Somewhere along the way, we decided that selling requires a certain kind of person. Someone loud. Someone charismatic. Someone who can ‘work a room.’ This is one of the most damaging myths in business.
I’ve spent nearly two decades in enterprise sales, and the best sellers I know are quiet. They’re thoughtful. They’re often introverts. They don’t dominate conversations — they guide them.
The myth of the extroverted salesperson persists because it’s visible. We see the back-slapping, deal-closing stereotype in movies and on LinkedIn. But visibility isn’t effectiveness.
What actually matters in selling? Clarity. The ability to articulate a complex idea simply. Curiosity. The genuine desire to understand someone else’s problem before offering your own solution. And patience. The willingness to let a relationship develop at the buyer’s pace, not yours.
If you’re an engineer, a product builder, or a domain expert who has been told you’re ‘not a sales person’ — I want to challenge that. You already have the skills that matter. You just need a framework that respects your nature instead of asking you to perform someone else’s.
Sales isn’t about personality. It’s about clarity, competence, and care. And those are skills anyone can develop.
