There's a selling style most consultants slide into without ever consciously choosing it: agreeable, flexible, eager to make buying as easy as possible. Say yes to the scope change. Soften the fee. Smooth over every moment of tension before it gets awkward. It feels professional. It feels safe. It feels like good client service.
Statistically, it's also the weakest approach in complex sales. Research across thousands of sales professionals found that only 7% of top performers in high-value, complex sales fit the Relationship Builder profile. Read that again: the style that feels most natural to service-business founders is the one least represented at the top of the performance curve.
That finding lands badly in consultancies, agencies, and training firms, because nearly everything in service culture pushes toward accommodation. Clients are relationships. Referrals flow from goodwill. Surely being liked is the asset?
Being liked is fine. Being deferential is expensive. The profile that dominates high-value sales is the Challenger — the seller who teaches, who can sit inside tension without flinching, who treats money as a normal topic, and who will tell a buyer they're wrong when the data says so. The good news: Challenger is a skill stack, not a personality type. This issue is about building it deliberately — in yourself, your team, and your partner network.
What Premium Buyers Are Actually Paying For
An Expert in the Room, Not Another Friendly Vendor
A buyer entering a high-stakes engagement already has plenty of friendly people around them. What they're short of is someone who can see what they can't, name the assumptions they've stopped questioning, and steer them toward a better decision than the one they walked in with. The accommodating seller resolves tension by agreeing. The expert resolves it by leading — even when leading means saying something the buyer didn't want to hear.
Listen to the difference in two answers to the same question. The deferential consultant: "We're happy to structure the engagement however suits you — we're flexible." The Challenger: "Your assessment data points to a different structure than the one you've proposed. Let me show you why it will produce stronger results."
The first answer sounds helpful. The second answer is helpful. And buyers — after a beat of discomfort — respect the second far more, because it's a live demonstration of the expertise they're paying premium fees to access. Deference signals interchangeability. Leadership signals value.
A Tale of Two Partners
Two partners in our network joined on the same day. Same certification, same enablement kit, comparable markets. One year in, the first had signed 22 engagements; the second, only 9. If your dashboard ranks partners by deal count, the verdict is obvious.
Now add the column the dashboard didn't show. The first partner's average engagement was $18,000 — a year of saying yes to everything, discounting to get signatures, and letting clients dictate scope. Total revenue: $396,000. The second partner's average engagement was $95,000 — a year of defending scope, holding fees, and declining three deals that were a poor fit. Total revenue: $855,000.
Their own words explained the gap better than any spreadsheet. The volume leader described herself as a relationship builder whose pride was making it easy for clients to say yes. The value leader put it bluntly: he tells clients what they need to hear rather than what they want to hear — and accepts that not everyone enjoys it.
Here's the uncomfortable governance question: if your scoreboard had been running that year, which partner would it have crowned? Most networks celebrate the wrong one — and in doing so, train everyone else to copy her.
The Challenger Behavior Set
Four Practices Anyone Can Learn
The critical insight about the Challenger profile is that it isn't a temperament you hire for. It's a set of observable behaviors — and behaviors can be trained. You don't need different people. You need the same people running different plays.
Open with an insight, not a pitch. The Challenger's first move is a perspective the buyer hasn't considered about their own business. Something like: most firms in your sector blame project management for their delivery problems, but the data shows the requirements process is what's actually driving 60% of the downstream failures. A statement like that earns attention precisely because it collides with what the buyer believed walking in.
Hold tension without arguing. When the buyer pushes on price, the Challenger neither caves nor fights. She returns the conversation to the gap: the fee is significant, yes — and the annual cost of the problem it solves is twelve times that fee. So the real question isn't whether the fee fits the budget; it's whether the buyer can afford another year of the gap. Uncomfortable? Briefly. But it's discomfort deployed in the buyer's own interest.
Talk about money like it's normal. Challengers state fees without hedging. They present a three-tier proposal top-down and never apologize for the premium option. No "our fees are typically in the range of..." No "depending on what budget you have available..." Investment, anchored to the gap, followed by next steps. The absence of flinching is itself a signal of confidence in the value.
