Why Sales History Matters – If We Don’t Know It, Are We Doomed To Repeat It?

Jul 27, 2021 | Podcast

Episode 8

Audio Podcast

Todd Caponi

Podcast Episode Description

Many view the past-10-plus-the-next-10-years as a period where technology is and will completely change the sales profession. But if we use history as a guide, where technology was changing an awful lot more than it is today, salespeople will ruin it again. The rise of the telephone, email, even LinkedIn…may have done more harm than good for a profession reliant on its reputation.

In this look back at the rise of technology-enabled sales from the advent of the telephone, we explore the lessons learned from sales’ past as our filter for selecting the sales technologies we leverage in the future.

0 Comments

Other Podcasts You Might Enjoy

What Was The First Sales Methodology?

What Was The First Sales Methodology?

What was the first sales methodology? In another case of a misguided Google result, it's time to set another record straight. What was the first "modern" sales methodology? What was it? Who developed it? And why did it serve as a baseline for so many companies...

read more
Lessons from the First Sales Kickoff

Lessons from the First Sales Kickoff

It's sales kickoff season. Kickoffs, or what was called sales 'conventions", have been around for at least 130 years. Today, we dig into the first known kickoff that I could find, from 1887. We'll dig into what they did, lessons learned from those 100+ year-old...

read more
What History Got Right: Sales Forecasting

What History Got Right: Sales Forecasting

Audio Podcast  While reading and studying books and magazines on sales leadership from the late 1800s through the 1940s:The problems of sales & leadership are almost all the same today...except for one thing. There are no articles, or even expressions of...

read more
Todd Caponi
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.