Why Your Sales Team Resists Scripts (And How It's Hurting Your Close Rate)
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
About this listen
Most salespeople will tell you they have a process. What they actually have is a set of habits that work often enough to feel like success; that is not a system. In this episode, we make the case for the sales playbook most reps resist, and we explain why the resistance itself is the real problem.
We get into the head trash that makes scripts feel inauthentic, the reason actors get celebrated for doing the exact same thing we are asking salespeople to do, and why most reps feel good about their calls until someone else is in the room.
Why Scripts Feel Inauthentic
The first reaction to a sales script is almost always the same: these are not my words. We talk through that reaction and offer a different frame. Actors memorize lines and deliver them convincingly; that is the skill we celebrate them for. A salesperson preparing responses to common buyer situations is doing the same work.
The 90 Percent Rule
If you have been selling for more than a year, you have already seen 89 or 90 percent of what a buyer is going to do or say in any given situation. A playbook captures those patterns. Instead of improvising, you come in prepared, anticipating what might happen, locked and loaded with how you will respond.
Why "Winging It" Breaks Down Under Visibility
Most reps feel fine about a call when they are the only one in the room. Put a manager on a ride-along and suddenly the wheels come off. That gap is not random; it is the difference between a routine that works ish and a process that can be coached.
You Already Have a Script (You Just Do Not Know It)
The salesperson who swears they do not use a script is running one anyway. It is just unconscious, stitched together from reactive habits that work maybe 55 percent of the time. In school, 55 percent is failing. In sales, it is a career.
You Cannot Listen and Plan at the Same Time
When you are thinking about what to say next, you are not hearing the buyer. Jim talks through how this was the pain that finally broke him of winging it, even at a respectable 30 percent close rate. The ratio looked fine. The experience was exhausting.
Without a Plan, There Is Nothing to Coach
If a rep cannot describe what they intended to do on a call, there is nothing for a manager to work with. Intention is where coaching begins. Without it, feedback becomes two people arguing about two different versions of what they think happened.
The Sandler Training Hour Hosted by Jim & Jason Stephens | Crossroads Business Development
Join hosts Jim and Jason Stephens from Crossroads Business Development as they discuss techniques, tactics, and the occasional tangent associated with the Sandler Selling System. Whether you are prospecting, negotiating, or closing, The Sandler Training Hour gives you the actionable advice you need to stop "winging it" and start controlling the sale.
📧 Reach out: jason.stephens@sandler.com 🌐 Crossroads Business Development