3 Micro Behaviors That Make You Instantly More Likable in Sales (Ask Jeb)

3 Micro Behaviors That Make You Instantly More Likable in Sales (Ask Jeb)

Ask Jeb Blount Podcast cover image. Feature photo of Jeb Blount with title "3 sales micro behaviors that win deals" on a 2 toned blue background

Let me ask you: What if the biggest thing standing between you and your next closed deal had nothing to do with your product knowledge, your pricing, or your pitch? What if it came down to three simple micro behaviors that most salespeople never bother to master?

I was speaking to a group of students and marketing professionals at BYU-Idaho recently, and this question came up in a great way. We were talking about what actually drives buying decisions, and I shared something I believe with every fiber of my being: your prospect’s emotional experience with you as they walk through their decision journey is a more consistent predictor of outcome than any other variable.

Read that again. Their emotional experience. Not your features. Not your price. Not your killer deck.

People are asking five questions as they go through a decision to buy:

  1. Do I like you?
  2. Do you listen to me?
  3. Do you make me feel important?
  4. Do you understand me?
  5. Can I trust you?

If you can get to yes on all five, you win. And the micro behaviors below are exactly how you do it.


Micro Behavior #1: Read the Room

Authenticity without respect for your audience is arrogance.

I know that sounds blunt, but I mean it. I see salespeople all the time who show up however they want to show up, dressed however they feel like dressing, presenting however they feel comfortable, and then wonder why the deal stalled. Being “authentic” does not mean ignoring your buyer. It means showing up for your buyer.

When I was in outside sales doing field work, I had clothes hanging in my car on a hanger. If I was walking into a company where everyone wore suits, I put on a jacket and a tie. If I was walking into a manufacturing plant full of people in polo shirts, I changed in the parking lot. When I sold in Clemson, South Carolina, I wore a Tiger tie. I’m a Georgia Bulldog, but I was in their house. Showing up in Clemson with a Dawgs tie would have cost me the deal before I ever opened my mouth.

Reading the room is not fake. It is the highest form of respect you can show another person. It says: I see you. I came prepared for you. You matter to me.

That one shift, from showing up for yourself to showing up for your buyer, will change your results immediately.


Micro Behavior #2: Shut Up and Listen

This is the easiest and fastest way to be likable on the planet, and most salespeople still will not do it.

When you give another human being your full, undivided attention and actually listen to them, they fall in love with you. I am not exaggerating. I said this to the students at BYU-Idaho and I will say it here: if you just listen to people, they will do almost anything you ask them to do.

Why? Because the most insatiable human need is the need to feel important. To feel like you matter. And when you give someone your full attention, you are filling that need in a way that almost nobody else in their life is willing to do.

The mechanics are simple. Ask a great question. Then shut up. Resist every urge to jump in, interject, or start mentally composing your response while they are still talking. Just listen.

The reason this is hard is that when our mouth is not moving, we do not feel important. We feel like we are losing ground. We feel like silence is weakness. It is not. Silence and attention are your greatest sales weapons.


Micro Behavior #3: Tell Them Their Own Story Back to Them

This one is where everything clicks together.

Once you have listened, here is what you do when you open your mouth: tell them the story they just told you, back to them, in the context of how you can help them.

Let me say that one more time because it is that important.

When words come out of your mouth, you should be telling your prospect the story they just told you about themselves and their situation, framed around how you can solve their problem. That is it. That is the whole game.

This answers the question every buyer is silently asking: “Does this person actually understand me?” And even if you do not get every detail right, if they can see you are genuinely trying to understand, they will still feel it. They will still think: this person cares about me.

When you can read the room, listen without an agenda, and reflect their story back to them in a way that connects to your solution, you have answered yes to four of those five buying questions before you ever ask for anything.


One More Thing: The Pipe Is Life

I was asked at the end of that BYU-Idaho session: “If you could leave us with one thing, what would it be?”

My answer was immediate. The pipe is life.

It does not matter how likable you are. It does not matter how well you listen. It does not matter if you have mastered every micro behavior in this post. If you do not have a pipeline, none of it matters. The number one reason salespeople fail is an empty pipeline. And the number one reason pipelines are empty is that salespeople stop doing the prospecting work every single day.

Especially on the days you are tired. Especially at the end of the day when you just want to go home. Feed the pipe. Pick up the phone. Make one more call.


Join Sales Gravy at our next live workshop event. These are high-energy, immersive experiences built to sharpen your mindset, your skills, and your pipeline. Get the details and register at salesgravy.com/live.

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