Introduction: The Word Everyone Thinks They Understand
Ask ten people what “sales” means, and you’ll likely hear:
“Convincing someone to buy”
“Pitching a product”
“Closing deals”
“Hitting targets”
None of these are entirely wrong.
But none of them are complete either.
Because sales, at its core, is not about persuasion.
It’s about understanding, alignment, and decision-making.
And this misunderstanding isn’t just held by outsiders.
Even within sales teams, many reps operate with a flawed definition of what their role actually is.
When you misunderstand what sales is, you optimize for the wrong behaviors.
And that leads to:
Shallow conversations
Weak relationships
Unpredictable outcomes
This blog breaks down why sales is so often misunderstood—and what it really is.
The Root Problem: Sales Is Judged by Its Outcomes, Not Its Process
Most professions are evaluated by how they work.
Sales is evaluated by what it produces.
Revenue.
Quota.
Deals closed.
This creates a skewed perception.
People see the result—not the process behind it.
So they assume:
Sales = Closing
But closing is just the final moment in a much larger sequence.
It’s like judging a surgeon only by whether the patient survives—without understanding the diagnosis, preparation, and execution involved.
This outcome bias is the first reason sales is misunderstood.
The Popular Myths That Distort Sales
Let’s unpack the most common misconceptions.
Myth 1: Sales Is About Talking Well
The stereotype:
A confident, articulate person who can “sell anything.”
Reality:
The best salespeople don’t dominate conversations.
They guide them.
They ask:
Better questions
At better moments
With better intent
Talking helps.
But understanding wins.
Myth 2: Sales Is About Persuasion
This is the biggest misconception.
Persuasion implies:
The buyer doesn’t fully agree
The seller needs to “push”
But in modern sales, especially B2B:
If you’re persuading, you’re already behind.
Great sales isn’t about convincing someone of something untrue.
It’s about helping them see what’s already true—but not fully clear.
Myth 3: Sales Is About the Product
Many reps believe:
“If the product is strong, it will sell itself.”
But buyers don’t evaluate products in isolation.
They evaluate:
Context
Risk
Timing
Alternatives
Internal pressures
The same product can:
Win easily in one deal
Lose completely in another
Because the context is different.
Sales isn’t about the product.
It’s about how the product fits into the buyer’s reality.
Myth 4: Sales Is About Hustle
“Hustle culture” has shaped how sales is perceived.
More calls.
More emails.
More outreach.
Activity matters—but it’s not the differentiator.
Because:
You can have high activity with low effectiveness
You can have fewer interactions with higher impact
The best salespeople don’t just do more.
They do better.
What Sales Actually Is (A More Accurate Definition)
Let’s reframe it.
Sales is the process of helping a buyer make a confident, informed decision that aligns with their goals and constraints.
That’s it.
Not pushing.
Not convincing.
Not manipulating.
Helping.
This definition changes everything.
The Four Pillars of Real Sales
To truly understand sales, break it into four core functions.
1. Understanding the Buyer’s Reality
This is where most deals are won—or lost.
It involves:
Context (What’s happening?)
Problems (What’s not working?)
Stakes (Why does it matter?)
Without this, everything else is guesswork.
2. Creating Clarity
Buyers often:
Know something is wrong
But don’t fully understand why
Sales helps them:
Clarify the problem
Understand implications
See possible paths forward
Clarity builds confidence.
3. Reducing Risk
Every purchase carries risk:
Financial
Operational
Personal
Great salespeople proactively address:
Doubts
Concerns
Unknowns
Because most deals aren’t lost to competition.
They’re lost to hesitation.
4. Enabling Decision-Making
The final step isn’t closing.
It’s helping the buyer decide.
This includes:
Aligning stakeholders
Structuring next steps
Removing friction
When done well, closing becomes a natural outcome—not a forced event.
Why Even Sales Teams Get This Wrong
You might think this misunderstanding only exists outside sales.
It doesn’t.
Many teams reinforce it internally.
1. Metrics Focus on Outcomes, Not Behaviors
Reps are measured on:
Revenue
Pipeline
Conversion rates
But rarely on:
Quality of discovery
Depth of conversations
Effectiveness of questioning
So they optimize for what’s measured.
2. Coaching Is Often Superficial
Feedback like:
“Be more confident”
“Handle objections better”
Sounds useful—but lacks specificity.
Without understanding what actually happened in conversations, coaching remains vague.
3. Best Practices Stay Hidden
Top performers often:
Operate on instinct
Don’t articulate their approach
Without visibility into real interactions, teams struggle to replicate success.
The Consequences of This Misunderstanding
When sales is misunderstood, teams:
1. Push Too Early
They pitch before understanding.
Which leads to resistance.
2. Miss Real Buying Signals
They focus on surface-level needs instead of deeper motivations.
3. Struggle With Objections
Because they’re addressing symptoms—not root causes.
4. Create Unpredictable Pipelines
Deals look strong—but lack real commitment.
What Top Sales Teams Understand That Others Don’t
High-performing teams operate with a different mindset.
1. They Prioritize Depth Over Speed
They’re willing to spend more time understanding—because it accelerates everything later.
2. They Listen More Than They Talk
Not passively—but actively.
They:
Notice cues
Follow threads
Ask better follow-ups
3. They Treat Every Deal as Unique
Instead of forcing a script, they adapt to:
The buyer
The situation
The stakes
4. They Focus on Decision Quality
Not just whether a deal closes—but whether it was the right decision.
The Role of Visibility in Fixing This Problem
Here’s the challenge:
Even if you understand what sales should be, making it consistent is hard.
Because:
Managers can’t review every interaction
Patterns are hard to spot manually
Feedback is often delayed
This is where many teams struggle.
Where Proshort Subtly Changes the Game
Proshort helps bridge the gap between theory and reality.
It gives teams visibility into how sales actually happens:
How reps spend their time
How conversations unfold
Where opportunities are missed
This allows managers to:
Move beyond assumptions
Identify patterns across the team
Provide feedback in real context
Instead of coaching based on memory or summaries, they coach based on reality.
Over time, this helps align the team around what sales actually is—not what people think it is.
A Practical Shift: From Selling to Guiding
If you want your team to adopt a more accurate view of sales, start here:
1. Redefine Success
From:
“Did we close the deal?”
To:
“Did we help the buyer make a clear, confident decision?”
2. Improve Discovery Depth
Focus on:
Why now?
What happens if nothing changes?
What’s at stake?
3. Make Conversations Visible
Use real examples to:
Show what good looks like
Highlight missed opportunities
4. Coach Behaviors, Not Just Outcomes
Instead of:
“Close more deals”
Focus on:
Ask better questions
Explore deeper
Clarify more
5. Reinforce Continuously
Understanding sales isn’t a one-time shift.
It requires ongoing reinforcement.
The Bigger Insight: Sales Is a Thinking Discipline
At its highest level, sales is not about:
Scripts
Techniques
Tricks
It’s about thinking.
Understanding:
People
Problems
Decisions
It’s closer to:
Consulting
Psychology
Strategy
Than most people realize.
Conclusion: Reframing Sales Changes Everything
When you redefine sales correctly:
Everything improves.
Conversations become deeper
Buyers feel understood
Deals move more naturally
Results become more predictable
Because you’re no longer trying to:
Push a product
You’re helping someone:
Make a better decision
And that’s what great sales has always been.






