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Some Goodness

Some Goodness

By: Richard Ellis
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Some Goodness is hosted by Richard Ellis, a seasoned sales leader passionate about inviting top business minds to share their wisdom. Each episode is only 15-20 minutes, perfect for your commute or workout.© 2026 Revenue Innovations Career Success Economics Management Management & Leadership
Episodes
  • Episode 51: Your Customer Is the Best Salesperson You’re Not Using
    May 20 2026

    Host Richard Ellis interviews Braydan Young, co-founder of Slash Experts and former Sendoso co-founder, about why most B2B companies rely on the same few reference customers late in deals and lack systems to operationalize social proof. Braden explains how social proof extends beyond reference calls to logos, case studies, reviews, testimonials, and especially short video testimonials, and argues prospects often complete much of the buying journey before talking to sales. Slash Experts addresses the “last-minute scramble” by letting prospects book calls with pre-vetted customers via expert pages, using AI to recommend the best match, automate follow-ups, and nudge buyers with relevant proof while capturing transcripts of customer language. Braydan shares practical CRO steps: test your own reference process, track and thank reference customers, and introduce customer conversations earlier to accelerate stalled deals.

    Soundbites

    • "80% of the deal cycle is done by the time they're actually hopping on the phone with sales."
    • "Everyone has the same 40, 50 logos on their site. How's everybody working with the exact same companies?"
    • "Typically it's a scramble at the end. It's, 'Who's the fastest person I can get on the phone so they can check that box?'"
    • "You've gone from trying to sell a product to being consultative. All you're trying to do is empower your champion to get the deal done."
    • "Social proof is just making someone not feel alone for taking a risk on buying your service." — Braydan Young
    • "The way our customer was talking to a prospect about how they used our system was totally different than the way we talked about it. That's the conversation that is gold."
    • "If you're a CRO, try to get a reference today for your own company. Go through the process you gave to sales and see what that's like."
    • “There's not a lot of separation between work and life anymore. When it's blended well, that's the company everyone wants to work for."
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    29 mins
  • Episode 50: The AI Truths Sales Leaders Are Avoiding
    May 6 2026

    This episode discusses why AI investment is outpacing real business impact, noting low AI production adoption among US firms, limited use cases reaching full production, and many initiatives being abandoned in 2025. Host Richard Rllid interviews Jack Siney, co-founder of FrontRace, about his white paper on “15 AI truths” sales leaders will face, arguing most companies are experimenting without executing with precision.

    Siney says sales teams have spent decades optimizing the wrong metrics (calls, emails, pipeline) and remain poor at forecasting and replicating top-performer behavior. He argues AI’s value is measuring previously unmeasurable “20 small things” behind 3X performers, delivering clearer “signals” like Moneyball analytics. Key prerequisites are consolidating, normalizing, and cleaning company data and uncovering actual workflow behaviors, enabling better forecasting and guidance while preserving human roles in higher-value, complex sales.

    Soundbites / Memorable Quotes:

    • "If you're on social media, you'd swear every company is fully AI-enabled, firing their entire staff, making it all AI. The real world at a ground level is pretty significantly different."
    • "We're no better today, four decades in, hundreds of millions if not trillions of dollars invested in all of these sales platforms. Companies hitting forecasts? We're worse at forecasting, shockingly, with all the tools we have today."
    • "You have two reps, they have the same metrics, same calls, same outreach, same pipeline, and one is outperforming the other by 3X. When the CEO asks why, the head of sales simply makes something up."
    • "The difference between these two people are 20 little things. It's not the big things. Everyone knows the pricing. Everyone knows the FAQs. Everyone knows how to do the demo. That is not it."
    • "When you ask that person to train the rest of the team, it's like Michael Jordan trying to teach basketball. They just know they do it."
    • "Everything we're doing today in the AI world is gonna look childish five years from now. We're still in the AOL dial-up stage."
    • "If you take AI and you put it on a crappy data set, AI's already gonna have some hallucinations to it, but if the data's not right, you're gonna come out with bad conclusions and you're gonna get fired."
    • "We've relied on the sales rep, who's very biased, to manage their own pipeline, put in the probability it's gonna close, the amount, and when. Are you kidding me?"
    • "In Moneyball, the big shift was we're no longer buying players, we're buying runs. The same thing in sales: who cares how it gets closed? Do they close it?"
    • "The more money a client's spending, the safer your job is. When rubber hits the road, they want someone to talk to."
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    28 mins
  • Episode 49: AI Hype, Product Complexity, and Trust in Enterprise Software
    Apr 22 2026

    In this episode, host Richard Ellis discusses how enterprise software companies face pressure from boards and markets to demonstrate AI progress, creating risks of overpromising, unnecessary product narratives, and eroding customer trust. Guest Rob Huffstedtler, Global Head of Pre-Sales Operations at Sitecore, describes varied customer readiness for AI and notes research suggesting AI more often automates tasks than eliminates entire jobs, enabling workflow redesign while preserving human judgment. They explore AI’s impact on RFP responses, where automation can improve customization but still requires locked-down, contextual answers and stronger storytelling than CRM data typically captures.

    The conversation also covers how “show up and throw up” demos and excessive feature focus create perceived complexity and pricing objections, the value of confidently saying “yes” or “no,” and challenges in migrating installed-base customers through platform shifts without forcing RFPs. They conclude with leadership guidance on proactive involvement, coaching, and avoiding late-stage “super seller” interventions.

    Soundbites

    • “When companies over promise, force customers toward a future they didn’t ask for, or drag buyers through sprawling product narratives they don’t need, trust starts to erode.”
    • “AI may speed things up, but it does not remove the need for discipline, honest positioning, and respect for the installed base.”
    • “There are very few jobs where even in a fully agentic flow, you can eliminate the whole job. What it’s doing instead is simplifying or eliminating particular tasks of a job.”
    • “There’s really an opportunity to rethink workflows and business processes and re engineer them to remove the slow friction parts.”
    • “Some of the best RFPs are those that tell a story and they reiterate why do something different in the first place and why now and why with you.”
    • “SAEs need to learn that yes is a full sentence.”
    • “You coach rather than swooping in to save the day.”
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    21 mins
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