Introduction: The Simplest Definition That Gets It Wrong
Ask someone outside of sales what sales is, and the answer is almost always immediate:
“Selling a product.”
Simple. Clean. Completely incomplete.
Even inside sales teams, the definition doesn’t get much better:
Pitching
Closing
Persuading
Hitting targets
These aren’t wrong—but they’re fragments.
And when you build a function around fragments, you get:
Inconsistent performance
Shallow conversations
Unpredictable outcomes
Because you’re optimizing for the wrong thing.
Sales is one of the few professions where most people participate in it—but very few understand it.
And that misunderstanding has real consequences.
The Root Problem: Sales Is Judged Backwards
Most roles are evaluated by their process.
Sales is evaluated by its outcome.
Revenue
Quota attainment
Deals closed
So naturally, people assume:
Sales = Closing deals
But closing is just the visible endpoint of an invisible process.
It’s like judging a movie by its final scene—without understanding the story that led there.
This backward evaluation distorts how sales is understood, taught, and executed.
The Four Most Common Misconceptions
Let’s unpack the beliefs that shape how people think about sales—and why they fall short.
Misconception 1: Sales Is About Talking Well
The stereotype is clear:
A persuasive, articulate person who can “sell anything.”
But in reality:
Talking doesn’t create understanding
Talking doesn’t build trust
Talking doesn’t uncover problems
In fact, excessive talking often signals:
Weak discovery
Misalignment
Lack of clarity
The best salespeople don’t dominate conversations.
They direct them—with precision.
Misconception 2: Sales Is About Persuasion
This is the most persistent myth.
If persuasion is required, it usually means one of two things:
The buyer doesn’t fully see the value
The solution isn’t fully aligned
In both cases, persuasion treats the symptom—not the cause.
Modern sales isn’t about convincing someone to agree.
It’s about helping them understand something clearly enough to decide.
Misconception 3: Sales Is About the Product
Many teams believe:
“If the product is strong, sales becomes easier.”
But buyers don’t evaluate products in isolation.
They evaluate:
Fit within their context
Risk of change
Internal alignment
Timing
The same product can:
Win easily in one scenario
Lose completely in another
Because sales isn’t about the product.
It’s about how the product fits into a specific situation.
Misconception 4: Sales Is About Activity
More calls.
More emails.
More meetings.
Activity is measurable—so it becomes the focus.
But activity without direction leads to:
Noise
Fatigue
Low conversion
The best salespeople don’t just do more.
They do what matters.
What Sales Actually Is (A More Useful Definition)
Let’s replace the misconceptions with something more accurate.
Sales is the process of helping someone move from uncertainty to confident decision-making.
That’s it.
Everything else—pitching, presenting, negotiating—is part of that process.
But not the purpose.
The Three Invisible Layers of Sales
To truly understand sales, you need to see what’s happening beneath the surface.
1. Understanding the Situation
Every deal starts with context.
What’s happening?
Why now?
What triggered this?
Without context, everything is generic.
2. Clarifying the Problem
Buyers often:
Feel something is wrong
But can’t fully articulate it
Sales helps them:
Define the problem
Understand its implications
Prioritize it
3. Enabling the Decision
This is where most people think sales begins.
But it’s actually the final layer.
It includes:
Aligning stakeholders
Addressing risk
Structuring next steps
When the first two layers are strong, this becomes natural.
Why Even Sales Teams Get This Wrong
You might expect sales teams to understand this deeply.
But many don’t.
Because of how systems are designed.
1. Metrics Focus on Outcomes
Reps are measured on:
Revenue
Pipeline
Conversion
But rarely on:
Quality of discovery
Depth of understanding
Effectiveness of conversations
So they optimize for results—not process.
2. Coaching Lacks Context
Managers often rely on:
CRM notes
Rep summaries
Limited call reviews
Which means feedback is:
Incomplete
Delayed
Generalized
3. Best Practices Are Invisible
Top performers:
Develop instinctive behaviors
Adapt dynamically
But without visibility, these behaviors aren’t shared.
So success remains individual—not scalable.
The Consequences of Misunderstanding Sales
When sales is misunderstood, teams experience:
1. Shallow Discovery
Reps ask:
“What do you need?”
Instead of:
“Why does this matter?”
2. Premature Pitching
Solutions are introduced before problems are fully understood.
3. Weak Differentiation
Without context, every pitch sounds the same.
4. Unpredictable Forecasts
Deals look promising—but lack real commitment.
What High-Performing Teams Do Differently
The best teams operate with a different mental model.
1. They Prioritize Understanding Over Speed
They spend more time upfront—because it reduces friction later.
2. They Treat Conversations as Data
Every interaction provides insight.
Not just for the deal—but for the team.
3. They Focus on Decision Quality
Not just:
“Did we close?”
But:
“Was this the right decision for the buyer?”
4. They Build Repeatable Behaviors
They don’t rely on talent alone.
They create systems for consistency.
The Missing Piece: Visibility Into Reality
Here’s the challenge:
Understanding what sales should be is one thing.
Making it consistent is another.
Because:
Managers can’t observe every interaction
Patterns are hard to identify manually
Feedback is often disconnected from context
So teams operate on assumptions.
Where Proshort Fits In (Subtle Integration)
This is where Proshort plays a quiet but critical role.
To fix how sales is misunderstood, you need to see how it actually happens.
Proshort helps teams:
Understand how reps spend their time across workflows
See how conversations unfold—not just how they’re summarized
Identify where understanding breaks down
Provide coaching based on real interactions—not memory
This creates a shift:
From:
Assumption-based coaching
To:
Reality-based development
And over time, it aligns the entire team around:
What sales actually is.
A Practical Shift: Redefining Sales Inside Your Team
If you want to correct this misunderstanding, start here.
1. Redefine Success
From:
“Did we close?”
To:
“Did we help the buyer make a confident decision?”
2. Measure What Matters
Track:
Discovery depth
Conversation quality
Decision clarity
3. Make Conversations Visible
Use real examples to:
Show what good looks like
Highlight missed opportunities
4. Coach Continuously
Not just at deal reviews—but throughout the process.
5. Reinforce the Right Behaviors
Understanding.
Clarity.
Alignment.
Not just activity.
The Bigger Insight: Sales Is a Thinking Discipline
At its highest level, sales is not mechanical.
It’s cognitive.
It requires:
Pattern recognition
Situational awareness
Adaptive thinking
It’s closer to:
Consulting
Strategy
Problem-solving
Than most people realize.
Conclusion: Understanding Sales Changes Everything
When you redefine sales correctly:
Conversations improve
Buyers feel understood
Decisions become easier
Results become more predictable
Because you’re no longer trying to:
Push a product
You’re helping someone:
Make a decision
And that’s what sales has always been.






