Modern selling demands more than product knowledge. Buyers expect relevance, speed and low risk; sellers need human connection, clear judgement and the discipline to execute. That is why high‑performing teams develop three dimensions of capability: EQ (how to sell to humans), IQ (insight‑driven judgement), and XQ (Execution Quotient: doing the right things, to the right standard, at the right cadence). When you balance all three, training stops being an event and starts moving the numbers.
For a full breakdown of what it takes to utilise EQ, IQ, and XQ in sales training programmes, read our pillar blog.
Together, they describe competence you can trust: EQ builds access, IQ creates conviction, and XQ makes progress predictable.
EQ, IQ and XQ map cleanly to outcomes leaders care about. Use the 3V lens:
The result is cleaner coverage, better win‑rates and reliable forecasting — without adding noise to the tech stack or hours to the calendar.
Keep it practical: the aim is useful insight in weeks, not a perfect report in months.
Great programmes move beyond content to practice and execution. Use the Learn → Practise → Embed loop:
Map each module to one or two observable behaviours, then instrument them so you can show behaviour → 3V movement.
Adoption improves when data privacy and security are clear from the start (ISO‑aligned controls, SSO and configurable retention). Keep everything your way, not our way — aligned to your methodology and governance.
Tie your reporting to the language of the business:
Publish a before/after for pilots and scale what works.
Q1. What is EQ in sales?
A1. EQ is emotional intelligence in a selling context — the ability to understand yourself and others, build trust quickly and maintain relevance in every interaction.
Q2. What is IQ in sales?
A2. IQ is commercial and insight intelligence — connecting data and context to diagnose problems, qualify rigorously and link your solution to business outcomes.
Q3. What is XQ and how is it different?
A3. XQ is Execution Quotient — the consistency and quality of sales behaviours in the workflow. It’s different because it measures doing, not just knowing.
Q4. How do we measure EQ, IQ and XQ?
A4. Define a few critical behaviours, collect light‑touch evidence (calls, notes, practice clips, proposals), score for quality and link to 3V outcomes like conversion, margin and cycle time.
Q5. How do we improve XQ?
A5. Use Learn → Practise → Embed with weekly manager coaching, objective feedback from digital practice, and clear standards for preparation, discovery, next steps and multithreading.
Q6. Do AI role‑plays really help?
A6. Yes — they allow safe, repeatable practice with instant feedback so sellers can make mistakes privately, improve quickly and hit a consistent standard before customer calls.
Q7. How much time should training take?
A7. Short, frequent reps beat marathons: micro‑learning and practice loops over weeks with embedded coaching, rather than one‑off all‑day sessions.
Q8. What’s the manager’s role?
A8. Managers are the multiplier: they run the weekly coaching cadence, review evidence and keep the team focused on the few behaviours that move 3V outcomes.