What Actually Makes a Good Salesperson? (It's Not on the Resume)
What makes a good salesperson is how they sell on a live call, not the traits on a resume. Here are the behaviors that predict closing and the ones that don't.
What makes a good salesperson is not a trait you can read off a resume or spot in an interview. It is a set of observable behaviors on a live call: asking before pitching, staying composed under pressure, and reframing the buyer's problem. Those behaviors predict closing. The things most people screen for — confidence, polish, a famous logo — do not.
We know this because the gap between reps is bigger than most teams realize, and it has almost nothing to do with what is on paper. This post is the hub for everything we have learned about identifying real sales ability. Each section links to a deeper piece if you want to go further.
Why the resume tells you so little
A resume answers one question well: where has this person been. It answers the question that matters — how does this person sell — not at all.
Two account executives can have nearly identical resumes and sell in completely opposite ways. One runs a patient discovery call and lets the buyer talk themselves into the deal. The other talks over objections and reads features off a sheet. Same logos, same tenure, wildly different close rates. The resume hides the only thing you actually need to know.
The strongest empirical evidence backs this up. In the most-cited meta-analysis of hiring methods, Schmidt and Hunter (1998) found that work samples (r = .54) predict job performance far better than years of experience or education, which sit near the bottom of the list. What someone does beats what their resume claims they did.
What behaviors actually predict closing?
When you look at how top closers differ from the rest, the same handful of behaviors show up again and again:
- They ask more than they pitch. Discovery is not a phase to rush through. The best reps spend the early call mapping the buyer's real problem before they say a word about the product.
- They stay composed when pushed. Price pressure, a skeptical buyer, a competitor in the room — composure under that pressure is one of the clearest separators between a rep who closes and one who folds.
- They teach the buyer something. The strongest reps reframe the problem so the buyer sees it differently. They do not just take the order.
- They listen, then adapt. A rep who listens on one call tends to listen on the next. The behavior is consistent, which is exactly why you can measure it.
These are observable. They happen on the call, every call, whether the rep is trying to impress you or not. That is what makes them trustworthy signal.
What traits do NOT predict closing?
Just as important is what you can stop screening for:
- Raw charisma. A great talker can carry an interview and still lose deals, because selling yourself for 30 minutes is a different skill than running a hard discovery call. More on this in why your best-interviewing candidate is often your worst hire.
- A personality-quiz "type." We tested whether a structured questionnaire could predict selling ability against real outcomes. It came out barely better than a coin flip. Self-report does not capture how someone sells.
- A famous logo on the resume. Working at a great company is not the same as being a great rep there.
- Generic "A-player" status. The best rep for an enterprise security buyer may be a poor fit for a fast SMB cycle. Fit beats prestige, which is the whole point of hiring to the customers you actually sell to.
How big is the gap between a good rep and a bad one?
Bigger than averages let you see. Across 2,420 real sales meetings in the MedLeague case study, five reps working the same leads, same product, and same playbook closed at very different rates. The best closed 60.9% of attended meetings. The worst closed 30.6%. That is a 30-percentage-point spread, all measured, none of it visible on a resume.
Close Rate by Rep (Attended Meetings)
2,420 meetings across 5 reps over 12 months
30pp gap between best and worst closer — on the same team, same product, same leads.
60.9% → 30.6%A team average of "around 45%" hides that completely. The average looks fine while half your pipeline quietly leaks out the bottom. That is why the spread, not the average, is the number that matters — a point we dig into in quota attainment benchmarks for 2026.
How do you measure how someone sells?
You score the behaviors directly instead of guessing at them. That is the idea behind the Compass Score in Salescadia Scout. A rep gets scored from their actual calls — or a short AI interview that runs like a live one — on traits grounded in established research (Big Five, HEXACO, the Challenger framework): drive, composure, listening, objection handling, and selling style. Every score points to the moment in the conversation that earned it.
Two things keep it honest. First, the Compass Score measures how someone sells; it does not promise who will succeed at your company — that depends on your buyers and your support. Second, style is mapped, not ranked. A warm consultative closer and a blunt fast one can both be excellent; they just fit different buyers.
The deeper case for scoring a live call over an interview is in the sales work-sample test.
A Compass Score is free, confidential, and portable for reps — evidence of how they sell that is not tied to a logo. For teams, it turns "this person interviewed well" into "this person sells the way our best closers sell."
Key takeaways
- What makes a good salesperson is behavior on a live call, not resume traits — asking before pitching, composure under pressure, teaching the buyer.
- Charisma, personality types, and famous logos do not predict closing. Work samples do.
- The rep-to-rep gap is large and measurable: a 30-point spread on the same team, same leads.
- "Good" is partly universal (drive, composure, listening) and partly fit — the right rep depends on your buyers.
- You can measure how someone sells by scoring their calls, not by trusting an interview.
See what good looks like on your own team
Salescadia scores how your reps actually sell and shows you which behaviors separate your closers. Start free and stop hiring on resume guesswork.
Start free with SalescadiaSource: Schmidt, F. L., & Hunter, J. E. (1998), The Validity and Utility of Selection Methods in Personnel Psychology, Psychological Bulletin.