For a long time, ‘see one, do one, teach one’ has been the backbone of teaching new skills in the surgical profession. It makes perfect sense in a job where you often have life or death outcomes.
When we add a modern meme to this teaching philosophy, ‘rinse and repeat’, taken from the instructions on a shampoo bottle, then it is a similar philosophy we could learn from as well.
However, I often see a different business version of supposedly teaching people new skills –
‘tell, finish’ and if that doesn’t work
‘tell them again, finish’.
The first thing that many businesses do when they want to develop new skills is to get their people together, deliver the key points of what they want and send them out to the world, supposedly armed with the skills needed to be brilliant. In reality, this rarely works. So, the answer to their problem becomes more of the same training. This is the
‘tell, finish’ scenario.
Training is only a small part of developing skills and changing behaviours. Training is just a point at which you are showing them something different from what they may currently be doing. Training does not change beliefs or behaviours. ‘Doing’ is what changes beliefs and behaviours.
Do it once, and it seems to work, then I’ll do it again. Do it twice, and it seems to work, then I’ll do it again, and at some point, this becomes my new behaviour – the way I now do things around here!
The fundamental of good selling is getting the buyer to tell themselves that this product or service is right for them. Any amount of just telling them that it is right for them without spending time to shift their views and beliefs will result in objections and, more often than not, a lost sale.
In the same way, when looking for our salespeople to change the way they do things, learn new skills and change their beliefs, we have to take them on the journey of
‘see one, do one, teach one’. ‘Rinse and repeat’.
Telling them is not good enough.
Conducting training courses without the ‘doing’ component to develop competency is just noise.
Sure, selling is not generally a life or death scenario (unless maybe you’re a military arms dealer), and yet selling is generally our livelihood.
As sales leaders, when developing the skills, behaviours and competency we want in our teams, we have to
‘be the behaviour’.
As salespeople, if we’re going to continue to grow, teaching someone else is a great way to develop ourselves.
‘See one, do one, teach one’. ‘Rinse and repeat’
is a great model to keep us focused, ensuring we lead by example.
Andrew Nisbet
PS - My new online course is just about live. It’s a deep dive into the insights and frameworks fundamental to relationship selling. To learn more about the course, head to this page here. If you’re interested in enrolling in the course and have any questions, please email me at any time - info@shiftperspectives.com.au.




