Most leaders I work with aren’t asking for miracles. They’re asking for consistency. They want to know that a strong quarter isn’t going to be followed by two shaky ones.
That the number isn’t being carried by one or two heroic performers. That deals which should close don’t suddenly drift into polite silence.
On paper, the team looks capable. Experienced, well-trained, commercially switched on.
So when results wobble, the response is almost automatic.
More activity.
More pressure.
More pipeline reviews.
More process.
And for a while, that can work.
But here’s the uncomfortable truth: when performance is inconsistent, it’s rarely because people don’t know what to do.
It’s because they don’t know who they become under pressure.
When sales leaders tell me they have a “performance issue”, what they usually have is a personality blind spot. You see it play out in familiar ways.
There’s the high-energy seller who builds instant rapport, creates great conversations… and sometimes talks buyers out of buying.
The driven closer who pushes certainty and pace, only to trigger resistance in the client.
The thoughtful, relationship-led seller who waits for permission that never comes.
The detail-focused seller who builds deep trust, but slows momentum just enough for deals to stall.
Individually, these people are strong.
Collectively, the results feel unpredictable.
Not because they lack skill, discipline, or intent – but because each person is selling through their own personality lens, especially when the pressure is on.
Most sales systems are built on a simple assumption: give everyone the same tools, the same targets, and the same pressure, and performance will follow.
But people don’t experience pressure in the same way.
Under stress, some push harder.
Some talk more.
Some retreat.
Some freeze altogether.
From the outside, this often gets labelled as motivation, attitude, or capability.
From an E-Colours perspective, it’s personality running on autopilot.
This is where leadership starts to feel heavy.
Instead of addressing root causes, you end up managing symptoms. Coaching becomes louder. Reviews become more frequent. Micromanagement creeps in. Forecasts slip later into the quarter.
And then the cycle repeats.
High-performing sales teams aren’t full of clones.
They’re made up of self-aware individuals who understand:
This is where personality frameworks stop being “nice to have” and start becoming commercial tools.
When salespeople understand themselves, objections soften, conversations shorten, and deals stall less often.
When leaders understand their people, coaching becomes specific, feedback lands cleanly, and performance becomes far easier to forecast.
That isn’t soft.
That’s operational clarity.
Instead of asking, “Why aren’t they closing?”
Try asking, “Who does this person become under pressure, and am I leading that person effectively?”
Once you can answer that, everything shifts.
How you coach.
How you motivate.
How you structure deals.
How confidently you forecast outcomes.
Sales stops feeling reactive.
Leadership stops feeling exhausting.
You don’t need louder salespeople. You don’t need more scripts. You don’t need another methodology layered on top of what already exists. What you need is clarity.
Clarity of self.
Clarity of others.
Clarity of behaviour under pressure.
That’s where consistent revenue really comes from.
- Mark Wilkinson
Want to know more about E-Colours Intentional Business Development Training? Get in touch.