Six research-backed pillars from organizations Americans trust most. Not opinions. Not frameworks invented last Tuesday. Decades of data across millions of interactions proving that the way most businesses approach sales is fundamentally broken.
Each card holds a question most business leaders think they can answer. Click to discover what the research actually says.
Dixon and Adamson studied 6,000+ reps across 90 companies. They found five distinct sales profiles. The one profile most prized by sales executives, the Relationship Builder, produced the fewest top performers at just 7%.
The highest performer? The Challenger, at nearly 40% of all top reps. Challengers teach customers something new about their business, tailor their message to each stakeholder, and take control of the conversation. They push customers to think differently rather than simply agreeing with them.
In complex sales, top reps outperform average reps by almost 200%. The gap is not marginal. It is a chasm.
Source: The Challenger Sale, Matthew Dixon and Brent Adamson, 2011. Published by Portfolio/Penguin. Research conducted by CEB, now Gartner.
Over 40,000 people apply each year. Fewer than 100 are selected. The initial franchise fee is $10,000. But they are not selecting for money. They are selecting for character, leadership, community engagement, and alignment with company values.
The result? A 95% annual operator retention rate in an industry where the average is 35%. Most operators stay 20+ years. Chick-fil-A outperforms competitors with a third of the locations, fewer operating hours, and one day closed per week.
They do not ask "can you afford this?" They ask "are you the right person for this?" That is a discovery call, not a sales pitch.
Source: Chick-fil-A corporate data, QSR Magazine, Forbes (96% retention over 50 years, reported 2015), Franchise Business Review.
Every Ritz-Carlton employee, from housekeeping to concierge, is authorized to spend up to $2,000 per guest per incident to solve problems or create memorable experiences. No managerial approval required.
Most employees never use anywhere near that amount. A piece of chocolate and a handwritten note usually does the job. But knowing they can changes everything about how they approach service.
Founder Horst Schulze explained it simply: if the average guest spends $250,000 over their lifetime, $2,000 to protect that relationship is not a cost. It is an investment. His motto, "Ladies and gentlemen serving ladies and gentlemen," was not a slogan. It was an operating philosophy. They teach employees who they are before they teach them what they do.
Source: Horst Schulze (co-founder, Ritz-Carlton), Corporate Competitor Podcast, Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award (1992, first hotel chain and first service company to win).
Amazon does not hire based on resumes. They hire based on demonstrated alignment with 14 leadership principles. Every interview question maps to a principle. Every answer is evaluated against behavioral evidence, not promises.
Two principles matter most for sales conversations: "Customer Obsession" (leaders start with the customer and work backwards) and "Have Backbone; Disagree and Commit" (leaders do not compromise for social cohesion when they believe something is right).
This is exactly what a Challenger seller does: they start with what the customer actually needs, not what the customer says they want. And they push back when they see a better path, even when it is uncomfortable.
Amazon built the most valuable company in the world by qualifying people against principles, not persuading them with pitches.
Source: Amazon Leadership Principles (public), The Amazon Way by John Rossman, Working Backwards by Colin Bryar and Bill Carr.
Gallup's State of the Global Workplace report shows that only 23% of employees worldwide are engaged, meaning they are involved in and enthusiastic about their work. The remaining 77% are either quietly disengaged or actively disengaged.
The companies that defy this? They invest in manager quality. Gallup's Q12 framework, based on decades of research across millions of employees, found that the single biggest factor in team engagement is the direct manager. Not compensation. Not perks. Not the product.
The parallel to sales is direct: the quality of the advisor (the person leading the conversation) determines whether the relationship thrives or dies. Tools, systems, and offers are secondary to the human in the room.
Organizations that empower employees experience 50% higher customer loyalty (Gallup). The Ritz-Carlton and Chick-fil-A prove this. So does every advisor who qualifies with depth rather than pitching with urgency.
Source: Gallup State of the Global Workplace (annual), Gallup Q12 Meta-Analysis, First, Break All the Rules by Marcus Buckingham and Curt Coffman.
BCG's 10-20-70 rule states that in any transformation initiative, 10% of the value comes from the algorithms, 20% from the technology, and 70% from the people and process changes required to make it work.
This is why the best sales conversations are not about features, platforms, or price points. They are about whether the people in the room are ready, aligned, and resourced to execute on whatever is being proposed.
A discovery call that skips this question, that jumps straight to "here is what we offer" without first understanding capacity, team structure, and investment readiness, is leaving 70% of the value on the table before the conversation even begins.
Source: BCG research on digital and AI transformation, widely cited in Harvard Business Review and Deloitte State of AI reports.
Every one of these organizations, from a fast-food restaurant to a global hotel chain to the largest company in the world, follows the same core pattern: qualify first, serve deeply, and let the quality of the experience do the selling.
They do not chase. They do not pressure. They do not discount to close. They invest in the quality of the conversation, the clarity of the alignment, and the depth of the relationship. Then they let the results speak.
The question is not whether this works. The research proves it does. The question is whether you have a system for doing it consistently.
Two interactive systems. One for pre-call research. One for the full conversation. Both grounded in the same methodology you just read about.
Pre-call SWOT assessment with 4 guided discovery questions. Evaluate a prospect's digital presence before the call, then run a focused 20-minute conversation that qualifies with depth.
Open the Tool →The full 12 Turning Points assessment. SWOT analysis, real-time conversation guidance, CRM summary export. For advisors who want the complete framework.
Open the Tool →The Founding Membership gives you access to advisor fundamentals, practice labs, community, and the full training library. $50/mo or $500 lifetime.
Explore →Start with the Discovery Call Training System. It takes five minutes to learn and will change how you approach every prospect from this point forward.