[INTRO]
Scott Scully: Letβs kick it off. Whatβs up, Grow Nation? Welcome back. Welcome back to the Grow Show.
Group: Letβs grow.
Scott Scully: Welcome back to the Grow Show. How are we doing today?
Eric Watkins: Excellent. Iowa Hawkeyes big game this weekend. Youβre predicting an upset.
Scott Scully: Tomorrow at 2:30 Central Standard Time, the Iowa Hawkeyes will destroy the Oregon Ducksβ chances of going to the playoffs. You heard it here first. Iβm going to be there dressed in black. Itβs the blackout.
Eric Watkins: I donβt know if itβs a blackout yet, but thatβs what youβre doing.
Scott Scully: Yep. You guys should tune in because thatβs whatβs going to happen. Iowaβs going to keep their playoff hopes alive. Theyβre still in the mix. Theyβve got to get through Oregon, then beat USC, and theyβd be in the playoffs.
Eric Watkins: Interesting. Theyβre going to take three teams from the Big 10.
Scott Scully: They actually have a shot of getting in the Big 10 championship, which I do not want to do.
Eric Watkins: You want to just sneak in the playoffs?
Scott Scully: Michigan would have to beat Ohio State for that to happen.
Jeff: (Rolling eyes) Everything he said is not going to happen. But I do want to say something else. And I donβt mean to be negativeβthis is going to come off negative.
Scott Scully: Oh god.
Jeff: I think this is my least favorite time of year.
Group: Oh my god. Oh my god.
Jeff: I canβt stop watching college football, but what about this time of year is redeeming? Itβs dark. Itβs cold. Thereβs no holidays yet. Itβs the anticipation of the holidays. Iβm already excited about nothing good. Everythingβs changed. My sinuses are calling in favors. My body canβt catchβ
Scott Scully: Hey, theyβve been listening to this podcast a long time. They know about your sinuses.
Jeff: My dermatological issues areβI donβt know. Airports you canβt go. I think, declaratively, this is my least favorite time of the year.
Eric Watkins: You should get one of those sun lamps. It gives you the same rays of the sun and it helps with seasonal depression.
Jeff: I donβt have seasonal depression.
Scott Scully: You sound sad. You donβt like this time of year.
Jeff: Iβll be cool once we get to Thanksgiving for a little bit, but this is tough.
Scott Scully: Are you gonna stop talking about it anytime soon?
Jeff: You know what? Iβm gonna go to Legendary Kick Stadium.
Eric Watkins: Legendary Kinnick Stadium.
Jeff: It is 100% chance of rain and 40 degrees, and Iβm going to [bleep] love it. Itβs going to be amazing.
Scott Scully: You going to take your shirt off?
Jeff: I might. I might.
Scott Scully: Please do. There is no better place to be freezing cold in the dark like Iowa.
Eric Watkins: Yeah, thatβs a bone chill. Minneapolisβyou go to Minnesota like, βThis is going to be cold.β In Iowa, you donβt realize how cold it is until youβre there.
Scott Scully: Jeff, Iβm going to have to cut you off. Donβt you think?
Eric Watkins: No. As an Iowan, noβbecause I went to college in Minnesota and theyβre just not even close.
Scott Scully: I donβt think that Iowa is that much different than here weather-wise.
Eric Watkins: Thatβs insane. Itβs [bleep] freezing.
Scott Scully: Have you ever been there?
Eric Watkins: Several times. Dozens of times. I love Iowa. Shout out to all of our fans.
Scott Scully: Iβm ready to do the actualβare we recording? Letβs do that.
Eric Watkins: We are recording. Iβm just kidding.
Segment: βJeff Jailβ (Objection Handling)
Scott Scully: All right. Iβm here with my partners in growth. You heard from them. You know how Jeff feels. Jeff, start us off. Jeff Jailβwho do we got?
Jeff: Each week, Iβm singling out a sales rep or group of sales reps who are committing an offenseβa crimeβnot against people or laws, but violating my sensibilities. This week itβs a group of sales reps I like to call the objection dodgers, the deflection department, the non-answer network, the clarification crew. These are the sales reps that when you ask them a question at the end of a sales call, they dodge it. They float around. They donβt answer your question. Answer my question.
Jeff: They dodge because they think theyβre such good salespeople. Theyβre not. Theyβre annoying and they need to be thrown in jail. This segment is about how to handle objections. We can help these people.
Jeff: Example: βJeff, your price is too high.β Thatβs an objection. We hear that. It would be easy to wander in a different direction and not answer. Or: βHow much does it cost?β It would be so easy to start moving in different directions. Answer the question. Tell them how much it costs. Tell them what your service does.
Jeff: Scott, Iβve seen you with a sales rep where you ask them a question and they wander around and donβt directly answer. You donβt take it great.
