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Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount
Jeb Blount
363 episodes
4 days 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.
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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
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Why Cultural Intelligence Beats Language Skills in International Sales (Ask Jeb)
Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount
20 minutes 43 seconds
1 week ago
Why Cultural Intelligence Beats Language Skills in International Sales (Ask Jeb)


Here's a question that'll flip your understanding of cultural intelligence in sales upside down: How do you win over a room full of skeptical Spanish teenagers when you're the obvious American outsider who barely speaks their language?
That's exactly what Spencer Birmingham from Arkansas faced when he called into Ask Jeb. Fresh out of college with a marketing degree and an internship at International Paper under his belt, Spencer was heading to Spain for eight months as a language teaching assistant. His challenge? Figure out how to connect with Spanish students and "sell" them on American culture and the English language.
What started as a simple question about gaining cultural perspective turned into a masterclass on the universal principles of influence—principles that work whether you're closing deals in boardrooms or winning over teenagers in Spanish classrooms.

The Universal Language of Human Connection
Spencer had already absorbed one of the key lessons from Sales EQ—the brown paper bag story about understanding what matters to your prospect. But he was struggling to see how those principles would translate across cultural and language barriers.
Here's the breakthrough: The five core decisions people make before they buy into you—Do I like you? Do you listen to me? Do you make me feel important? Do you get me? Do I trust and believe you?—are universal. They transcend language, culture, and geography.
Whether you're selling software to executives in Atlanta or teaching English to teenagers in Madrid, every human being makes these same emotional decisions before they'll open their hearts and minds to your message.

The Listening Advantage That Trumps Language Barriers
Most teachers (and salespeople) make the same fatal mistake: They walk in talking. They assume their job is to deliver information, share knowledge, and demonstrate expertise.
Wrong approach.
The secret weapon that works in every culture? Start by listening.
Instead of walking into that Spanish classroom and immediately launching into English lessons, what if Spencer started by asking questions: "Tell me something about yourself that not many people know. What are your biggest challenges with English? Why do you want to learn this language?"
This approach leverages what we know about human psychology in complex sales: When you listen first, you accomplish three critical things simultaneously.
First, you demonstrate likability through genuine interest. Second, you prove you're actually listening—the foundation of all trust. Third, you make people feel important, which is the most insatiable human need.

Speaking Their Language (Even When You Don't)
Here's where it gets fascinating. Spencer worried about the language barrier, but that's actually his biggest opportunity.
The language that matters most isn't Spanish or English—it's the language of being a teenager in Spain. It's the language of their challenges, their dreams, their world. When Spencer takes what they share about themselves and incorporates it into his lessons, suddenly he's not the outsider trying to force American culture on them.
He becomes the person who gets them.
"Remember when you told me about your soccer tournament? Let's practice describing that experience in English." Suddenly, English isn't a foreign concept—it's a tool for expressing what matters to them.
This mirrors exactly what happens in complex sales. The most successful salespeople don't speak the language of their product features—they speak the language of their prospect's business challenges, industry pressures, and personal goals.

The Power of Making People Feel Heard
There's a reason why Back to Episodes
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.