Because at the end of the day, a healthy sales system cannot depend on just one person. It should not slow down because someone takes time off. It needs to be organized enough to keep moving on its own.
Before I leave, I make sure several things are in place: well-qualified opportunities, defined next steps, clear ownership, a realistic forecast, monitored activity, and all the information properly loaded into the CRM.
But there is something even more important: truly delegating.
Delegating is not just about letting people know I’ll be away. It means sharing context, explaining risks, transferring judgment, and making it clear what to do if something changes while I’m out. It means making sure the team has the information and the autonomy they need to keep going.
That includes shared account plans, a solid summary of the most important opportunities, clarity around what decisions each person can make, and escalation criteria in case a sensitive issue comes up.
When the business stops because one person takes a break, the problem is not the vacation. The problem is that there is too much dependence on one individual and not enough on the system.
To me, sales maturity is not measured by how much one person can handle or by how indispensable they appear to be. It is measured by the team’s ability to stay on course, by predictability, and by the strength of the method.
Because selling professionally should not mean constantly putting out fires.
It should mean having a process, sound judgment, metrics, and a system that keeps working even when its main executor takes 14 days off.