Disagree in the client's interest. When a buyer proposes a weaker path — attacking the wrong gap first, under-investing in the area that matters, skipping the diagnostic — the Challenger says so, plainly and without heat: I'd recommend against that, and here's what I've watched happen to organizations that started there. The willingness to contradict the buyer is the line between an expert and a vendor.
"Deference asks the buyer what they'd like done. Leadership tells the buyer what their own data says should be done. Premium fees follow the second posture — never the first."
Install the Skills in Layers
Sequence Beats Intensity
The fastest way to fail at Challenger training is to dump every competency on a partner at once. Overload produces regression — under pressure, people retreat to the accommodating habits that feel safe. Build the stack one layer at a time, in this order.
First: executive-room confidence. Begin with VITO access training. Nobody can challenge a buyer they're intimidated by, so the foundation is comfort at the top of the org chart: approaching the C-suite directly, naming the fee without qualifiers, carrying the tone and posture of an authority. Every later layer rests on this one.
Second: the teaching conversation. Train the insight-led opening — using your assessment data to tell the buyer a story about their business they haven't heard before, engineering the moment where they say they hadn't thought of it that way. This layer is what separates a genuine Challenger from someone who is merely assertive.
Third: disciplined questioning. Add SPIN — Situation, Problem, Implication, Need-Payoff. Worked in sequence, those questions get the buyer articulating the severity of their own gap, in their own words. A partner who masters this layer barely needs to sell; the buyer talks themselves into the engagement.
Fourth: the financial anchor. Teach gap quantification — converting assessment findings into a specific dollar figure that frames every pricing conversation that follows. The gap costs this much per year; the engagement costs this much; the return is the ratio between them. When that arithmetic is on the table, price objections shrink fast.
Fifth: indecision rescue. Finish with the JOLT methodology, because the fear of choosing wrongly kills more deals than any competitor does. Judge how indecisive the buyer is. Offer a clear recommendation. Limit the options on the table. Take the risk off their shoulders. This is the advanced layer that converts stalled pipelines into signed work.
Three implementation rules govern every layer. Work on one behavior at a time. Run each new behavior at least three times before judging it — the first attempts always feel clumsy. And favor volume over polish early on: deliver five assessments before you start optimizing the debrief. Repetition builds competence, competence builds confidence, and confidence is what keeps Challenger behavior alive when a real buyer pushes back.
Make the Scoreboard Match the Standard
Training installs the skills; recognition decides whether they survive. Culture is shaped by what gets measured, celebrated, and rewarded. Celebrate the partner with the most closed deals and you are manufacturing Relationship Builders. Celebrate the partner with the strongest margins, the best-fit clients, and the best outcomes, and you are manufacturing Challengers.
Publicize held prices. When procurement pressed for a discount, the partner held the fee, and the client signed anyway — broadcast that story across the network. It's evidence, not anecdote: pricing discipline works, and everyone watching learns they can hold the line too.
Honor the no. When a partner turns away a poor-fit client — wrong size, wrong problem, unwilling to fund the engagement properly — treat the refusal as a win. Saying no is harder than saying yes, and every bad-fit client accepted becomes a mediocre result, a tepid testimonial, and zero referrals.
Surface the debrief moments. When a partner challenges a CEO's assumptions in an assessment debrief and the CEO responds that nobody has told them that before — capture it and share it. Those moments are the proof that teaching with insight does what the training promised.
Be the template. Whatever you do in your own sales conversations is what your partners will copy. Discount, and they discount. Accommodate, and they accommodate. Teach with conviction, hold constructive tension, price on value — and that becomes the house style. Culture propagates from the founder outward, always.
One calibration check ties it all together: roughly one-third of your proposals should be rejected on price. If everyone signs, you're undercharging. If nobody signs, your value communication is broken. A healthy share pushing back while a healthy share signs means your fees reflect your value and your people are confident enough to defend them. That's a Challenger culture operating exactly as designed.