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Pressure builds from within, often inside your own head. You start thinking about what has to happen, what you need this deal to do for you, and suddenly the moment feels bigger than you can handle. Before you know it, you’re not trying to do the right thing anymore. You’re just trying to hold on.
In this episode of Purpose Under Pressure, host Bryan Lefelhoc, founder of Bryan Media Strategies, makes the case that most pressure, especially in sales, is self-inflicted. We put it onto ourselves. And it shows up strongest when you’re trying to avoid hearing “no.”
Pressure fades when you stop needing every deal to work. When you don’t mind hearing “no”, sales becomes less about forcing outcomes and more about finding the right fit.
Purpose Under Pressure is brought to you in partnership with Sandler by the Ruby Group, serving sales professionals and sales organizations nationwide from their locations in Akron and Columbus, Ohio, in Capital Region, New York, and in Jacksonville, Florida
Key Takeaways:
– Pressure in sales is usually self-created, not driven by the buyer or external factors
– The fear of hearing “no” is one of the biggest sources of that pressure
– Needing a deal too badly leads to poor behavior, like talking too much, ignoring signals, and chasing weak opportunities
– Buyers rarely create pressure to purchase; that tension comes from the seller’s expectations
– Asking for “no” can actually create clarity and move conversations forward
– Giving prospects permission to say no often reveals the real objection
– Truth is more valuable than a dragged-out maybe
– A full pipeline reduces pressure and improves decision-making
– Strong prospecting helps eliminate dependence on any single deal
——————-
Helpful Links:
Sandler by the Ruby Group: https://go.sandler.com/therubygroup/
Bryan Lefelhoc, Owner, Bryan Media Strategies: https://www.bryanmediastrategies.com/
By Bryan Lefelhoc3.7
33 ratings
Pressure builds from within, often inside your own head. You start thinking about what has to happen, what you need this deal to do for you, and suddenly the moment feels bigger than you can handle. Before you know it, you’re not trying to do the right thing anymore. You’re just trying to hold on.
In this episode of Purpose Under Pressure, host Bryan Lefelhoc, founder of Bryan Media Strategies, makes the case that most pressure, especially in sales, is self-inflicted. We put it onto ourselves. And it shows up strongest when you’re trying to avoid hearing “no.”
Pressure fades when you stop needing every deal to work. When you don’t mind hearing “no”, sales becomes less about forcing outcomes and more about finding the right fit.
Purpose Under Pressure is brought to you in partnership with Sandler by the Ruby Group, serving sales professionals and sales organizations nationwide from their locations in Akron and Columbus, Ohio, in Capital Region, New York, and in Jacksonville, Florida
Key Takeaways:
– Pressure in sales is usually self-created, not driven by the buyer or external factors
– The fear of hearing “no” is one of the biggest sources of that pressure
– Needing a deal too badly leads to poor behavior, like talking too much, ignoring signals, and chasing weak opportunities
– Buyers rarely create pressure to purchase; that tension comes from the seller’s expectations
– Asking for “no” can actually create clarity and move conversations forward
– Giving prospects permission to say no often reveals the real objection
– Truth is more valuable than a dragged-out maybe
– A full pipeline reduces pressure and improves decision-making
– Strong prospecting helps eliminate dependence on any single deal
——————-
Helpful Links:
Sandler by the Ruby Group: https://go.sandler.com/therubygroup/
Bryan Lefelhoc, Owner, Bryan Media Strategies: https://www.bryanmediastrategies.com/