On 12 March 2026, Tim Africa joined Landie Stevens on building sales teams' course from the Heavy Chef Organization. She’s a sales leader, director of Landie Stevens Consulting and known for her practical approach to building strong, motivated sales teams.One of our team members, Tre, captured key insights that entrepreneurs and business leaders can apply when building and managing sales teams.
Explore how confidence is developed in salespeople, how leaders unlock potential in their teams, and why successful sales performance depends on more than just talent.
Landie is a sales expert and the director of Landie Stevens Consulting. She's been involved in various aspects of sales and business management for over 27 years, working with various organisations to implement, coach and provide training that creates sustainable sales solutions for her clients. Landie has a keen understanding of sales cycles and processes that makes her top notch at what she does and has been running her own consultancy since 2013.
Landie Stevens is an incredible machine. Her approach to sales focuses on people first, recognising that performance is often unlocked through belief, support, and the right leadership environment.
We noted that Landie’s story begins with a powerful moment early in her career. She explained that her sales journey started with a manager who believed in her before she believed in herself. It was the belief of a great manager, combined with her determination to improve her situation, that unlocked her potential.
Landie credits much of her success to her honesty and what she calls an “open book” approach. Rather than presenting herself as someone who always has the perfect answer, she believes that being vulnerable and transparent builds stronger trust with clients.
Admitting that you do not know something, but committing to finding the answer, can often strengthen a relationship rather than weaken it. Trust, after all, is the foundation of long-term sales relationships.
When asked whether sales ability can be taught, Landie responded with a confident yes. She explained that great sales performance is built on three core components, which she compares to baking a cake.
If one of these ingredients is missing, a salesperson will struggle to reach their full potential.
3. Selling Yourself before Selling the Business
Landie emphasised that while salespeople represent a company’s product or service, their first responsibility is learning how to sell themselves. Clients ultimately buy from people they trust.
For entrepreneurs especially, this means understanding your strengths, acknowledging your weaknesses, and surrounding yourself with people who help bring out the best in you. Once someone can confidently present themselves, selling the business becomes far easier.
One of Landie’s strongest leadership lessons focused on team alignment. When companies design sales strategies, they often focus on how the strategy benefits the organisation. Landie argues that this is the wrong starting point.
Instead, leaders should ask how the strategy benefits the employees responsible for executing it. Sales teams perform better when they understand how their efforts contribute to personal growth, income, and long-term career development.
Landie summarised the role of performance metrics with a well-known business principle. “What is not measured, cannot be managed.”
Clear key performance indicators help both leaders and team members understand what success looks like. They provide accountability, clarity, and a framework for improvement. Without measurement, even talented sales teams can struggle to maintain consistent results.
Landie’s advice for managing sales teams' centres on unlocking potential within leaders while removing unnecessary pressure around performance. When leaders create environments where people feel supported rather than constantly judged, teams are more likely to experiment, learn, and improve.
As Landie put it, if a salesperson does not have the tools they need, they cannot do the job effectively. She shared a simple list of essentials every sales team should have.
But the most important item on the list is not a piece of technology. It’s a manager with proper training and real experience.
When recruiting salespeople, Landie advises leaders to move beyond generic interview questions. Instead, she recommends introducing unexpected questions or scenarios that force candidates to think quickly and respond authentically.
Throwing a curveball during an interview can reveal how someone thinks on the spot and how clearly, they articulate their ideas under pressure. These moments often provide far more insight than rehearsed answers.
Landie Stevens’ recipe highlights a powerful truth about sales. Sales success is rarely just about talent. It is about belief, leadership, structure, and the right systems that allow people to perform at their best. For entrepreneurs and business leaders, this means investing not only in sales strategies but also in the people responsible for executing them.
This sits right in Tim Africa’s world, where businesses rely on strong marketing, storytelling, and sales alignment to grow. We see the same principle in marketing and content creation. If you’re wanting help turning your concepts or expertise into content, Tim Africa does this every day through podcasting, performance marketing, and web development.