The Challenge of a Dishonest Competitor
βTodd, I appreciate and embrace the idea of being transparent – but hereβs the problem: Weβre transparent. Our competitors arenβt. And, the customer doesnβt find out until itβs too late – theyβve already gone with our competitor and are already eight months into their implementation. What do we do?β
This is a question I received (from a C-Level Exec) following a keynote I gave last week. In a space where the implementations are a heavy lift, the client doesnβt often find out the truth until theyβre fully sunk into the project – when turning back isnβt an option, and changing horses wonβt happen for years. A lost deal stays lost.Β
I could answer through the lens of karma – which will make you sleep better at night, but the fact remainsβ¦telling the truth is costing this company business.Β
So letβs look through the lens of something more tangible.
The Long Game Wins the Short Game
In a way, playing the long game creates a tangible form of βkarmaβ, defined informally as, βdestiny or fate, following as effect from cause.β
When we lie to win a deal, we win that deal. We receive the revenue from that deal.Β
But the cost is still there. There are costs to rebuild the trust eroded through the lie. But even more, there are costs associated with:
- The won client is less likely to think of you for referrals or when a peer is asking for recommendations.
- The won client is more likely to tell the story of the dishonesty to their friends, peers, or via a review.
- The won client is less likely to invest more – via upsells or cross-sells within the organization. Or, at the very least, you can count on an extended cycle time to upsell or cross-sell.
- The won client is likely to change companies at some point, and less likely to pick you next time.
Maybe you donβt see it – itβs hard to see something that you donβt hear or seeβ¦but itβs there, created through a failure to embrace the truth.

Alexander Revell, founder of Alexander H. Revell & Co. in 1876
In 1905, Alexander Revell (founder of Alexander H. Revell & Co. in 1876) said,
“Many otherwise honest men talk in a dishonest way merely because they think they are meeting the dishonesty of the other fellow. Make a man honest with you by being honest with him, but under no circumstances let him make you dishonest.”
Playing the long game wins the long game, and eventually the short game, too.
Transparency begets transparency
To put Revellβs quote another way, we subconsciously canβt help but be more transparent with someone who is being transparent with us.Β
Four years ago, I bought a car at the local Ford dealer. I decided to be a transparent buyerβ¦not wed to the car I was interested in, but more as an experiment. I shared the three things you arenβt supposed to tell a car salesperson:
- How I intended to pay: Common advice says to wait until the price is negotiated before revealing whether you intend to pay for it outright, finance the purchase through the dealer, or lease the car. I started the conversation by saying, βIβve already worked out the finances, and intend to write a check when weβre ready.β
- That I had a trade-in: That same advice suggested waiting until the price of the to-be-purchased car is fully negotiated, then bring up the trade-in. My second sentence was, βOh, and that 2009 Jeep Grand Cherokee there in the parking lot is mine, and intend to trade it in.β
- Donβt reveal the problems with the trade-in – let them find themβ¦or not: βAndβ¦do you see that smoke still swirling in the parking lot? That was pouring out of the back of the Jeep. The check engine light wasnβt just onβ¦it was flashing as I pulled in.β
Why are we taught to do that? Because car salespeople canβt be trusted, so be prepared to meet their dishonesty with your own.
As it turns out, my transparency led to the salesperson (Frankie) sharing his situation with me – his problems with ADHD, his relationship with his father, and even his lack of passion for selling cars.Β
Transparency begets transparency. Frankie likely couldnβt help it. I admittedly took a bit of advantage of the situation, asking him if heβd be willing to explain his compensation plan to me. He gladly obliged.Β Β
The point? In selling situations, when we are there with a whole-hearted focus on helping the customer make a good decision, achieve optimal outcomes, and even achieve outcomes they didnβt know possible, honesty begets honesty. Youβll find that when you become a resource to the client instead of a necessary evil, the client will come to you with questions, clarifications, and the belief that youβre there for them!Β
When youβre able to share, βHey, thereβs a requirement that you have that we donβt have masteredβ with transparency and honesty, youβll inspire a trusting conversation. When youβre able to be a resource to your client by saying, βHereβs a couple things our competitor truly does do better than usβ¦things that may matter to you based on your requirementsβ with transparency and honesty, theyβll trust your perspectiveβ¦and seek it!
On a firm foundation of trust, you wonβt sound like a politician or a slimebucket when youβre able to also say, βBy the way, weβve had a couple of clients tell us that (competitor) has claimed that they have the ability to do X really well, Iβd suggest taking a deeper look. That hasnβt turned out to be the whole truthβ¦βΒ
With unexpected honesty – about your shortcomings, the upsides of a competitor, and the potential landmines and risks, theyβll come to you first with leanings before decisions are made, and trust your perspective one where your solution is, in fact superior, and where your competitors may be weakerβ¦or hiding the truth.Β
Losing a deal to a lying competitor has long-term value, and eventually creates significant short-term value, too.
As Arthur Dunn said in 1921 via my favorite sales quote of all time:
“A lie is a weapon of the weakling and the afraid. There is no come-back to truth – no alibi – no hereafters – no explanations. If the truth won’t sell it, don’t sell it.”

I speak and teach revenue organizations on how to leverage transparency and decision science to maximize their revenue capacity. Itβs what I doβ¦teach sellers, their leaders, and really entire revenue organizations the how we as human beings make decisions, then how to use that knowledge for good (not evil) in their messaging (informal and formal), negotiations and revenue leadership. I wrote a 3x award-winning book (ππ©π¦ ππ³π’π―π΄π±π’π³π¦π―π€πΊ ππ’ππ¦), and have a newish book out (ππ©π¦ ππ³π’π―π΄π±π’π³π¦π―π΅ ππ’ππ¦π΄ ππ¦π’π₯π¦π³) now that just won its first award!
Reach out if you want to discussΒ The Transparency SaleΒ sales methodology,Β or reallyβ¦anything else (sales kickoffs,Β workshops,Β keynotes, the economy, history, etc.)! EmailΒ info@toddcaponi.comΒ or call 847-999-0420.
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