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Rob Nelson and Don Tennessen discuss Principle Two of Ninja Selling: Stop Selling. Start Solving. It's built on a simple truth that people love to buy, and they hate to be sold. They explore why most sales approaches push people away, triggering defensiveness and avoidance, and how Ninja flips that dynamic by creating value, asking questions, and building relationships that naturally attract clients.
Rob and Don clarify that the goal is not to avoid a process or abandon structure. The goal is to redefine what selling is, to become the trusted guide who helps people decide. They draw a sharp contrast between persuasion and clarity, emphasizing that confidence is built through communication, anticipating needs, reducing surprises, and making the transaction feel "greased" so the focus can stay on the human experience.
A major theme is that real estate is uniquely emotional and complex because it is layered on top of life events like career changes, marriage, divorce, children, and moving routines and memories. That makes "fabled service" less about technical excellence and more about how clients feel during uncertainty. Don shares personal examples from selling rental properties and from a longtime doctor relationship to show what people remember most, the moments that communicate, I care about you, and I've got you. The conversation ends with a practical reset. If you feel yourself selling, you likely stopped solving, and the fastest pivot is to ask a question and re-center on the client's next chapter.
Key Takeaways
People move away from sales pressure and move toward value, so the first goal is to stop pushing people away
Stop selling is really about attracting clients instead of chasing them
A Ninja mindset focuses on what you can give rather than what you can get
The job is not to make people buy, the job is to help them decide
Reputation replaces persuasion because what clients say about you is more powerful than what you say about yourself
Value creation has two lanes, what you do during the transaction and what you do between transactions
Clients want information, a clear process, consistent follow up, and fewer surprises
Real estate is more complex than other financial transactions because it stacks on top of life change and emotion
Fabled service is less about technical perfection and more about how you make people feel
A moment of truth is when a client touches your process, so anticipate stress points and communicate proactively
If you feel like you are selling, you probably stopped solving and started thinking about yourself
The best pivot out of sales mode is to ask a question and return focus to the client and ask questions
Strangers are only strangers as long as you let them be strangers, one meaningful conversation changes that
The transaction is not the goal, it is the consequence of consistent relationship and service
Memorable Quotes
"People love to buy and they hate to be sold."
"Our job isn't to make people buy. Our job is to help them decide."
"The mindset of a salesperson is to get something from someone. The mindset of a Ninja is what can we give."
"Reputation replaces persuasion."
"What do I have to do so they don't have to lay awake at night?"
"A moment of truth is when your client comes into contact with your process."
"You build confidence through clarity."
"If I'm solving, then I don't have to sell. If I'm selling, I've probably stopped solving."
"The transaction is not the goal, it's the consequence."
Links:
By Ninja Selling4.8
310310 ratings
Rob Nelson and Don Tennessen discuss Principle Two of Ninja Selling: Stop Selling. Start Solving. It's built on a simple truth that people love to buy, and they hate to be sold. They explore why most sales approaches push people away, triggering defensiveness and avoidance, and how Ninja flips that dynamic by creating value, asking questions, and building relationships that naturally attract clients.
Rob and Don clarify that the goal is not to avoid a process or abandon structure. The goal is to redefine what selling is, to become the trusted guide who helps people decide. They draw a sharp contrast between persuasion and clarity, emphasizing that confidence is built through communication, anticipating needs, reducing surprises, and making the transaction feel "greased" so the focus can stay on the human experience.
A major theme is that real estate is uniquely emotional and complex because it is layered on top of life events like career changes, marriage, divorce, children, and moving routines and memories. That makes "fabled service" less about technical excellence and more about how clients feel during uncertainty. Don shares personal examples from selling rental properties and from a longtime doctor relationship to show what people remember most, the moments that communicate, I care about you, and I've got you. The conversation ends with a practical reset. If you feel yourself selling, you likely stopped solving, and the fastest pivot is to ask a question and re-center on the client's next chapter.
Key Takeaways
People move away from sales pressure and move toward value, so the first goal is to stop pushing people away
Stop selling is really about attracting clients instead of chasing them
A Ninja mindset focuses on what you can give rather than what you can get
The job is not to make people buy, the job is to help them decide
Reputation replaces persuasion because what clients say about you is more powerful than what you say about yourself
Value creation has two lanes, what you do during the transaction and what you do between transactions
Clients want information, a clear process, consistent follow up, and fewer surprises
Real estate is more complex than other financial transactions because it stacks on top of life change and emotion
Fabled service is less about technical perfection and more about how you make people feel
A moment of truth is when a client touches your process, so anticipate stress points and communicate proactively
If you feel like you are selling, you probably stopped solving and started thinking about yourself
The best pivot out of sales mode is to ask a question and return focus to the client and ask questions
Strangers are only strangers as long as you let them be strangers, one meaningful conversation changes that
The transaction is not the goal, it is the consequence of consistent relationship and service
Memorable Quotes
"People love to buy and they hate to be sold."
"Our job isn't to make people buy. Our job is to help them decide."
"The mindset of a salesperson is to get something from someone. The mindset of a Ninja is what can we give."
"Reputation replaces persuasion."
"What do I have to do so they don't have to lay awake at night?"
"A moment of truth is when your client comes into contact with your process."
"You build confidence through clarity."
"If I'm solving, then I don't have to sell. If I'm selling, I've probably stopped solving."
"The transaction is not the goal, it's the consequence."
Links:

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