As artificial intelligence technology rapidly takes over the sales field, human-centered B2B sales are facing a significant turning point. In this era where Bots handle customer inquiries, automate email follow-ups for potential clients, and AI insights schedule meetings, what are we actually losing? The answer is “trust.”
Today, sales teams are using speed as a weapon to implement a non-discriminatory outreach strategy. From creating quotes, cold emails to customized solutions, although AI participates in the entire process to improve efficiency, genuine human touchpoints are disappearing. The problem is that this model can provoke discomfort and ridicule from the buyers—overly refined personalization can lead to awkward mistakes, even damaging brand trust.
The power of AI is indeed strong, but it cannot achieve persuasion on its own. According to statistics from marketing and organizational performance experts, 67% of consumers emphasize the need to trust a brand before making a purchasing decision. Furthermore, trust-based companies significantly outperform those lacking a foundation of trust in dimensions such as productivity, repurchase rates, and market dominance.
The key to building trust ultimately depends on interpersonal interactions. Communication, ability, intention, and consistency—these four major signals of trust can forge deep relationships that no algorithm can match. However, AI can only mimic some of these elements and cannot replicate the impact of sincere dialogue, adaptability, or the authenticity brought by honestly saying “I don't know.”
In this regard, Adam Landsman, Vice President of Sharebite, who has been deeply engaged in the SaaS and food technology fields for over twenty years, emphasized that human intuition and emotion remain the most decisive sales weapons. In a recent case, a customer who appeared to respond positively was actually hesitant. Realizing this, Adam reconstructed the conversation through follow-up calls and ultimately succeeded in closing the deal.
These cases demonstrate the intuitive power that cannot be obtained by relying solely on data. When eye contact is more important than wording, and contextual understanding is more crucial than the content of the dialogue, the role of humans becomes increasingly prominent. Especially in core elements such as long-term customer relationships, brand loyalty, and repurchase rates, these are areas that machines cannot replace.
Ultimately, the essence of sales lies in “people” rather than products. Buyers crave certainty rather than information, trust the process rather than the outcome, and respond to relationships rather than technology. AI can make this journey more efficient, but it cannot itself be the destination.
In an era where trust is increasingly scarce, the most differentiated strategy is to return to humanity. AI is just a tool; what customers truly crave is a connection with trustworthy individuals. Only through the accumulation of trust can a brand transcend the role of a supplier and become a truly memorable partner.
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AI cannot replace... the essence of sales is "trust"
As artificial intelligence technology rapidly takes over the sales field, human-centered B2B sales are facing a significant turning point. In this era where Bots handle customer inquiries, automate email follow-ups for potential clients, and AI insights schedule meetings, what are we actually losing? The answer is “trust.”
Today, sales teams are using speed as a weapon to implement a non-discriminatory outreach strategy. From creating quotes, cold emails to customized solutions, although AI participates in the entire process to improve efficiency, genuine human touchpoints are disappearing. The problem is that this model can provoke discomfort and ridicule from the buyers—overly refined personalization can lead to awkward mistakes, even damaging brand trust.
The power of AI is indeed strong, but it cannot achieve persuasion on its own. According to statistics from marketing and organizational performance experts, 67% of consumers emphasize the need to trust a brand before making a purchasing decision. Furthermore, trust-based companies significantly outperform those lacking a foundation of trust in dimensions such as productivity, repurchase rates, and market dominance.
The key to building trust ultimately depends on interpersonal interactions. Communication, ability, intention, and consistency—these four major signals of trust can forge deep relationships that no algorithm can match. However, AI can only mimic some of these elements and cannot replicate the impact of sincere dialogue, adaptability, or the authenticity brought by honestly saying “I don't know.”
In this regard, Adam Landsman, Vice President of Sharebite, who has been deeply engaged in the SaaS and food technology fields for over twenty years, emphasized that human intuition and emotion remain the most decisive sales weapons. In a recent case, a customer who appeared to respond positively was actually hesitant. Realizing this, Adam reconstructed the conversation through follow-up calls and ultimately succeeded in closing the deal.
These cases demonstrate the intuitive power that cannot be obtained by relying solely on data. When eye contact is more important than wording, and contextual understanding is more crucial than the content of the dialogue, the role of humans becomes increasingly prominent. Especially in core elements such as long-term customer relationships, brand loyalty, and repurchase rates, these are areas that machines cannot replace.
Ultimately, the essence of sales lies in “people” rather than products. Buyers crave certainty rather than information, trust the process rather than the outcome, and respond to relationships rather than technology. AI can make this journey more efficient, but it cannot itself be the destination.
In an era where trust is increasingly scarce, the most differentiated strategy is to return to humanity. AI is just a tool; what customers truly crave is a connection with trustworthy individuals. Only through the accumulation of trust can a brand transcend the role of a supplier and become a truly memorable partner.