s not the right match.
Your Process is Your Competitive Edge
Amateurs wing it. Top performers trust their process.
A rock-solid sales process is your roadmap to predictable success. It’s the framework that turns chaos into control. When you trust your process, you stop second-guessing yourself. You know exactly what to do next, even when prospects throw curveballs.
Your process should cover all parts of the sales cycle: prospecting, qualifying, handling objections, closing, and follow-up. Each step should be intentional and refined through experience.
Trust in your process gives you the courage to disqualify bad fits and the discipline to execute consistently.
Building Trust with Prospects: Where Deals Live or Die
Prospects don’t buy from people they don’t trust. They buy from people who understand them, demonstrate competence, and follow through on every promise.
The 7 Trust Accelerators That Actually Work
Prepare Like Your Career Depends On It: Before every interaction, know their business, industry challenges, and recent news. When you reference their Q3 earnings call or their CEO's LinkedIn post, you show respect for their time and business.
Lead with Insight, Not Pitches: Share something valuable they don't know about their market, competitors, or opportunities. "I noticed companies in your space are struggling with X. Here's what the successful ones are doing differently..."
Ask Questions That Make Them Think: Skip the basic discovery questions. Ask: "If you could wave a magic wand and fix one thing about your current process, what would it be?" or "What's the real cost of not solving this problem?"
Admit What You Don't Know: When stumped, say: "That's a great question. I don't have the answer right now, but I'll find out and get back to you by tomorrow." Then actually do it.
Tell Them When You're NOT a Fit: Nothing builds trust faster than saying: "Based on what you've told me, I don't think we're the right solution for you. Here's who might be better..." They'll remember your honesty.
Share the Whole Truth About Implementation: Don't sugarcoat. Tell them: "Here's where clients typically hit speedbumps. Here's how long it really takes. Here's what you'll need to invest beyond the price tag."
Follow Up with Value, Not Just "Checking In”: Every touch should add value. Send industry reports, introduce them to potential partners,