The Death of Relationship Selling: Why Only 7% of Top Performers Are Relationship Builders
Dixon's research: 53% of B2B loyalty is driven by the sales experience itself. The agreeable, accommodating style most consultants default to is the worst predictor of complex sales success.
If you ask most service business founders how they win clients, you'll hear some variation of: "It's all about relationships." Be likable. Be accommodating. Be easy to work with. The client will appreciate the experience and reward you with their business.
Matthew Dixon and Brent Adamson studied 6,000 sales representatives across multiple industries and discovered something that should make every relationship-focused consultant uncomfortable: the agreeable, accommodating style that most service professionals default to is the worst predictor of success in complex, high-value sales.
Not one of the worst. The worst. Only 7% of top-performing sales professionals in complex B2B engagements fit the Relationship Builder profile. The dominant profile among top performers? The Challenger — the professional who teaches the client something new, tailors the message to the stakeholder, and maintains constructive tension when the buyer pushes back.
This isn't a minor finding. It's a reversal of everything the consulting industry teaches about how to win business.
And it has profound implications for how you train your partner network to sell.
The Five Sales Profiles
And Why the Most Common One Fails
Dixon and Adamson's research identified five distinct sales profiles across their dataset of 6,000 reps:
- The Hard Worker. Always putting in more hours. First in, last out. High activity. Diligent follow-up. Doesn't give up.
- The Relationship Builder. Accessible and generous. Builds personal connections. Goes above and beyond to make clients comfortable. Avoids tension.
- The Lone Wolf. Self-confident. Follows instincts rather than processes. Difficult to manage but occasionally brilliant.
- The Reactive Problem Solver. Highly reliable. Exceptional at post-sale service. Keeps every promise. Clients love the support experience.
- The Challenger. Understands the client's business deeply. Pushes the client's thinking. Isn't afraid to share controversial perspectives. Maintains tension around commercial discussions.
In simple, transactional sales, the profiles perform roughly equally. Any approach works when the decision is straightforward and the stakes are low.
But in complex, high-value sales — the kind that service businesses live on — the gap is enormous. Challengers dominate the top-performer category. Relationship Builders constitute the largest percentage of underperformers.
The reason is structural, not personal. Complex B2B sales involve 5.4 decision-makers on average. Each stakeholder has different priorities, different fears, and different success criteria. An agreeable, accommodating approach that works one-on-one collapses in a multi-stakeholder environment because being likable to everyone means challenging no one. And complex buying decisions don't happen without challenge.
"In complex sales, being nice is a competitive disadvantage. The client doesn't need another agreeable advisor. They need someone who makes them see their business differently."
The most unsettling implication: the personality type that gravitates toward consulting — empathetic, accommodating, relationship-oriented — is precisely the type that underperforms at selling consulting.
The 53% Finding
Why the Sales Experience Matters More Than the Product
Dixon's research produced another finding that restructures how you should think about selling services: 53% of B2B customer loyalty is driven by the sales experience itself. Not by brand. Not by product quality. Not by service delivery. Not by price. By how the buyer experiences the selling process.
Think about what that means. More than half of a client's loyalty — their willingness to buy again, to expand the engagement, to refer colleagues — is determined before you deliver a single thing. The way you sell is more important than what you sell.
What makes a sales experience loyalty-generating? Dixon's data points to three factors:
- Teaching. The seller delivers genuine insight — something the buyer didn't know about their own business. Not generic "thought leadership." Specific, data-backed insight that changes how the buyer sees their situation.
- Tailoring. The message is customized to the individual stakeholder, not delivered as a one-size-fits-all pitch. The CEO hears about competitive positioning. The CFO hears about ROI and risk. Same methodology. Different framing.
- Taking control. The seller maintains constructive tension around pricing, scope, and timeline rather than caving at the first sign of pushback. Buyers respect confidence. They don't respect accommodation.
This is the Challenger trifecta: teach, tailor, take control. And it's precisely the opposite of what Relationship Builders do, which is accommodate, agree, and avoid tension.
For a diagnostic-driven service business, the teaching dimension is built into the model. Your diagnostic produces data that the client didn't have before. The assessment results are the insight. The question isn't whether you have something to teach — you do. The question is whether your practitioners have the commercial courage to present findings that challenge the client's assumptions rather than confirming them.
