Podcast: Play in new window | Embed
Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music | Pandora | iHeartRadio | Email | RSS
You’re at a networking event and someone corners you. For the next ten minutes, they talk nonstop about their vacation, their dog, their new car. You’re not having a conversation. You’re trapped in their monologue. You’re annoyed. You tune out. You start looking for the exit.
That’s exactly how your prospects feel when you make yourself the star of the conversation.
What Is Sales Main Character Syndrome?
Sales main character syndrome is when you position yourself as the hero instead of your prospect. You see it everywhere:
On the phone: You launch into a five-minute pitch about your company history before asking a single question.
In email: You send giant blocks of text about features without mentioning their actual problems.
On LinkedIn: Your connect request immediately hits them with “Here’s my product, here’s my calendar link, let’s meet.”
No matter the channel, it all leads back to the same place: your product, your company, your agenda.
Prospects don’t care about your product yet. They care about their problems, their goals, and what’s at stake in their world. When you make it all about you, you trigger resistance. Buyers feel sold to instead of collaborated with. And that leads to ghosting, objections, and stalled deals.
Nobody wants to sit through a feature dump. People need relevance. They want to feel heard and know you actually get them.
The Real Cost of Sales Main Character Syndrome
Sales main character syndrome has consequences that will wreck your quota.
- Prospects disengage. When you focus on yourself and your product instead of the buyer and their needs, they tune out. Calls feel like lectures. Emails read like brochures. Messages get deleted without a response. Lose their attention, and you’ve lost your shot.
- You miss the real opportunities. By making the interaction about yourself, you fail to ask the right questions. You don’t hear what’s actually going on in their world. You can’t identify the true pain points, the real goals, or what’s actually motivating them. So you pitch solutions that don’t align with what they need. You waste discovery time chasing the wrong problems.
- Destroy trust before it’s built. Your prospects stop seeing you as a helpful guide. Instead, you’re just another salesperson pushing a product. Without trust, everything gets harder and long-term relationships become impossible.
The cost is too high. So how do you flip the script?
The Mindset Shift: From Hero to Trusted Guide
Your job is to be a trusted guide, not the hero. Think Yoda, not Luke Skywalker.
Your prospect is the hero of their own story. They’re the ones facing the challenge, making the decision, and living with the outcome.
When prospects feel like the main character, they engage more. They open up. They trust you. And trust moves deals forward.
Here’s a simple three-step framework you can use in every conversation.
Step #1: Change Your “I” to “Why”
Stop starting conversations with:
- “I want to show you…”
- “I’d love to introduce…”
- “I think you’ll like…”
Your buyers don’t care about your “I.” They care about their “why.”
Why should this matter to them? Why is it relevant right now? Why does it solve a problem they’re actually facing?
Lead with “why,” and the focus shifts from your agenda to their reality. You’ll stop sounding like a salesperson and start being seen as someone who understands their world.
Before: “I’d love to show you our new platform and walk you through all the features we’ve built.”
After: “Companies in your industry are losing 20% of their pipeline to manual data entry errors. Here’s how to fix that.”
One is about you. The other is about them.
Step #2: Define What You Solve, Not What You Sell
Most salespeople can rattle off what they sell. A platform. A service. A software solution. That’s not what your buyer cares about.
Buyers don’t wake up thinking, “I need a new vendor today.” They wake up thinking, “I need to fix this problem that’s making my life harder.”
When you define the problem you solve instead of the product you sell, you build immediate value. You position yourself as a partner in their success, not just another pitch in their inbox.
Product-focused: “We’re a sales engagement platform with email sequencing, call tracking, and analytics.”
Problem-focused: “We help sales teams stop losing deals to slow follow-up and inconsistent outreach.”
Stop leading with what you sell and start leading with what you solve. Conversations convert faster when prospects see themselves in the problem you’re addressing.
Step #3: Listen to Hear, Not to Respond
The biggest mistake in sales? Listening just long enough to jump in with your answer.
Most reps wait for their turn to talk. They’re mentally preparing the pitch while the buyer is still speaking. It feels efficient. It’s actually ineffective.
Listening to hear means shutting up long enough to understand. You catch the nuance. You pick up on the emotion. You uncover the hidden pain points that competitors miss because they’re too busy pitching.
Slow down. Tune in. Let your buyer feel heard. That’s when trust starts to build and when real opportunity opens up.
Your Challenge: Put It Into Practice This Week
The shift from sales main character syndrome to trusted guide isn’t complicated. But it does require awareness and intention. You have to catch yourself when you’re about to launch into your standard pitch. Pause and ask, “Am I making this about me or about them?”
Your prospect is the hero. Your job is to guide them to success. Make it about them. Lead with relevance. Listen deeply. Watch what happens when you get this right.
Because the most successful salespeople aren’t trying to be impressive. They’re trying to be useful.
Make your prospect the main character in every conversation. Do it consistently, and you won’t have to chase attention. You’ll earn it.
—
Stop getting tuned out. Download the Free ACED Buyer Style Playbook and learn how to speak your buyer’s language.



