Being interested, not interesting in post‑sales means you focus less on talking about your product and more on asking questions that uncover how things really work for the client. That shift reduces defensiveness, exposes hidden fears like job security, and gives you the information you need to protect adoption, renewals, and expansion.
In the source conversation, the group kept running into the same pain point: customers who slow down adoption. One champion hoarded all the work in the software because she feared losing relevance if others used it. Another ran meetings herself and derailed implementation. Those are not product problems; they are people and safety problems.
Research on behavioral styles in sales shows that when you adapt how you communicate, you get more honest answers and faster decisions. Sandler’s own work on DISC points out that reps who “speak three more behavioral languages” connect with more prospects and move more opportunities forward. When people feel understood, they stop hiding the truth behind polite phrases like “They just love spreadsheets.”
That’s why post‑sales conversations must start from curiosity. Instead of thinking, “How do I convince them to use the tool the way we designed it?” think, “What would I ask if my only job was to understand their world?” That mindset leads you naturally into better questions, calmer conversations, and stronger renewal stories.
WHAT and HOW questions help you get to the client’s truth without putting them on the defensive. They replace “Who, when, where, why” questions that often feel like blame, deadlines, or interrogation and shut people down just when you need them to open up.
From childhood most of us learned to brace when we heard:
You can ask for the same information with a very different emotional impact:
In the transcript, the coach suggested questions for the gatekeeping champion like:
Both invite honesty about workload and fear without accusing her of blocking progress. This matters because, as he put it, “Asking questions gets you information. Information gives you leverage. Leverage lets you create better solutions and outcomes.”
A practical way to improve fast is to write your questions before the call. Draft them using your natural language, then:
This simple rewrite increases the odds that:
Using DISC styles in post‑sales means you keep asking questions, but you change how you ask them so they land in the client’s preferred language. That makes conversations shorter, less stressful, and more productive because people feel “got” instead of judged or steamrolled.
DISC describes four main behavioral styles:
Authoritative overviews of DISC in customer work, like Sandler’s customer communication guide, report that teams who adapt to these styles see measurable improvements in communication effectiveness and even double‑digit sales gains.
Here’s how that plays out in post‑sales:
You can prepare by quickly guessing someone’s DISC style from their emails, LinkedIn profile, or tools like Crystal (which estimates styles with around 80–85% accuracy). Then you tune your questions to their style before you ever log into Zoom.
Over time, this habit builds trust. People remember about 10% of what you say and 90% of how you made them feel. When your questions match their style, they feel respected—and that makes them far more willing to share the truth about adoption risk, internal politics, and budget.
You can keep control of conversations and still be interested by answering questions with questions—a technique often called reversing. Used well, it stops you from guessing, avoids foot‑in‑mouth moments, and sends a powerful message: “I care enough to understand before I respond.”
Take a common post‑sales gut‑punch: “When is this feature coming?” Many teams answer, “I’ll check with product and get you a ballpark,” which gives no context and leaves the customer feeling brushed off.
Instead, you might say:
Now you know whether this is an annoyance (a 3) or a renewal‑risk (a 9), and you can speak honestly about expectations:
This approach mirrors guidance from Sandler‑style coaching and aligns with broader best practices in customer success: getting clear impact data before committing. It also gives you better material when you talk to your own product org—real dollar impact, renewal timing, and emotional temperature, not just “customer wants X.”
You can apply the same structure to deflection and control issues:
Being interested in this way never means being passive. It means you control the process by controlling the questions—so clients feel heard, you feel prepared, and your post‑sales calls actually move adoption, usage, and renewals forward.