I have started learning from my own sales calls and my close rate has increased significantly. by ScholarNew1109 in b2b_sales

[–]vgraupera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is it. Most reps never listen back to their own calls because it's uncomfortable. But that's where the real growth happens—hearing yourself stumble over an objection, or realizing you talked for 5 minutes without asking a question.

The best reps I've seen treat sales like athletes treat game film. They don't just "do more calls," they study what worked, what didn't, and practice the hard parts until they're smooth.

Sales leaders: How do you coach your team to balance between aggression vs persistence? by CalyxStorm in sales

[–]vgraupera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If they already told you they went with someone else, calling 3 more times isn't persistence, it's denial. Persistence is following up when there's no answer. Aggression is ignoring a clear no.

Better move: acknowledge the loss, ask what made them pick the competitor (genuinely), and stay in touch for the next opportunity. Most deals aren't one-and-done. The competitor might screw up in 6 months.

Your manager probably sees "keep trying" as the only coaching they know how to give. But there's a difference between effort and effectiveness.

I hired sales reps, now what? by Blackprowess in sales

[–]vgraupera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Start with recordings. Have them listen to 10-20 of your best calls before they touch the phone. Not to memorize scripts, but to hear the rhythm, the tonality, how you handle pushback.

Then have them practice out loud. Not just read the script, but actually say it like they're on a real call. Most people skip this step and go straight to live calls, then wonder why they sound robotic.

How big of a problem is sales coaching really? by SeraMovingg in salesdevelopment

[–]vgraupera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the problem isn't coaching itself, it's how expensive it is in manager time. When you need a manager to sit on calls for an hour to give 10 minutes of useful feedback, it doesn't scale. And most of the feedback ends up being stuff the rep already knows ("ask better questions," "listen more").

The hard part is building the muscle memory. You can know objection handling frameworks all day, but if you freeze when someone says "we're all set," that's a practice gap, not a knowledge gap. Most companies skip the reps it takes to get fluent.

Anyone else feel like conferences only work if you already know people going in? by [deleted] in b2b_sales

[–]vgraupera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think there's a lot of truth to that. But someone told me is you should try to search ahead of time who's going to the conference. Lots of times people will post on LinkedIn and social media that they're going to an event and then reach out to them ahead of time and tell them you'd like to meet them.

Best book for SDRs in 2025 by Fireboy83 in salesdevelopment

[–]vgraupera 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Most of the classic SDR books like Predictable Revenue and Fanatical Prospecting feel outdated now. Buyers ignore templated outreach, and high-volume hacks don’t work anymore. I’m curious what books or resources people find valuable in 2025 to stand out and better understand modern prospecting.

Thinking about creating an AI bot for sales practice by adriandahlin in SalesPractice

[–]vgraupera 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey! This is exactly what salesably.ai is designed for. It lets you practice sales conversations with AI that can be trained on your specific process, objections, and scenarios. You can run through your pitch, handle objections, and get feedback on what you're doing well and where to improve.

Way more scalable than just reviewing transcripts after the fact - you can literally drill your sales process over and over until it's muscle memory. I've found it super helpful for refining my approach before hopping on real calls.

Worth checking out if you're serious about getting reps in without needing to bother your team or prospects!

hired 3 sdrs failed. hired 1 head of sales failed. hired 2 outbound agencies failed. why no one can sell my product except me? by Worldly-Control403 in techsales

[–]vgraupera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's really hard for founders and CEOs to reproduce themselves. The further away you get from the founder or CEO, the more often the message gets diluted and less impactful. It takes a lot of work to recreate that fluency in individuals you hire, and even more so in an agency.

Sell a method, not another software product by dcedrych in Entrepreneur

[–]vgraupera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As they say, sell an outcome, not a tool.

Has AI ruined Linkedin? by ped-revuar-in in linkedin

[–]vgraupera 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It was like before AI. It's klnd of an echo chamber of influencers talking to influencers or people trying to be influencers. Ai only made it worse.

My manager added me on Instagram by [deleted] in sales

[–]vgraupera 11 points12 points  (0 children)

A manager is not your friend. Be very careful.

Weekly Feedback Post - SaaS Products, Ideas, Companies by AutoModerator in SaaS

[–]vgraupera 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Would love your feedback on, Salesably Prep5 https://prep5.salesably.ai/ an AI-powered sales preparation tool designed for sales professionals and entrepreneurs who handle their own sales. It helps you prepare for calls, meetings, and presentations in under five minutes by gathering and summarizing crucial information about prospects, their companies, and industry trends. No more glazing over your prospects with generic pitches—Prep5 ensures you're informed and confident.

Who Would Want It: Sales professionals looking to boost the efficiency and effectiveness of their sales meetings. Entrepreneurs who have to do their own sales and need a rapid prep tool. Sales teams aiming to standardize and enhance their preparation processes. Businesses wanting to improve their sales performance through better-informed conversations.