Scott Scully: I hate it. I think people do it because theyβre taken off track in their presentation and they donβt know how to go with the flow. I want the answer right away. If I ask a question, I just want them to answer it. Or if I have an objection, I want them to come at me right now and make me feel like they know what theyβre talking about. Otherwise, youβve lost me for good.
Jeff: Eric, youβve been on some sales calls lately. Somebody asks you a questionβyou wander around? You part of the deflection department?
Eric Watkins: No. Naturally sometimes you do, but I try to be as direct as possible. The most important part, in my opinion, is yesβitβs annoyingβbut you only have so much real estate on these calls. You only have so much time. And if youβre spending five minutes spinning around talking about your answer, youβre cutting into valuable real estate you need to get out of that prospect.
Jeff: Amy?
Amy: Iβd agree. It applies the same when youβre setting an appointment call. The stakes are super high there, too. And you tend to see SDRs dodge around objection handling because theyβre scared theyβre going to get the βnoβ right then at that point. Itβs the same fear in the pitch and in the appointment setting. Itβs drilling down to the sales rep being scared theyβre going to get a no right there versus just directly answering it and then taking the conversation from there.
Jeff: Iβve got three tips.
Jeff: Tip 1: Donβt be afraid to just say yes or no.
βAre you guys based in St. Louis?β Yes.
Thatβs it. No story. No background.
Jeff: Tip 2: If you do need to explain: answer, then explain.
βYes, we are based in St. Louis. And the reason why is because our founders founded the company here. We feel a sense of civic pride. We love the Midwestβ¦β
Jeff: Tip 3: Objection handling in three steps:
- Ask a clarifying question.
- Slow down.
- Use feel-felt-found.
Jeff: βJeff, your price is too high.β
βWhat do you mean?β
βWell, on a per-lead basis, your price is too high.β
βOh, I see what youβre sayingβcost per lead is too high in your head. InterestingβI talked to a customer a few days ago whoβs been with us a long time. They told me they got an amazing amount of ROI out of our service and at the time they bought, they believed price per lead was too high. But what they found is price per lead never mattered because the ROI is so high.β
Scott Scully: Jeff, I have stats. Deflection departmentβI have stats. Objection dodgers. Transparent sales reps close 30% to 50% moreβHubSpot study. And Harvard Business Review says trust drops by 50% and buyers are three times less likely to buy if a salesperson dodges a question.
Eric Watkins: Thatβs big because everybodyβs instinct is, βWell, why is your price so high?β and then you donβt even answer until the end. βWhatβs your price?β βWell, it dependsβ¦β Answer then explain.
Scott Scully: Yeah, good tips, Jeff.
Segment: Growth Jedi (Hiring βThe Oneβ)
Eric Watkins: Now weβre headed over to our growth Jedi whoβs going to talk about why itβs so important to find the right peopleβto pick the one if you want to get it done. Did I have that right?
Scott Scully: There we go. Have I trained you tonight?
Eric Watkins: Help I can.
Scott Scully: Eric, let me ask you a question. Why does the NFL have a draft?
Eric Watkins: Because every player is not created equal, and itβs a super important way to build your team. Youβve got to spend every dollar and ounce of energy to make sure youβre putting the best team on the field.
Scott Scully: Amy, do you think an NBA team would put just the best they have in the lineup, or do you think they also try to find the best to put on the floor?
Amy: I do know nothing about the NBA, so thatβs really hard for me to answer.
Scott Scully: Yeah, but the bestβyou know my point. Yes.
Scott Scully: There are sports organizationsβor other examplesβwhere somebody has an entire team dedicated to making sure that without fail theyβre putting the best person in the position. A lot of times in business we take the best we have and put them in the spotβwe want to hire from within, itβs what we know. Or maybe itβs the interviews I had. Maybe the recruiter sent me five people and I interviewed and I picked the best out of those five.
Scott Scully: If you are completely dedicated to not hiring a person to put in a position until you are pretty damn sure that person is the best at the job, then you worry less about your training. You worry less about your processes, how good your account management isβwhatever. The list goes on. The right person solves the problem. Period. The right person figures it out.
Scott Scully: Weβre always working on processes, training, how we can support people better to make jobs easier. But when we land on a person that just flat out gets it done, all of that stuff matters less. But we donβt do it. Donβt be tempted to be just good enough, or whoever you have that is best for that spot. Go out and find somebody that makes your life easier. If theyβre reporting to you, they should know more than you about that particular section and they should make your life easier. If youβre doing their jobβif theyβre not making your life easierβyouβre not done.
Scott Scully: You will look like an incredible leader if you just surround yourself with the people that know how to get it done. And you will go forward in a much more profitable way. If you want to get it done, youβve got to hire that one. Then itβs all downhill from there.
