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Inside Clay's Sales Playbook | Becca Lindquist

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How do you read a LinkedIn profile? Oh

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wow. Which pulled up people's LinkedIns.

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We pulled up yours. It was actually

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really weird. We're like, don't hire

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this guy. No, I'm kidding.

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>> Today we have Becca Linquist, head of

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sales at Clay, one of the fastest

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growing companies to scale to $100

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million in ARR. Our quota to OT ratio is

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like 7 12. It should be heavily weighted

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for overperformance. If I'm giving you a

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big quota and you're hitting 110% of

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that, I want you to be making good

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money. This was an exceptional deep dive

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that goes very granular into how to

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scale a sales or when you have 60% of

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people over 100% 80% over 80% I think is

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best you're building a winning culture

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people are successful get your pen and

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paper out you'll be taking a lot of

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notes in this one hire two at a time

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because you hire one you're like is it

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good is it not good I don't know if you

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hire two it's pretty clear outbound will

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never be dead

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>> ready to

1:00

Be back. It is so good to have you in

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the studio. It's so nice to do it in

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person. I went for a walk around High

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Park with Verun and he said so many

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wonderful things. So, thank you so much

1:07

for joining me today.

1:08

>> Thanks for having me. It's fun.

1:09

>> Now, I think a lot of sales leaders and

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sales people are looking at themselves

1:13

today going, "Am I in the right place?"

1:14

you're in a SAS company and you're like

1:17

that's not an AI company and you're

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seeing a load of friends make a lot of

1:20

money at AI companies. How should people

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actually think about the decision of

1:25

should I leave my SAS company and join a

1:27

hot AI company or should I actually just

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stay? So, I have a lot of these types of

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conversations both with like peers and

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and with uh folks that are having this

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like kind of evaluation. And I think

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there's there's two ways to approach it,

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right? A lot of folks that I talk to are

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at software companies. They've been

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there for like four years, 5 years. The

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learning curve is kind of flattened out.

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And like the the phrase that I use to

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describe how they might feel is like,

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"Hey, do you feel like you're kind of

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like rotting, right? Like you're you're

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not you're not learning a ton more. The

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the the learning curve is flattened for

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you. You're not in an AI space, which

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like I think is like the next uh the

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next phase of things to learn." And

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actually almost every time they're like,

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"Yeah, that's exactly how I feel." And

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I'm like, "Okay, let's let's fix that

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then." Because that once you stop

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learning, like you actually as as a

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person, I think, start to settle and

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then it's just a like a process of

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settling all the way down to the bottom.

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>> So what do you do when you feel as a

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sales rep or leader?

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>> Yeah.

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>> That you are rotting. What do you do?

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>> You got to go you got to go find

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something else, right?

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>> You can't reinvigorate it. I mean maybe

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you can move maybe you can move into

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like a different role or like a

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different sub sector of the company but

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usually like if you've been there for

2:44

four or five years the company's pretty

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big there's a lot of structure there's a

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lot of process like there's there's not

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much more for you to like innovate

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meaningfully I mean maybe you could um I

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don't know maybe you could go run the

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company's like VC fund or something

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right like but but but at the end of the

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day like if you leave a company like

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that and you move to this is like

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partially why I joined Clay, right? Like

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if you leave a company like that and you

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go to a nextgen AI startup, like you're

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going to learn way more. The surface

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area of of what you can actually go and

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impact is much much higher. And I think

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that's what those types of people are

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excited about, right? Like if you've

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been at Salesforce for 12, 13, 14 years,

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like you've probably had an incredible

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run, you probably really enjoy that and

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you're probably going to stay there. But

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like most people are at companies for

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like four or five years.

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>> Dick comment. If you've been at

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Salesforce for 12, 13, 14 years, I

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automatically think you're not great.

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I'm like, you got stuck in your ways.

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You've been there for way too long.

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Seriously, you were happy just in this

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kind of malay of mediocrity for 12, 13,

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14 years. Is that a bad read?

3:48

>> I don't think it's a bad read. I

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actually So, we're we're recruiting a

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lot right now at Clay and uh you know, I

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see a lot I see a lot of profiles. I

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actually ran a training for my team on

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on recruiting last last week, the week

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before. And one of the things that we

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talked about is like how do you read a

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LinkedIn profile? Oh wow. Right. And I

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we just pulled up people's LinkedIn. We

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pulled up yours. It was actually really

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weird. We're like don't hire this guy.

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No, I'm kidding.

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>> Terrible. Look at that. Egotistical,

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arrogant. Why would I? He's a ter.

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>> Um so we pull up LinkedIn profile and

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and I'd be like, "Okay, what do you

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like? What do you see that you like?

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What do you see that you don't like?"

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And it's actually there's a certain

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amount of time that if you spend at any

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company, it's like kind of a red flag

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because it's like can you can you do

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something new? Can you operate outside

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of the bounds of what you've what you've

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built and what you've done? Right.

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>> What is that amount of time? Because I

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also hate the bouncer. And the biggest

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red flag for me is 13 months here, 15

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months.

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>> That's that that there's there's a lower

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bound too. And like I think I think it's

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two years, right? Like

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>> I always think four to five years is

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like optimal. Yeah. I mean that's I I've

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spent the last decade at two companies.

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Yeah. Right. And like I've built

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something. I've learned a ton. And when

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that learning curve starts to cap off

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like okay, you start to think about

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what's next and what's new. I think it's

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probably like

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>> 7 years, 6 to 7 years. After that, if

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you've been in a company for 8 n 10

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years, it's like

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>> the company's kind of built around you

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probably. And you you've built so much

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of it to like uh I don't know the best

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way to describe it is like maybe like

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putting on someone else's shoes right

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now. Now I'm giving you you're giving me

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your shoes now like I got to like I

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don't know redo the laces and the

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insoles all you know screwed up. Like I

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think it's really tough for someone

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who's been at a company that long to

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like adjust and and prove me wrong,

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right? Like I I have a friend who was at

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at heap which I was at two companies

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ago, right? He was there for like eight

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or nine years and I'd actually like

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every time that you know the LinkedIn

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anniversary he's like oh my god your

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friend has been there for this many I

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just like one year I I screenshotted it

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I sent it to him I was like yo blink

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twice if you need me to save you

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>> because like but he was like look I'm

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learning and like yes there is an end

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date there is an expiration date but

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like when I see something like that

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especially at a company like Salesforce

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I'm like okay you you have your thing

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you know what you're doing you probably

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have great hobbies outside of

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that just so denigrative. I love that.

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That's so funny. Yeah. Yeah. Um

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training, recruiting. Take me to that

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day on on the LinkedIn specifically. Is

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there anything else like we watch out

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for? Don't laugh. One of my big red

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flags is someone who has like a picture

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of them speaking at an event. It just

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tells me that they have great

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self-importance.

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>> You're just a dick. Well, well, well,

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actually, actually, I when I see that, I

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look at it and I'm like, okay, either

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