Pioneering a New Era of Global Sales — Behind the Scenes of “Global Sales Mastery!!”

Global Sales

Toronto, Canada — June 24

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Even in today’s world of digital fatigue, information overload, and hyper-fragmented attention spans, one truth remains unchanged:

“The essence of sales is conversation.”

And more specifically, a conversation done right.

This powerful message resonated during the international sales seminar “Global Sales Mastery!!” held on June 24.

The event featured two powerhouse speakers:

  • Bruce Weddel, a Canadian sales architect with over 30,000 students worldwide, and
  • Kyosuke Nagai, a Japanese communication coach known for elevating business value by billions of yen through his emotionally-driven “One-Page Sales Template®” method.

Broadcast live in Canadian time, the event brought together business professionals, sales leaders, and entrepreneurs from around the world, all eager to sharpen their global sales skills.

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Bruce Weddel: “Most Sales Calls Fail Before They Even Begin”

Weddel opened with a bold statement:

“Sales isn’t improvisation. It’s choreography.”

“If you enter a call without a structured flow, you’re already taking the first step toward failure,” he warned.

What he emphasized wasn’t a robotic script, but a conversational flow that builds trust, clarifies the problem, and naturally leads to a “Let’s move forward” outcome.

Bruce Weddel’s 3 Pillars for High-Conversion Sales Calls:

Start with Clarity, Not Information

→ Begin with warmth, a confident voice, and a clear declaration of intent.

“Sales isn’t about begging — it’s about leading.”

Diagnose Before You Prescribe

→ One of his most repeated lines:

“A prescription without diagnosis is malpractice — in medicine and in sales.”

Great salespeople don’t rush to pitch. They uncover challenges through smart questions and deep listening.

Make Structured, Not Improvised Proposals

→ The most dangerous moment in a pitch? The final 10 minutes.

“If your proposal lacks value, urgency, or clarity — it’ll end with a ‘We’ll think about it.’”

“A script isn’t a restriction. It’s a structure that creates freedom.”

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While many see sales scripts as limiting, Weddel sees it differently:

“Great actors rehearse. World-class musicians follow sheet music.

Top-performing salespeople follow a sales flow.

It’s not a limitation — it’s mastery.”

What Modern Sales Truly Needs: Emotional Design

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Next up was Kyosuke Nagai, who addressed the challenge of modern-day selling.

“Today, it’s harder than ever to let people experience your product.

Digital products, intangible services, online-only offerings…

No samples. No demos.

So how do we move people emotionally?”

From the perspective of behavioral psychology, he shared a counterintuitive truth:

“We don’t laugh because we’re happy.

We feel happy because we laugh.

Emotion is created after the action.”

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Nagai’s 3-Step Framework to Move Emotions in Sales

As a method for triggering emotion in conversations, Nagai introduced this framework:

Evoke Action Through Conversation

→ Getting someone to talk is the trigger.

“When people speak about their pain, worries, dreams, or stories, the brain begins to generate emotion.”

Lead with Emotion-Triggering Questions

→ Not persuasion — but emotional activation.

“Imagine moms chatting at Starbucks. It starts light, but as they talk, their emotions intensify.

That’s how human behavior works.”

Empathy Chains Build Trust

→ Shared emotion creates resonance — “I feel the same” — which builds trust.

Where East Meets West, Emotion Meets Structure

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Nagai shared this “emotion-from-action” model as especially powerful in high-context cultures like Japan — showing how to let the client speak, feel, and act.

By the end of the seminar, the takeaway was clear:

  • Nagai moved the heart.
  • Weddel moved the deal.

In today’s borderless world of sales, you need both —

Emotion and Structure.

Author: LIZA ADVERD