Eric Watkins: Weβve been talking about it this week. When you donβt have the one, you parse out the job. Isnβt it great to have a person that owns the whole thing and can either do it or canβt?
Scott Scully: I was watching a TikTok of Steve Jobs. He said, βYou know how many committees we have that run departments at Apple? None.β Somebody owns the iPhone. Somebody owns this. Jeff Bezosβsingle-threaded leadership. Give it to someone that can do the job, get out of the way, support them, help them, contribute where youβre uniquely able. But either theyβll sink or theyβll float. Give them the thing. Put the best people youβve got there and get out of the way.
Eric Watkins: Iβm guilty of stepping in and doing stuff I shouldnβt. Itβs hard when youβre trying to get the business rolling and you need the result right now. Itβs hard to not overstep. Weβve all done itβdo part of the job for them to ensure you get there. But right off the get when youβre small, go hire the best people. Itβs going to cost more, but two or three years later youβll be glad you did that. Youβll be in a whole different spot.
Scott Scully: Where this is so importantβit sounds so simple: everybodyβs like, βOh, duh. Put the right people in.β But then youβre in the spot where a key position turns over and there is immediate pain. Clients reaching out: βWho should I talk to?β The easiest thing is next person upβplug them inβimmediate pain is gone. But what weβve seen is if we plug that gap and weβre not 100% sure that person is the right person, long-term pain is way worse than short-term pain. Learn it from usβweβve made those mistakes multiple times. Find bridges: be clear, for 60 days weβre going to do this, but we know it isnβt the long-term solution.
Amy: Another trap is leaders being afraid that the person will surpass them. Some of the best advice: pick the person who will know more than you and do it better than you, because then youβre not stuck. People think if they hire someone more talented, theyβll replace them. And thatβs the entire pointβto develop someone to where they make your life easier and youβre open for other opportunities and needs in the business. Leaders, donβt be afraid to pick the best person directly underneath you.
Scott Scully: Thatβs a good point. Iβd look at you as an incredible leader if you found somebody better doing what youβre doing than I could have you go find someone else to do something else.
Eric Watkins: Pick the one. Pick the one you want. Pick the one to get it done.
Scott Scully: You have so little to do on this thing. Itβs a tongue twister.
Eric Watkins: Pick the one if you want to get it done.
Scott Scully: I got it now. I see.
Segment: Heartfelt Sales (NALP + In-Person Selling)
Scott Scully: Amy, youβve recently gone to an event and posted some videosβhad some incredible conversations. Talk to us about that event and your theme today, which is heartfelt sales.
Amy: We attended NALP earlier this weekβSunday, Monday, and Tuesday. Itβs the National Association of Landscape Professionals. We met with hundreds of landscaping companies, and the exhibitors were typically vendors of landscaping companies.
Amy: First of all, they put on an incredible event. We attended a womenβs-only luncheon and event the first day and I thought that was awesome. They gave a stat that in the past three years, attendance to that conference is now 50% womenβwomen actually in the industry and leading in the industry. We heard the CRO of a very large landscaping company speak. It was really cool to see this industry embracing women being in landscaping, and being in sales too.
Amy: Heartfelt sellingβI saw two LinkedIn posts this week about companies sending handwritten direct mail to their prospects. Itβs popping up even more. Weβve done that now for over a year and a half, but those posts talked about heartfelt selling and I loved that. It ties into in-person events too.
Amy: It was wild how many people would come up to our booth and ask, βSo what do you do?β They wanted to have a human conversation and connect in person. You donβt get that opportunity on the phones, in email, or LinkedIn. Thereβs this need right nowβwith so much AI and technologyβpeople are returning a little to the old-school ways of heartfelt human-to-human selling.
Amy: It was also eye-opening that if you go to trade shows and your service is service-based, you have to know what differentiates you in the marketplace. We saw exhibitors with tractors and physical tech products. Weβre service-based, and if youβre selling in person without a physical product, you have to be sharp on what makes you different.
Amy: With the ups and downs of Google right now and other channels, invest in trade shows and in-person selling experiences in 2026, because I think itβs going to be more and more on the rise.
Eric Watkins: Scott, youβve been selling in person for years. Talk about the importance of that and why weβre going back to that as an organization.
Scott Scully: Years ago, we sold 100% face-to-face. We were sending people all over the country on planes and entertaining car dealers. It got really expensive. We built a process where we could internalize sales and did it 100% over the phoneβthere was less noise then.
Scott Scully: Now weβve arrived at a point where weβre spending so much money on leads for our salespeople that itβs gone back. We honor the phoneβwe do email, LinkedIn, some Googleβand weβll always honor the phone because weβre the best at it. But weβre eliminating spend in other areas, and weβve been planning sales rep trips to get out face-to-face. Believe it or not, itβs a differentiator. In our space, thereβs no one doing it. Close rates are three or four times higher.
