Here is a number that should change how you run every sales conversation in your business: 53% of B2B customer loyalty is generated by the sales experience itself. Not by the quality of your delivery. Not by your brand, your pricing, or your methodology. By what it felt like to buy from you.
That finding comes from Matthew Dixon and Brent Adamson, who studied 6,000 sales representatives across industries to understand what separates top performers from everyone else. Their conclusion dismantles the advice most consultants, agency owners, and coaches have absorbed since day one — that winning business is about being likable, accommodating, and easy to work with.
It isn't. The data shows the reverse. The accommodating, relationship-first style turned out to be the single worst predictor of success in complex, high-value sales — exactly the category of sale an expertise business depends on.
And if more than half of a client's loyalty is settled before you've delivered anything, then the sales process isn't a gate you pass through to reach the real work. It is the real work — the opening act of the engagement.
Most service founders are running that opening act on a script the evidence says fails. Worse, they're teaching the same script to their partners.
Five Ways to Sell. One That Wins Big Deals.
What 6,000 Reps Revealed
Across their dataset, Dixon and Adamson found that sellers cluster into five recognizable profiles:
- The Hard Worker. Outworks everyone. More calls, more follow-ups, more hours. Relentless, but rarely strategic.
- The Relationship Builder. Generous with time, allergic to friction. Prioritizes the client's comfort above all else and steers around anything that could create tension.
- The Lone Wolf. Trusts instinct over process. Occasionally brilliant, usually unmanageable.
- The Reactive Problem Solver. Dependable and detail-obsessed. World-class at post-sale support. Keeps every commitment.
- The Challenger. Knows the client's business cold, offers perspectives the client hasn't considered, and stays composed when commercial conversations get uncomfortable.
When the sale is simple and transactional, the profile barely matters — all five perform at roughly the same level. Low stakes forgive any style.
When the sale is complex — multiple stakeholders, serious budget, real organizational consequences — the profiles separate dramatically. Challengers fill the top-performer ranks. Relationship Builders make up the largest share of the bottom. Only 7% of top performers in complex B2B selling fit the Relationship Builder profile.
The mechanics explain why, and they have nothing to do with anyone's character. A complex B2B purchase involves 5.4 decision-makers on average, each carrying their own agenda, anxieties, and definition of a win. A style built on agreement works fine across a coffee table with one person. Put it in front of a buying committee and it dissolves — because pleasing everyone means confronting no one, and committees don't reach high-stakes decisions until someone forces the hard questions.
"The buyer already has plenty of pleasant advisors. What they lack is someone willing to show them their own business from an angle they haven't seen."
Here's the uncomfortable part for our industry: consulting, coaching, and agency work attract empathetic, accommodating people. The temperament that draws you into expertise work is the same temperament the data says struggles to sell it.
What a Loyalty-Generating Sale Actually Looks Like
Teach. Tailor. Hold the Line.
Go back to that 53% number. If the buying experience drives more loyalty — repeat purchases, expansions, referrals — than the thing being bought, the obvious question is: which buying experience? Dixon's data isolates three behaviors that do the work:
- Teach. Bring the buyer a genuine insight — something specific and evidence-backed about their own business that they didn't already know. Recycled thought leadership doesn't qualify. An observation that changes how they see their situation does.
- Tailor. Deliver the same case differently to each stakeholder. The CEO cares about competitive position. The CFO cares about return and risk. One methodology, several framings — never one pitch for the whole room.
- Take control. Hold your position on price, scope, and timeline when the buyer tests it. Confidence earns respect. Instant concession earns more demands.
Notice that these three behaviors are the exact inversion of the Relationship Builder's playbook, which is to agree, adapt, and defuse.
If you run a diagnostic-led business, the teaching half of this equation is already built in. An assessment generates data the client has never seen about their own organization — the findings are the insight. What's usually missing isn't material to teach with. It's the commercial nerve to present results that contradict what the client believes about themselves, instead of softening the findings to keep the room comfortable.
Three Ways Agreeableness Quietly Destroys Margin
The Failure Patterns to Watch in Yourself — and Your Partners
The Relationship Builder doesn't lose deals in one dramatic moment. The damage accumulates through three predictable patterns, and every agreeable founder will recognize at least one.
Pattern 1: Free work disguised as generosity. The client asks, "While you're in there, could you also look at...?" and the agreeable founder says yes. Then yes again. Each individual yes feels like an investment in the relationship. Stacked together, they erase the engagement's margin — and they signal that the boundary in the contract was decorative.
Pattern 2: The reflexive discount. When the buyer balks at the fee, the agreeable instinct is to protect the relationship by shaving the number. What the client actually learns is that your price was an opening bid. They will negotiate every invoice from now on, because you taught them that pushing works.
Pattern 3: Anchoring too low in the org chart. Agreeable sellers drift toward the warmest contact — usually a mid-level manager who returns calls and enjoys the attention. But warmth isn't authority. Anthony Parinello's research, drawn from 2.5 million salespeople, found that deals opened at the CEO level run 54% larger and close 50% faster. The friendly director can champion you. Only the executive can buy from you.
These three patterns feed each other. You discount to win the deal, over-deliver to keep the goodwill, and never meet the person who would have approved the full fee without flinching. The output is a portfolio of small, under-priced, high-maintenance engagements — and a founder who can't understand why being so easy to work with pays so badly.
You Can Train This. So Train It.
Turning Challenger Behavior Into a Partner Curriculum
The redeeming news in Dixon's research: Challenger selling is a behavior set, not a birthright. Nobody is excluded by temperament. Which means it belongs in your training curriculum — especially if you license your methodology to a partner network, where every practitioner doubles as a seller.
Build the insight repertoire. Every practitioner should carry 3-5 first-meeting insights: evidence-backed observations that reframe the buyer's view of their own situation before any pitch begins. Delivering one is a teaching moment, and it repositions the practitioner from vendor to authority within minutes of sitting down.
Drill stakeholder translation. Before any committee meeting, the practitioner prepares a distinct message track for each seat at the table — the CEO version (market position), the CFO version (financial exposure), the COO version (operational throughput), the department-head version (team capability). Same findings, four framings. Showing up with one generic deck for the whole room marks you as a commodity.
Condition the tension muscle. This is the hardest behavior to install because it contradicts every service professional's instinct. It sounds like: "You've asked to cut the scope. I'd advise against it, and here's the reasoning — the gaps we identified in this area drive the exact outcomes you hired us to fix, and fixing them partially tends to produce worse results than not starting." Saying that out loud feels risky. The data says it's what closing complex work requires.
Neil Rackham's SPIN research reinforces the point from another direction: top performers ask four times as many Implication Questions as average ones. "If this gap is still here in a year, what does it do to your competitive position?" is a challenging question by design — it makes the buyer sit with consequences they'd been minimizing. That isn't aggression. It's the job.
"Asserting is not bulldozing. Bulldozing ignores what the client said. Asserting proves you heard it — and still recommends what the evidence supports."
Then you rehearse. Run role-plays where the practitioner has to hold price under pressure, deliver an unflattering finding to a skeptical executive, and answer "just give us some options" with one firm recommendation. Repetition is what converts these moves from uncomfortable exceptions into default behavior.
None of this means relationships are worthless. It means they're an outcome, not a technique. Clients don't stay loyal because you were pleasant to deal with. They stay because you showed them something true about their business, stood behind your recommendation, and made an expensive decision feel safe. Build sellers who do that, and the relationships take care of themselves.