
Look at the best rep on your team. They are not lucky. They have a handful of small moves they do over and over, and those moves are right there for you to copy. You can learn from top reps without a single training course. You just have to pay attention to what they do and steal it. The whole masterclass is already sitting in their call recordings.
Most people work next to a star rep and never learn a thing from them. They see the numbers on the board and think it is talent. So they put their head down and grind through their own calls, making the same mistakes alone. The answer was ten feet away the whole time. You do not have to figure out a great opener by yourself when someone near you already nails it every day. Ignoring them is the slow way to get good.
Good reps are quiet thieves. They listen to the top seller's calls on purpose, and they borrow the things that work. They notice how the star handles a price question, or how they ask for the meeting. Then they try that exact move on their own call. They are not pretending to be someone else. They are picking up one trick at a time and making it their own. That is how good reps get better fast.
Pick the best seller near you and play one of their recorded calls. Listen for the small moves, not the magic. Most teams keep call recordings, so just ask where they are.
It is review week. Let me pull up one of Priya's discovery calls at meritt and hear how she runs it.
Do not try to copy everything. Find one thing they did better than you and write it down. One move is enough to work on.
She did not rush after a hard question. She paused, then asked one calm follow-up. I want that.
Use the move on your very next call. Afterwards, ask yourself one question: did it work better than my old way? Keep what helps, drop what does not.
I tried Priya's calm pause on my call today. The buyer opened up more. Keeping it.
Priya is just a natural. I could never sell like that, so what is the point of listening to her calls.
I listened to Priya's call. When the buyer pushed back, she did not panic, she paused and asked why. I tried that same pause on my next call and the buyer told me the real reason they were stalling. Adding it to how I handle pushback.
Same star rep, two very different outcomes. One treats her as a mystery. The other treats her as a how-to guide. The strong version turns watching into a real skill you now own.
You've got this when you often watch top reps and borrow the things they do well. That is the test. Look back over the last month. Did you listen to a strong rep's calls? Did you try one of their moves and check if it worked? If yes, you are doing what most people never bother to do. Keep at it, and the best moves on your team slowly become your own.
You do not need to take up their time. Most teams record calls, so ask where the recordings live and listen to one of the top rep's calls every two weeks. Listen for small, repeatable moves like how they open or handle price. meritt's coachability work shows that quietly studying a strong rep and copying one move at a time is one of the fastest ways to improve.
Look for one move you can steal, not everything at once. Notice how they handle a tough moment, like a price question or a brush-off, and how they ask for the next step. Pick the single thing they did better than you, write it down, and try just that on your own next call. One borrowed move beats ten you only admired.
No, copy the move, not the person. Take the thing that works, like a calm pause after a hard question, and say it in your own words. If you mimic someone exactly, it sounds fake and buyers feel it. Borrow the idea, then make it fit how you naturally talk. That is how a copied move becomes a real skill of yours.
Then borrow from more than one person. Maybe one rep has a great opener and another handles objections well. Take the best single move from each. You can also use public call breakdowns or recordings your manager shares. The point is not to find one perfect rep, it is to keep stealing one good move at a time and testing it.
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