Scott Scully: Weβre going to save $50,000 to $75,000 a month in marketing expense by putting people on the street again in mini trips. We had our first round and it was already successful. People are excited about it.
Eric Watkins: I talked to the first rep that went on our first trip and something he said stuck out to me. He said, βThese guys are getting asked to be on Zoom calls all the time and theyβre taking some of them.β But for them to be in personβit lands five, ten times greater than saying the same thing over a computer screen.
Scott Scully: Thatβs a great point. In business, the efficiency is easy to fall in love withβvirtual pitches, no travel costβbut you should always do some in person to evaluate what true efficiency youβre missing out on. If itβs five times better, four times betterβwhatever it isβyou need to know.
Eric Watkins: You go out on a trip and your close rateβs 30% and itβs 6% on the phoneβwhatβs going on? Maybe you stay on the phone most of the time, but youβve got to figure out how to duplicate what was happening on the road.
Scott Scully: Itβs so much different to sell in personβ
Eric Watkins: Not really.
Scott Scully: No, itβs not. You canβt wear gym shorts, sure. Body language matters. Everything else is the sameβno computer screen. If it helps you, imagine thereβs a computer screen.
Scott Scully: Iβm bullish on in person. Iβm bullish on events. It takes the life out of me, but itβs productive. Exhausting, but so productive.
Eric Watkins: Thereβs no tired like βgot to the trade show at 7:30 and itβs 9:00 at night after the post-trade-show dinnerβ tired.
Scott Scully: We were at an automotive trade show for three days. We tracked everything. I think we did like 875 full presentations to individual car dealers over a three-day period. We were youngβwe went out hard every night and then did that every day. But it was so productive.
Eric Watkins: Do you remember the names of the people you met with?
Scott Scully: I barely remember my own name. Iβm beat.
Eric Watkins: Great topic, Amy. Glad you had a great time at that event.
Segment: βTo Do or Not To Doβ (Trade Show Strategy)
Eric Watkins: Weβve made it to βTo Do or Not To Do.β This one is timely based on what we were talking about. When you go to these events, do you try to play the volume gameβget as many business cards and introductions as possibleβor do you zero in on people youβve had better conversations with and go for quality over quantity? Amy, letβs start with you.
Amy: For us, we went with who was the best fit with the landscapers. We did research beforehandβpicked targets. We were in luck that a lot of the ones primed for growth came to our booth. But we walked around for volume with exhibitors because we know we can get them into the types of companies theyβre looking for. So we had a mixβtargeting plus volume. We got more business cards walking around exhibitor booths than from the landscaping companies.
Jeff: I have to do volume. Otherwise Iβll have three and Iβm like, βI donβt want to do any more conversations.β Every trade show is the same: I get there and Iβm frozenβgo find someone to talk to. Youβve got to have the first conversation, then the second, then itβs like, βAll right, Iβm going to talk to 25 people.β Some are better, longer, shorter. But Iβm going to talk to X number of people or I wonβt do it because itβs exhausting.
Scott Scully: Youβre building a funnel at the show. Automotive example: companies that do it right have a first layer responsible for bringing people into the booth. Second layer does a quick conversationβgets them excited and qualifies them. Then there are closing rooms in the booth in the back where they take someone qualified and interested, pull them back, and someone with deeper experience has a more in-depth conversation.
Scott Scully: At night, they rent a suite or a bar or restaurant, invite top prospects, and have clients there at the show talking about how much they love working with that company. Itβs well orchestrated. And the follow-up after is beautiful.
Scott Scully: Youβve got to do both. You need the masses to bring it down to a smaller amount. But if youβre going to spend that much at a show, you should try to close them at the show. Three layers: get them to the booth, get them excited, get them to the closing room. If that doesnβt work, pull them to the suite, feed them cocktails and food, and close them with your clients around.
Eric Watkins: There were secret speakeasy parties.
Amy: I told Ryan, we need a speakeasy party next time to close people.
Jeff: One phenomenon thatβs universally true about trade shows: people at your prospectβs company who are not influential at the office are influential at the trade show because theyβre fun. Someone perceived as lower-levelβnobody cares at the officeβbut the CEO might care at the trade show because theyβre fun. So be careful who you dismiss.
Scott Scully: There are people good at bringing people to the booth, qualifying, closing, and entertainingβand people good at taking all of that and following up after. If you orchestrate it the right way, you can literally get your pipeline full for an entire quarter.
Eric Watkins: Yep. Huge.
Eric Watkins: Well, great insight on the event piece. Good insight overall. Good to be back with you all. And until next timeβletβs grow.
Group: Letβs grow. Letβs grow.
