- simon6045
- May 14
- 5 min read

Introduction - AI Has Entered Sales — But Most Companies Are Thinking About It Too Narrowly
Over the last two years, “AI for sales” has become one of the most crowded, confusing and noisy spaces known to man. Forecasting platforms, conversational intelligence tools, content generators, analytics engines, sales copilots, and workflow automation systems are all being grouped together under the same broad label. It’s mis-applied and most of it is a thin veneer of form over substance – window dressing on an LLM.
But lumping all sales AI into one category misses something important. Not all sales AI is trying to solve the same problem, nor should it.
Some AI systems are designed to improve the operational mechanics of sales. Others focus on something much harder: improving the quality of human judgment, communication, and decision-making inside complex commercial environments.
Those are fundamentally different objectives, and the distinction matters because it may shape the next phase of how AI changes B2B sales organizations. Given this, AI in Sales can be broadly split into two camps - Procedural AI and Behavioral AI.
The First Wave: Procedural AI - Optimizing the Machinery of Sales
The first major wave of AI investment in sales has largely focused on operational efficiency.
This category — what we might call Procedural AI — is designed to help organizations manage, measure, automate, and optimize the sales process itself.
Its focus is procedural – workflows, reporting, forecasting, sequencing and activity support and analysis.
The value proposition is straightforward: help sales organizations run more efficiently and predictably. This includes technologies such as, pipeline forecasting, lead scoring, CRM automation, attribution modeling, workflow orchestration, sequence optimization and RevOps intelligence platforms.
These tools promise the improvement of visibility, reduce manual effort, and create more structured operational control over the sales environment. They are fundamentally floored in anything other than the biggest most sophisticated companies. Why? Because most companies have neither the quantity or quality of data to support such noble quests. Data varies somewhere between “average” and “toxic.”
Why Procedural AI Took Off First - It’s Easier to Measure, Easier to Buy, Easier to Scale
Procedural AI became the dominant early category for a simple reason: it fits neatly into the existing operating model of modern sales organizations, rt at least the operating model we think we have. Also it fits into the dominant thinking of RevOps – sales is simply a math problem!
It promises measurable metrics, better reporting, more visible efficiencies, and aligns with RevOps priorities. Most importantly, the ROI is relatively easy to explain if we use the lens of RevOps.
It promises that we can quantify: time savings, CRM compliance, forecast accuracy, conversion metrics, workflow efficiency and activity levels. That makes the “procedural” application of AI easier to justify financially and operationally.
But here’s the news - improving the mechanics of selling does not necessarily improve the effectiveness of selling. And those are not the same thing.
The Hidden Problem in Modern B2B Sales - Efficiency Is Not the Same as Effectiveness
Modern B2B sales environments have become increasingly complex.
Buyers are overwhelmed with information. Differentiation has collapsed, sellers sound more informed (superficially) — but increasingly indistinguishable. Stakeholder groups are larger, and more fragmented. Most of all risk sensitivity is higher driving what’s become the most likely outcome - No Decision.
Deals fail because: sellers don’t confront buyer risk, buyers never gained enough confidence, stakeholders failed to align internally, no one feels comfortable enough to stand behind a decision, urgency never became emotionally real, the seller failed to create meaningful clarity and resonance. It’s become commercial theatre.
These are not operational failures. They are behavioral failures, and procedural AI, is not designed to solve them.
So what’s Behavioral AI? AI That Improves Human Judgment, Not Just Workflow
The second category of AI focuses on improving the quality of human decision-making, thinking and commercial interaction.
We might call this Behavioral AI. Behavioral AI is less concerned with: managing activity and more concerned with:
Confronting risk
improving judgment
reducing uncertainty
increasing relevance
transferring confidence
navigating human complexity
Its purpose is not simply to automate sales tasks. Its purpose is to help humans think better inside high-stakes commercial situations.
Examples include: strategic account guidance, organizational synergy analysis, decision risk interpretation, stakeholder mapping, political dynamics analysis, call planning, objection interpretation, buyer psychology guidance, confidence transfer coaching.
This is a fundamentally different orientation toward AI. The objective is not merely operational efficiency; it is decision effectiveness.
Why Behavioral AI Is Harder - Human Decision-Making Is Messy - It’s NOT a Math problem
Behavioral AI is significantly harder to build well because human decision-making is rarely linear or rational, as much as the religion of RevOps has many people believing that it is!
Complex B2B sales involve: emotion, politics, uncertainty, exposure risk, organizational self-protection, competing incentives, incomplete information and a lack of trust.
Two buyers can look at the same proposal and interpret the risk entirely differently. A superior solution can still lose because risk was never confronted and confidence was never established. Buyers don’t buy logically.
This is difficult territory for AI because it requires more than information retrieval or content generation. It requires contextual reasoning and behavioral interpretation, which is way more nuanced challenge. Success in modern selling is all about the details.
The Future of Sales AI - From Automation to Cognitive Augmentation
So far sales AI has focused primarily on automation and is missing augmentation.
Not replacing salespeople. Not removing human interaction, but improving the quality of human thinking inside increasingly complex buying environments.
This is where the conversation needs to shift from workflow optimization to: cognitive augmentation.
Organizations that combine operational efficiency AND enhanced human judgment will be the winners. In complex B2B sales, decisions are rarely made on information alone, they are made on confidence.
Where Shadow Fits – the blatant sales pitch - Operationalizing Better Sales Thinking
This is where tools like Shadow sit differently from much of the broader sales AI market.
Shadow is not primarily designed as a workflow automation platform or a RevOps analytics engine. Its focus is behavioral and cognitive. We operationalize better sales thinking by helping sellers: prepare faster, identify strategic leverage, understand buyer pressures, interpret (and confront) decision risk, personalize intelligently, communicate more effectively, and create greater confidence in complex buying situations.
In that sense, Shadow is less about automating sales activity and more about helping sellers “think” better. It bridges the gap between information and meaningful decision movement.
So? Where dos that leave us? - The Companies That Win Will Combine Both
Selling has become more completed due to the market and buyer conditions – to be effective in this landscape buyers need to be more and do more and to do that we need to operationalize the idea of augmented thinking.
Procedural efficiency alone does not solve this deeper challenge facing modern B2B sales: which is about helping humans make difficult decisions under uncertainty.
The future of AI in sales will belong to organizations that learn how to combine operational intelligence with behavioral intelligence.
Because the real challenge in modern selling is not simply generating activity. It is about generating enough confidence for people to act.



