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In all cases, experience drives outstanding sales performance. Depending on how you apply your experience, your performance will be outstandingly good or outstandingly bad.

Experience without perspective is catastrophic. In sales, there is a trap we fall into called “the halo effect”. It means taking one experience and generalizing it to apply to all similar situations.

  • This printing company hated me and my products. Therefore, printing companies are poor prospects.
  • This buyer stopped doing business with me because my repeated emails annoyed him. Therefore, I won’t send emails anymore.
  • This product failed disastrously at my largest account. Therefore, I won’t sell it anymore.

This sort of inductive reasoning is full of fallacies, but in sales, it is often rooted in emotion. We remember bad experiences and don’t want to repeat them. We become gun shy. If we fall into this habit, eventually we will be unable to do much of anything.

New Year’s Resolution!
I won’t let a bad experience throw me off track. A negative incident is simply that – incidental.


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