Home
Categories
EXPLORE
Society & Culture
Comedy
Leisure
True Crime
Education
Business
News
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
Loading...
0:00 / 0:00
Podjoint Logo
MO
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts126/v4/8b/ac/2c/8bac2c4f-c969-1acc-b73d-bdd2d29ccd0b/mza_9651768523217385038.png/600x600bb.jpg
Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount
Jeb Blount
375 episodes
1 day ago
Jeb Blount is the bestselling author of 16 of the most definitive books ever written for the sales profession. He believes that Sales Professionals are the Elite Athletes of the Business World. On the Sales Gravy podcast Jeb teaches you how to open more doors, close bigger deals, and rock your commission check.
Show more...
Careers
Business,
Marketing,
Entrepreneurship
RSS
All content for Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount is the property of Jeb Blount and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Jeb Blount is the bestselling author of 16 of the most definitive books ever written for the sales profession. He believes that Sales Professionals are the Elite Athletes of the Business World. On the Sales Gravy podcast Jeb teaches you how to open more doors, close bigger deals, and rock your commission check.
Show more...
Careers
Business,
Marketing,
Entrepreneurship
https://salesgravy.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/How-Poor-Sales-Meeting-Strategy-Kills-Win-Rates-with-Lee-Salz-Jeb-Blount-Jr.-on-the-Sales-Gravy-Podcast-1.png
How a Poor Sales Meeting Strategy Kills Win Rates
Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount
16 minutes 9 seconds
1 week ago
How a Poor Sales Meeting Strategy Kills Win Rates
Most salespeople lose a sales meeting before they ever open their mouth. They show up with decks of slides, lists of discovery questions, or AI-generated talking points, thinking preparation is about having more material. 

But while they’re busy organizing, their prospects are mentally checking out—and the meeting hasn’t even started.

Lee Salz, bestselling author and founder of Sales Architects, has observed this pattern for decades. "If you want to win more deals at the prices you want, you need a better first meeting strategy. Everyone says I want to win more deals, so they focus on closing at the end. But that's not where the opportunities are. The opportunities to win more deals start in that first meeting."
The Sales Meeting Problem Hiding in Plain Sight
Ask any salesperson: "If a prospect agrees to meet with you, what do they get out of it?"

The response is usually stunned silence.

That silence reveals the problem. Too many sales professionals approach the first sales meeting with an extraction mindset, focused on what they can learn instead of what they can give.

Think about how you prepare. Do you make a list of questions to gather information? Do you pull together slides about your company, products, and clients? That might feel productive, but here’s what it communicates: This meeting is about me.

When prospects can’t see immediate value in the conversation, they resist. They may decline the meeting altogether, or worse—they show up already skeptical, arms crossed, counting down the minutes until they can escape.
Why Traditional Discovery Is Failing You
Sales training has conditioned reps to believe that discovery meetings are the foundation of the sales process. In theory, this makes sense: You need information to qualify opportunities.

But here’s the problem—buyers don’t experience value when they educate you. They already have suppliers, vendors, and service providers. Another salesperson asking them to “tell me about your challenges” just feels like more work.

Worse, traditional discovery feels like an interrogation. You’re pulling data without leaving anything behind. And prospects are savvy enough to sense when you’re there to take rather than give.
The Emotion Gap in Every Sales Meeting
You already know people buy on emotion and justify with logic. You’ve heard it in every sales book, every training, every keynote.

Walk into the average first meeting, and you’ll see the same setup: a rep armed with facts, features, processes, and pricing structures. All logic, zero emotion.

The result? Buyers nod politely, take notes, and then ghost you. Not because your product isn’t good enough, but because you failed to make them feel anything.

Your competitors who are consistently winning aren’t necessarily better at selling features. They’re better at weaving emotional connection into the very fabric of their meetings. They create trust, credibility, and resonance in the first 15 minutes.
The Three Non-Negotiables of Every Winning Sales Meeting
High-performing sales professionals understand that every first meeting must accomplish three core objectives:

Meaningful Qualification: Determine whether this opportunity aligns with your ideal customer profile while also helping prospects better understand their situation. 
Clear Differentiation: Prospects need to understand what makes your approach unique, but not through feature comparisons. Real differentiation comes from your methodology, philosophy, and approach. Show them how you think about solving problems,
Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount
Jeb Blount is the bestselling author of 16 of the most definitive books ever written for the sales profession. He believes that Sales Professionals are the Elite Athletes of the Business World. On the Sales Gravy podcast Jeb teaches you how to open more doors, close bigger deals, and rock your commission check.