19. Josh Shirley ~ Sandler Powered by Coffman Group

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Episode Notes

Key moments from this episode

Josh Shirley joins Tailwind for a practical conversation about building sales teams that treat business development as a core revenue engine: why BDR and SDR roles should not be treated like junior varsity sales work, how hunting and closing require different skills, why strong prospectors need a real path to growth, how closing-only cultures can stall when the market gets quiet, and why leaders should reward controllable prospecting behavior before the meeting ever gets booked.

Business developmentSales trainingTop-of-funnel salesCold callingProspecting consistencySales activity qualitySales mindsetRevenue team operating rhythm

Takeaways

  • BDR and SDR work should be treated as a critical revenue function, not junior varsity sales work.
  • Hunting, closing, management, and customer success require different skills and should not be treated as one ladder by default.
  • Companies lose strong prospectors when the only way to grow income or status is to leave the business development role.
  • A hunting culture gives teams more controllable momentum than a culture that only celebrates closed deals.
  • Leaders should reward the prospecting behaviors that create opportunities, not only the meetings or deals that follow.

Key Moments

  1. 0:36

    Sales Tales and learning from misses

    Josh introduces his sales coaching work, his Sales Tales podcast, and why laughing at sales mistakes can make lessons easier to hear.

  2. 8:31

    Dividing sales roles as teams scale

    The conversation moves into how growing teams separate hunting, closing, and client success responsibilities as they reach scale.

  3. 9:58

    BDRs are not junior varsity

    Josh explains why treating business development as lower-status work creates culture problems and overlooks one of the hardest sales jobs.

  4. 12:58

    Losing strong prospectors to the wrong ladder

    Josh describes how companies lose great BDRs when the only path to income or recognition is leaving the role for management or AE work.

  5. 17:35

    Choosing a hunting culture

    Josh contrasts a closing culture with a hunting culture and explains why controllable prospecting behavior matters when the market gets quiet.

  6. 23:04

    Rewarding prospecting behavior

    Josh closes by encouraging leaders to make prospecting behavior rewarding before the booked meeting or closed deal arrives.