Sales Is Changing - But the Fundamentals Aren’t
By Michael K. Adonteng
June 17th, 2026
Sales Is Changing—But the Fundamentals Aren’t
Sales is changing.
That part is true.
New tools.
New channels.
New expectations.
Every year, there’s something new promising to transform how selling works.
- Automation. Data platforms. Outreach tools.
And all of them do change how sales is executed.
But they don’t change what makes it effective.
Because while tools evolve, buyers don’t.
What Has Actually Changed
Buyers today are:
- More informed
- More sceptical
- More selective
They’ve seen more pitches.
They’ve ignored more emails.
They’ve been through more buying cycles.
Which means:
- Generic outreach gets ignored
- Weak conversations get cut short
- Unclear value gets deprioritised
The bar has gone up.
Not because of tools.
Because of buyer expectations.
What Hasn’t Changed
Despite all the change, the fundamentals are the same.
Buyers still need two things.
1. Justification
Every decision needs to make sense commercially.
That means:
- A clear problem
- A measurable impact
- A defensible business case
If a buyer can’t explain:
- Why this matters
- What it solves
- What the outcome is
The deal won’t move.
No matter how good your product is.
2. Alignment
Deals don’t get approved by individuals.
They get approved by groups.
Which means:
- Multiple stakeholders
- Different priorities
- Internal trade-offs
And unless those stakeholders are aligned:
- Deals stall
- Decisions get delayed
- Priorities shift
Alignment is often the real blocker.
Not competition.
Where Sellers Get Distracted
With so many tools available, it’s easy to focus on:
- Automation
- Personalisation at scale
- Activity volume
Instead of:
- Conversation quality
- Problem understanding
- Decision navigation
You’ll see teams sending more messages than ever.
But converting less.
Because the fundamentals are missing.
The Difference Between Good and Great Sellers
Good sellers adapt to tools.
They:
- Use automation
- Improve efficiency
- Increase output
But great sellers focus on fundamentals.
They:
- Understand the real problem
- Quantify the impact
- Navigate the buying process
- Build alignment across stakeholders
Tools support them.
They don’t define them.
A Simple Example
Two sellers in the same market.
Seller A:
- Uses the latest tools
- Automates outreach
- Sends high volumes
Seller B:
- Uses tools for efficiency
- Focuses on fewer, better conversations
- Builds stronger business cases
After a few months:
- Seller A has activity
- Seller B has revenue
The difference isn’t effort.
It’s focus.
What This Means for Teams
If you’re leading a sales team, the priority is not to chase every new tool.
It’s to ensure the fundamentals are in place:
- Clear targeting
- Strong discovery
- Structured qualification
- Defined deal progression
Then layer tools on top.
Not the other way round.
Because tools amplify what already exists.
If the fundamentals are weak, tools scale inefficiency.
If the fundamentals are strong, tools accelerate performance.
The Shift That Matters
Sales isn’t becoming easier.
It’s becoming more disciplined.
Because buyers expect more:
- More relevance
- More clarity
- More value
And that requires sellers to be sharper.
Not just busier.
Sales will continue to evolve.
New tools will emerge.
New methods will appear.
But the core will remain the same:
Understand the problem.
Build a clear case.
Align the right people.
Guide the decision.
Those who master this will always outperform.
Regardless of the tools they use.
If you want the modern sales playbook, request it and you’ll get a structured approach to building pipeline, progressing deals, and closing consistently in today’s market.
Explore our articles section for other topics of interest.

Michael K. Adonteng
Founder, ASA
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