The Obsolete Salesperson

Dave Kahle

For decades, outside sales ran on a simple formula: get in the car, visit customers, build relationships, grow business. That model served distributors and manufacturers well. But the landscape of B2B selling has shifted dramatically, and Dave Kahle, founder of Kahle Way Sales Systems, isn鈥檛 sugarcoating what that means for the salespeople still operating the old way.

鈥淎re they obsolete?鈥 Kahle said. 鈥淪ome of them are. Some of them will be.鈥

Where outside sales still matter

Kahle sees three specific conditions where a live salesperson remains essential, at least for the foreseeable future. The first is big-ticket products. When a piece of production equipment costs half a million dollars, the customer鈥檚 risk is high enough that they want a real relationship with someone they know, trust, and believe is competent.

The second is large purchase decisions. Even if an individual part is inexpensive, a million-dollar invoice to a major manufacturer carries enough weight that buyers want a human in the loop. And the third is a sophisticated or complicated sales process. Kahle recalled mapping out one client鈥檚 sales process for high-end woodworking equipment and counting 28 distinct steps. That kind of complexity requires a salesperson to work it through.

鈥淚f you don鈥檛 have that,鈥 Kahle said, 鈥測our job is questionable.鈥

The trend has been building for years

This isn鈥檛 a sudden shift. Kahle pointed to a study conducted 20 years ago in which 70% of industrial buyers said that if they had a good catalog and a capable inside salesperson, they鈥檇 rather not see an outside rep at all. That was before most purchasing moved online.

鈥淚magine today, if I have a good website I can go to, what do I need a person for?鈥 Kahle said. The migration from outside to inside sales has been underway for two decades. AI is now accelerating it. When a customer鈥檚 AI agent can research, compare, and initiate a purchase without picking up the phone, a salesperson who adds no distinct value has little left to offer.

What salespeople need to do right now

For salespeople who want to stay relevant, Kahle鈥檚 advice is direct: sharpen the fundamentals and add new ones. The core competencies鈥攂uilding relationships, asking good questions, making a strong presentation鈥攕till matter and can always be improved. But the days of showing up and winging it are over.

鈥淚f you鈥檝e got 20 minutes on the phone or on a Zoom call with a customer, you better have that thing ready,鈥 Kahle said. 鈥淵ou better have an agenda. You better be organized鈥 practiced鈥 rehearsed.鈥 For many salespeople, that level of preparation is itself a new skill set.

He also noted a striking statistic from his years training salespeople: only one in 20 has ever spent $25 of their own money on their own professional development. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e one of the 19 of 20,鈥 he said, 鈥渉onestly, your job is probably in jeopardy.鈥

What about selling services?

If you sell services, such as cleaning, the same dynamics apply. 鈥淵ou are more likely to utilize a salesperson if the total value of the contract is high, if the sales process requires several steps,鈥 Khale explained. A detailed discovery process, a customized proposal, and a negotiated agreement are examples. 鈥淲hen you have the opposite in these criteria, such as a small contract value, a simple sales process, and a sophisticated customer, the value of a field salesperson is in question.鈥

Regardless, Kahle added, everyone should be preparing for the day, perhaps in the next few months, when some customers will first ask AI to recommend a specific service. Then, to recommend a company to perform that service. And then to create the purchase order.

鈥淭he purchasing function may soon be automated, and the salesperson’s value as a relationship builder will be negated when there is no one to build a relationship with,鈥 he said.

The bigger question for sales leaders

Kahle鈥檚 message isn鈥檛 just for individual reps. He has a direct word for chief sales officers and anyone making decisions about how a sales force is structured: look at this now.

鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to take a good, hard, objective look at the role of your outside sales force right now,鈥 he said. That means examining what customers actually want today鈥攏ot what they wanted four or five years ago鈥攁nd whether the current structure is built to deliver it.

The shift, Kahle said, is already too far along to ignore. The question now is whether salespeople and the companies that employ them are honest enough with themselves to adapt before the window closes.

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Jeff Cross

Jeff Cross is the 天美传媒 media director, with publications that include Cleaning & Maintenance Management, 天美传媒 Today, and Cleanfax magazines. He is the previous owner of a successful cleaning and restoration firm. He also works as a trainer and consultant for business owners, managers, and front-line technicians. He can be reached at [email protected].

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