OFFRE D'UNE DURÉE LIMITÉE | Obtenez 3 mois à 0.99 $ par mois

14.95 $/mois par la suite. Des conditions s'appliquent.
Page de couverture de The Invisible Manager: Coaching, Scaling & Making Yourself Obsolete w/ Sean Gannon

The Invisible Manager: Coaching, Scaling & Making Yourself Obsolete w/ Sean Gannon

The Invisible Manager: Coaching, Scaling & Making Yourself Obsolete w/ Sean Gannon

Écouter gratuitement

Voir les détails du balado

À propos de cet audio

Episode SummaryIn this episode of Thoughts on Selling, Lee Levitt sits down with Sean Gannon, founder of GTMPPL (GTM People), to answer the "unanswerable" question: Who is Sean Gannon?We dive into a refreshing (and controversial) take on Sales Leadership: why the best managers strive to make themselves obsolete. If your team can't function without you, you aren't leading—you're hovering. From the trenches of EdTech to the nuances of Sandler Training, Sean shares candid stories about the transition from "spreadsheet inspection" to true coaching. We also share a hilarious cautionary tale about what happens when a salesperson sticks to the script even after the customer has said "yes."Memorable Quotes:"I view my role as a sales manager to make myself obsolete. I should be relatively invisible." — Sean Gannon"Your job is to sell the meeting... not to sell the company, not to sell the solution." — Sean Gannon"The best sales enablement... you don't know what's being done to you. You don't know what's being done for you." — Lee Levitt3 Actionable Takeaways for Leaders:The "Obsolete" Standard: Your goal is to build a team so competent they don't need you to close the deal. If you are constantly swooping in to save the quarter, you are failing at scale.Stop "Spreadsheet Inspection": Sean shares how shifting his focus from inspecting metrics to coaching behaviors increased his team's retention from 18 months to 36 months. Stop asking "What's the number?" and start asking "How can I help you get there?"Read the Room (The Sandler Trap): We discuss a painful example of a rep who kept running the "Sandler Pain Funnel" even after the buyer said they were ready to sign. Lesson: When you get the "Yes," stop selling and start contracting.Key Topics & Timestamps:(00:00) – Introduction: Who is Sean Gannon?(05:15) – The "Obsolete" Manager: Why the best leaders strive to become invisible.(12:30) – Sales vs. Marketing: Dismantling the "throw it over the wall" lead mentality.(19:45) – Coaching vs. Inspection: How to double your team's tenure through mentorship.(27:00) – The "Script" Horror Story: Why you must stop the process when the customer says "Yes."(34:10) – Everyone Sells: Why CSMs, SDRs, and even internal staff need sales skills.(41:00) – Authenticity Wins: Why "I don't know" is a powerful trust-builder.About Our Guest:Sean Gannon is the Founder of GTMPPL (GTM People), a community and consultancy focused on the people side of Go-To-Market strategy. With a deep background in EdTech sales and leadership, Sean is an advocate for human-centric management. He specializes in helping organizations move from rigid "command and control" structures to coaching cultures that drive long-term revenue and retention.About the Host:Lee Levitt is the Principal of The Acelera Group and a seasoned sales consultant. With decades of experience in Sales Enablement, RevOps, and Performance Management, Lee helps enterprise organizations build disciplined, replicable sales operating systems.He is the voice behind the Thoughts on Selling™ brand.Related Episodes:Ep [Prev]: The Accidental Manager Crisis w/ Ben Perreau: More on the transition from rep to leader.Ep [Prev]: Why Sales Training Fails w/ Tom Kiernan: The difference between "events" and "process."Resources & Links:Build Your Revenue Engine: Visit GTMPPL.com.Connect with the Guest: Find Sean Gannon on LinkedIn for his latest industry observations.Subscribe: Get the newsletter at thoughtsonselling.com.Keywords:Sales Leadership, Sales Management, GTM Strategy, GTMPPL, Sandler Training, Sales Coaching, Employee Retention, RevOps, Sales vs Marketing, Go-to-Market, EdTech Sales, B2B Sales Strategy, Deal mechanics, Sales Psychology
Pas encore de commentaire