When sales performance drops, it’s easy to confuse urgency with pressure. Your body feels it, your mind starts telling stories, and if you’re not careful that stress turns into leadership thrash.
In this episode of Calm Under Quota, I share a real moment from my sales agency. Our show rate fell under 40%, my heart rate spiked, and my first instinct was control. I wanted to push pressure downhill and tell the team to “do better.” Instead, I slowed down and looked at what was actually true.
The inputs were broken. SDR answer rate was just over 4%, and it worked out to roughly one set per 200 dials. That’s not a motivation problem. That’s a math problem. It’s the kind of problem that makes good people look bad if you don’t diagnose it first.
We use a Stoic lens from Marcus Aurelius to separate facts from stories, narrow back to what’s in your control as a leader, and avoid wasting energy on anger at what already happened. You’ll leave with one leader move, a tiny 3-step check you can run before you react, and a standard to hold when everyone wants answers fast.
Timestamps
00:00 Show rate drops and the urge to push pressure downhill
00:19 Calm Under Quota intro (who this is for)
01:10 The leader question: pressure without panic
01:33 The scene: inputs are broken, fear spikes, then the data
05:04 Stoic lens #1: anger at what happened doesn’t help
07:51 Stoic lens #2: people don’t see reality cleanly
10:28 The leader move: facts before stories
11:59 The practice: 3-step check before you react
13:07 The standard: facts before stories
13:26 Closable.ai: AI-enabling sales teams (close)
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