Why Relationship Builders Lose Big Deals
The Three Traps of Being Too Agreeable
Understanding why Relationship Builders fail in complex sales isn't about blaming a personality type. It's about recognizing three specific behavioral traps that agreeable service professionals fall into.
Trap 1: Scope creep as accommodation. The Relationship Builder wants the client to be happy. When the client asks for something outside the agreed scope — "Could you also take a look at our compensation structure while you're at it?" — the Relationship Builder says yes. And yes again. And again. Each accommodation feels generous. Cumulatively, it destroys the engagement's profitability and teaches the client that the scope was never real.
Trap 2: Discounting as relationship preservation. When the client pushes back on price, the Relationship Builder's instinct is to preserve the relationship at any cost — including reducing the fee. "Let's work something out" sounds collaborative. In practice, it signals that the stated price was a negotiating position, not a reflection of value. The client learns to always ask for less.
Trap 3: Selling to the wrong level. Relationship Builders gravitate toward the contacts who are warmest and most responsive — typically mid-level managers who appreciate the attention. But these aren't the decision-makers. Anthony Parinello's research across 2.5 million salespeople demonstrates that deals initiated at the CEO level are 54% larger and close 50% faster. The Relationship Builder's comfort zone is the director who smiles and nods. The Challenger's comfort zone is the executive who asks hard questions and expects answers.
Each trap reinforces the others. The Relationship Builder accepts a lower price to win the deal, expands scope to maintain goodwill, and never reaches the executive who could have approved the full engagement at the original price. The result: small deals, thin margins, and exhausting client management.
Training the Challenger Skill Set
It's Learnable — Not Personality-Dependent
The most important insight from Dixon's research isn't that some people are natural Challengers and others aren't. It's that the Challenger skill set can be taught. It's a set of behaviors, not a personality trait.
Here's what that training looks like for a partner network:
Teaching skill: The commercial insight. Every practitioner needs a repertoire of 3-5 insights they can deliver in the first conversation — data-backed observations that reframe how the buyer sees their situation. "Companies in your industry that score below 40 on our assessment lose 14% more projects to delay than their higher-scoring competitors." That's not a pitch. It's a teaching moment. And it positions the practitioner as someone who brings intelligence, not just competence.
Tailoring skill: Stakeholder mapping. Before any multi-stakeholder meeting, practitioners should prepare different message tracks for each person in the room. The same assessment results, framed differently for the CEO (competitive positioning), the CFO (financial impact), the COO (operational efficiency), and the department head (team capability). Walking into a buying committee with a single deck is the mark of an amateur.
Taking control: The tension muscle. This is the hardest skill to develop because it runs counter to every service professional's instinct. Maintaining tension means saying: "I understand you'd like to reduce the scope. Here's why I'd recommend against that — the gaps we identified in [area] are connected to [consequence], and addressing them partially often produces worse outcomes than addressing them comprehensively."
That conversation feels uncomfortable. It should. Comfort is the opposite of challenge, and challenge is what closes complex deals.
"The Challenger doesn't bulldoze. They assert. There's a difference. Bulldozing ignores the client. Asserting says 'I've heard you, and based on the data, here's what I recommend' — and holds that position with confidence."
Rackham's SPIN research complements this perfectly. Top performers ask four times more Implication Questions than average performers. These questions — "What happens to your competitive position if this gap persists for another year?" — are inherently challenging. They force the buyer to confront consequences they may have been minimizing. That's not aggressive. It's professional.
The prescription for partner training: role-play these scenarios relentlessly. Practice delivering insights that challenge assumptions. Practice tailoring messages for different stakeholders. Practice holding your price when the buyer pushes back. Practice making a specific recommendation when the buyer asks for a menu.
Relationships still matter. But they're the result of great selling, not the method. Clients don't become loyal because you were agreeable. They become loyal because you taught them something, pushed their thinking, and helped them make a confident decision. That's the Challenger advantage — and it's available to any practitioner willing to learn it.
Luis Goncalves
Three-time founder. Built and exited Evolution4All before this. Now building FIKR Space — the operating infrastructure underneath every innovation ecosystem (startups, accelerators, governments, investors). Lisbon-based, works global.