AI is reshaping every corner of commercial work, from how salespeople research accounts to how leaders coach teams. But while the hype cycle promises transformation, the reality inside most organisations looks very different.
Many buy tools, run workshops, install copilots … and then momentum stalls. Adoption dips. Results feel incremental, and teams start to question whether AI is really worth it.
In this episode of Mastering Sales & Negotiations, Casper Guldager shares a decade of experience working at the intersection of sales, AI, and organisational behaviour. His message is clear: AI fails for reasons that have nothing to do with technology. It fails because organisations underestimate the human, behavioural, and leadership components needed to make AI part of everyday commercial execution.
To build an AI‑first sales organisation, companies must shift from buying tools to building habits, structures, and commercial cultures that help people think differently, work differently, and improve consistently.
One of the clearest themes from Casper’s experience is that AI fails when leaders treat it as an add‑on. Many instruct their teams to use AI without using it themselves – a credibility gap that kills momentum before it starts.
Leaders need an executive AI blueprint, which means understanding:
Without this, teams sense that AI is optional, superficial, or temporary. With it, AI becomes part of the organisation’s operating system. Ultimately, commercial culture flows from the top. If leaders don’t practice, teams won’t persist.
Many organisations invest heavily in AI tools but expect results too quickly. Teams try AI once or twice, receive imperfect outputs, and then disengage. Casper sees the same pattern repeatedly:
AI isn’t a magic switch. It’s a skill that requires iteration. Like any craft, it improves through experience, repetition, and refinement. This mirrors what structured methodologies teach: mastery comes from deliberate practice, not exposure. As SPIN experts and trainers, we know this only too well.
The companies that outperform with AI are the ones that accept the friction, invest the time, and coach their people through the learning curve.
While many organisations use AI to automate admin tasks, the biggest commercial gains come from improvements in thinking and preparation, not efficiency alone. Casper highlights three areas where AI genuinely strengthens sales performance.
1. Deep account research
Teams often ask AI to produce entire account strategies. It rarely works. The output sounds good but lacks nuance and relevance. Using AI for deep internal and contextual research works far better. High‑performing teams use AI to:
AI becomes a thinking partner rather than a strategy generator, and the human remains the strategist.
2. Opportunity preparation
AI can support sellers by:
But again, value comes when the salesperson brings judgement, methodology, and context to turn AI’s material into actionable insight.
3. Raising the bar across the entire team
Perhaps the most transformative element is when AI lowers the barrier to high‑quality work. Junior sellers can access thinking that once required years of experience. This doesn’t diminish the expert, it simply supports them and creates a stronger baseline across the entire commercial organisation.
4. Why human commercial skills matter even more in an AI-first world
AI handles more preparation, research, and synthesis. This frees salespeople to focus on something far harder: commercial thinking. Casper defines this as the ability to:
AI cannot replace these skills, but it can magnify them. And this is where sales methodology becomes essential. Whether SPIN Selling or another structured approach, methodology provides the mental scaffolding that helps sellers turn AI output into meaningful customer engagement. AI supports the “what,” but methodology strengthens the “how” and “why.”
Over the next three to five years, Casper expects the seller’s role to shift:
The organisations that fall behind will be those who treat AI as a shortcut. The organisations that move ahead will be those who treat AI as an enabler of deeper thinking, sharper conversations, and stronger customer understanding.
Casper’s advice to leaders is both simple and actionable:
1. Start with yourself
Build your own AI workflow before asking others to change theirs.
2. Define a few non‑negotiable use cases
Not “transform everything”, but “use AI to prepare before every meeting.”
3. Pair AI with methodology
Structured thinking turns AI output into commercial advantage.
5. Create standards, instead of suggestions
Optional usage guarantees inconsistency.
6. Make coaching the multiplier
Review not only the AI output, but the reasoning behind it.
AI will not build a sales organisation; however, it will strengthen any organisation that is ready to rethink how people learn, practice, and sell. The future belongs to companies where leadership models curiosity, teams embrace practice, and methodology gives structure to the intelligence AI provides.
Casper Guldager is a keynote speaker and VIP AI trainer who works closely with CxOs, investors and senior leaders to build practical AI capability.
Acting as a personal AI trainer, he helps leaders move beyond theory to confidently apply AI in their day-to-day roles and lead large-scale AI transformations.