Ged Dimacali | Director of Operations, Salesperson.com
"Great job" means nothing. Salespeople hear it constantly, forget it immediately, and gain nothing from it. Meaningful recognition is specific, timely, and acknowledges effort as well as outcome. It names exactly what someone did, why it mattered, and what made it difficult. Top-performing sales organizations recognize the deal that almost fell through, the creative problem-solving, and the persistence through months of rejection. Generic praise is forgettable. Specific acknowledgment of what made something hard is what salespeople remember, what shapes their behavior, and what builds the culture that retains top performers. This article provides a framework for transforming well-intentioned but ineffective recognition into appreciation that actually resonates, whether you are a sales leader recognizing your team or a marketing leader building cross-functional partnership.