10. Chris Kelly ~ Sandler Training Toronto

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Episode Notes

Key moments from this episode

Chris Kelly joins Tailwind for a practical conversation about making the sales cookbook personal: why corporate and income cookbooks may not be enough, how personal goals and intrinsic motivation can make discipline stickier, how habit stacking can connect business behaviors with routines such as journaling, exercise, reading, and tracking, and why completing the behavior can create a daily win even when pipeline results arrive months later.

Sales cookbookHabit stackingSales mindsetProspecting consistencySales activity qualitySales trainingRevenue team operating rhythmBusiness development

Takeaways

  • Cookbook discipline is easier to sustain when business behaviors connect to income, personal goals, and the life a seller actually wants.
  • Habit stacking can pair sales behaviors with routines sellers already care about, making the cookbook less cold to start.
  • Tracking personal habits can reinforce tracking business behaviors; when one slips, the other can drift too.
  • The daily win comes from doing the behavior and fueling the math, even when revenue results show up months later.
  • Different personality styles may need different motivational triggers: some want clean math, while others need a more personal or emotional connection.

Key Moments

  1. 0:03

    Making the cookbook personal

    Chris opens by contrasting corporate cookbook expectations with income goals and personal goals.

  2. 3:08

    Intrinsic motivation inside the cookbook

    Chris explains why a personal cookbook should include business and personal behaviors that the seller actually cares about.

  3. 4:30

    Habit stacking business behavior

    Chris introduces habit stacking and uses daily routines like brushing teeth, journaling, and exercise to explain how one behavior can cue another.

  4. 8:44

    Goals, vision, and behavioral steps

    The conversation turns to goal setting, vision boards, and translating desired outcomes into behavioral cookbook steps.

  5. 12:46

    When discipline became sticky

    Chris describes how combining personal and business behaviors helped him move from choppy cookbook use into consistency.

  6. 16:30

    The daily win before results arrive

    Chris reframes the cookbook payoff as the daily buzz from completing the behavior, even when pipeline results are months away.

  7. 18:50

    Accountability and early prospecting

    Chris tells a story about his son tracking prospecting attempts on a thermometer during the early days of building the business.

  8. 22:23

    Motivation by personality style

    Chris and Austin discuss how different DISC-style personalities may respond to math-based versus emotion-based motivators.

  9. 23:30

    Find the motivational trigger

    Chris closes by asking listeners to remember a time they tracked inputs successfully and reuse that trigger for a sales cookbook.