Using the DISC model in sales means adapting how you speak and listen to match your prospect’s natural style, so you build trust faster, get more honest answers, and reach clear go/no‑go decisions instead of endless maybes. When people feel “got,” they open up. When they don’t, they hide the truth.
In real sales calls, prospects rarely lie out of malice. They protect themselves. They say “Let me think about it” instead of “Your price scares me,” or “Email me something” instead of “I don’t trust you yet.” That’s why Brad, the DISC instructor in your transcript, calls trust a “tool to get to the truth.” DISC is one of the fastest ways to earn that trust.
Think of DISC as four need‑driven behaviors:
Research on behavioral styles in sales consistently shows that when you mirror how buyers prefer to communicate, close rates and deal velocity improve. Sandler’s own content points out that reps who “speak three more behavioral languages” connect with more prospects and move more opportunities forward (Sandler). DISC gives you those extra “languages” without turning you into a different person.
You can usually read someone’s DISC style in the first five minutes by watching how fast they move, how much they talk, and whether they focus on people or tasks. You don’t need a formal assessment; you just need to pay attention and take a quick guess, like Brad asked his class to do.
Start with two simple questions in your head:
From there:
Your clues show up everywhere: email length, how they answer “How’s your day going?”, whether they want a high‑level overview or a step‑by‑step breakdown. Tools that analyze public profiles can get you close before the meeting, but a disciplined first five minutes of observation is usually enough.
The goal is not to label people and box them in. It’s to form a working hypothesis so you can choose the best way to explain things, ask questions, and ask for a decision.
Adapting to DISC in sales means changing your pacing, structure, and focus—not your values—so the other person can hear you. You stay authentically you, but you meet them where they are, like Brad’s student who said, “Details please, know your stuff.”
Here’s a practical cheat‑sheet you can apply on your next call:
Selling to a D (needs control)
Selling to an I (needs to be liked)
Selling to an S (needs peace and stability)
Selling to a C (needs accuracy and logic)
You don’t flip into a new personality for each prospect. You make micro‑adjustments—shorter or longer answers, more or fewer details, more or less emotion—so the prospect doesn’t have to work as hard to understand you.
DISC only helps your sales results if it shows up in your daily behavior: call prep, questioning, and how you debrief after meetings. Treat it as a checklist you run before, during, and after every conversation, just like Brad’s class used their own DISC profiles to reflect on their style.
Before a call, take two minutes to answer:
During the call, look for confirming clues: Do they cut you off (D)? Tell stories (I)? Ask about impact on people (S)? Drill into the numbers (C)? Adjust in real time instead of forcing your original script.
After the call, debrief in writing or with a coach:
Teams that take DISC seriously often bake it into CRM notes, call‑review sessions, and role‑plays. Some even print their own “office door signs,” like Brad described, with instructions such as “Get to the point, value my time” or “Details please, know your stuff.” Those same instructions can guide how you sell to your prospects.
When you consistently adapt this way, three things happen: prospects relax faster, the real issues surface sooner, and decisions—yes or no—come with less friction. That’s the practical payoff of using DISC in sales: more truth, less theater, and a pipeline full of real opportunities instead of polite maybes.