SNAP Selling by Jill Konrath — Cliff Notes Summary
Direct Answer
SNAP Selling by Jill Konrath (2010) is the sequel to *Selling to Big Companies* that addresses a sharper, more uncomfortable truth: enterprise buyers aren't just busy — they're frazzled, frantic, and fried. The buyer's biggest enemy isn't your competitor; it's their own attention deficit caused by back-to-back meetings, perpetual Slack pings, and a calendar that's overbooked by 30%.
Sellers who don't adapt to the frazzled buyer's mental state lose deals to inertia and overwhelm, not to competition.
SNAP is Konrath's acronym for the 4 rules of selling to frazzled buyers: Simple, iNvaluable, Aligned, Priorities. Sellers must make every interaction Simple (zero cognitive overhead), iNvaluable (worth the buyer's 30 seconds), Aligned (with the buyer's stated business priorities), and tied to Priorities that match the buyer's immediate strategic agenda.
Konrath also introduces the 3 Buyer Decisions model — every deal requires the buyer to make three sequential micro-decisions: (1) allow access, (2) change from status quo, and (3) change resources to your specific solution. Each decision has its own selling tactics, its own objections, and its own conversion math.
The seller who collapses all three into one pitch loses; the seller who separates them into discrete conversations wins.
Below: chapter-by-chapter notes, the two diagrams (the SNAP Framework and the 3 Buyer Decisions sequence), what holds up in 2027, and what has aged.
Chapter 1 — The Frazzled Customer Phenomenon
Konrath opens with a portrait of the modern enterprise buyer that has only intensified since 2010: constantly interrupted, perpetually behind, decision-fatigued. The data she cites (and that Gartner, Microsoft, and Slack have validated repeatedly since):
- The average knowledge worker is interrupted every 11 minutes and takes 23 minutes to refocus.
- Executives sit in 8-12 meetings per day (per Microsoft Work Trend Index data Konrath foreshadowed).
- Email volume exceeds 120 inbound messages per day for most VPs.
- Decision fatigue sets in after 3-4 major decisions per day, after which the brain defaults to "no" or "later".
The seller's mental model shift: the buyer's default state is overwhelm. Every email, voicemail, and meeting request that adds cognitive load without obvious value gets deleted, declined, or deferred indefinitely.
The Frazzled Customer's 4 Truths:
- They're not avoiding YOU — they're avoiding EVERYTHING.
- They can't process complexity under cognitive overload.
- They default to status quo because it requires zero new decisions.
- They reward sellers who make their life simpler, not sellers who pitch harder.
Chapter 2 — The SNAP Framework
Konrath's SNAP framework is the operational rule set for every touch — phone, email, meeting, follow-up.
S — Simple. Every interaction must require zero cognitive overhead. Translation:
- One ask per email (not three).
- No PDF attachments in initial outreach.
- No 15-link calendar tools ("Tuesday 10 or Wednesday 2?" beats "book a time on my Calendly").
- Short paragraphs — 3 lines max each.
- Plain English — no buzzwords, no acronyms the buyer might not know.
N — iNvaluable. Every interaction must be worth the buyer's 30 seconds in demonstrable value. Translation:
- Specific peer benchmark ("P&G reduced churn 23% in 90 days" beats "we help companies grow").
- Industry intelligence the buyer hasn't seen.
- Introduction to another executive in the buyer's peer network.
- Free assessment or calculator that delivers immediate ROI thinking.
A — Aligned. Every interaction must mirror the buyer's stated values, language, and priorities. Translation:
- Quote the CEO's earnings-call language in your outreach.
- Mirror the buyer's vocabulary — if they say "revenue growth," don't say "top-line expansion."
- Reference cultural cues specific to the company (mission statements, public values, recent announcements).
P — Priorities. Every interaction must tie to the buyer's top-3 strategic priorities for this quarter. Translation:
- Read the buyer's quarterly earnings transcript before outreach.
- Identify the 3-5 strategic initiatives named in the last shareholder letter.
- Map your conversation to one of those initiatives, not to your product roadmap.
The principle: every interaction passes through 4 SNAP filters. If any filter fails, the interaction fails to advance the deal.
Chapter 3 — How Frazzled Customers Make Decisions
Konrath's 3 Buyer Decisions model — every enterprise deal requires the buyer to make three sequential micro-decisions, each with different selling tactics.
Decision 1: Allow Access. Will the buyer give the seller 20 minutes of attention? This is the prospecting decision. Tactics: SNAP-compliant cold outreach, trigger-event-based relevance, referral introductions, value-first generosity.
Decision 2: Change from Status Quo. Will the buyer commit organizational energy to change anything at all in this domain? This is the business-case decision. Tactics: Current State diagnosis, Gap Math quantification, Cost-of-Inaction analysis, status-quo deconstruction.
Decision 3: Choose Your Specific Solution. Among the alternatives the buyer is considering (including build-internal and do-nothing), which does the buyer pick? This is the vendor selection decision. Tactics: Differentiation, peer references, proof-of-concept, multi-stakeholder consensus building.
The trap most sellers fall into: they pitch their solution (Decision 3) before the buyer has even committed to changing anything (Decision 2). Result: the buyer hears a solution to a problem they haven't acknowledged owning — and politely deflects.
The discipline: don't pitch Decision 3 until Decision 2 is locked in writing.
Chapter 4 — Becoming SNAP-Compliant in Your Communications
The book's most operationally prescriptive chapter — how to rewrite every email, voicemail, and proposal to pass the SNAP filters.
The SNAP Email Rewrite Exercise:
BEFORE (Pre-SNAP):
"Hi Joe, I hope this email finds you well. I wanted to reach out and introduce myself and my company XYZ Corp. We provide a comprehensive cloud-based platform that leverages AI and machine learning to optimize revenue performance and improve outcomes across the entire customer lifecycle.
I've attached a 12-page case study and would love to schedule a 60-minute deep-dive demo to walk you through our capabilities and discuss how we might partner together. Let me know what dates and times work for you. Looking forward to connecting!"
AFTER (SNAP-compliant):
"Joe — your Q3 earnings call flagged customer retention as a top concern. P&G hit the same wall last year and recovered 23% of at-risk accounts in 90 days. The single tactic that drove most of it — I can walk through in 15 minutes. Tuesday 10 AM or Wednesday 2 PM?"
The transformation analysis:
- Simple: one ask (15-min call), one calendar option, no attachments. Pass.
- iNvaluable: specific peer benchmark (P&G, 23%, 90 days). Pass.
- Aligned: quotes Joe's Q3 language verbatim ("customer retention"). Pass.
- Priorities: ties to a stated strategic priority from the earnings call. Pass.
Word count: 128 → 42. Decisions required of buyer: 5 → 1. Predicted response rate jump: 0.5% → 8-12% (per Konrath's customer data).
Chapter 5 — The First SNAP Factor — Keep It Simple
Konrath dedicates a full chapter to Simple because it's the SNAP rule most sellers violate most often — under the misguided belief that more information = more persuasion.
The Simplicity Hierarchy:
- 1 ask per interaction (cold reach asks for a meeting; meeting recap asks for a follow-up; follow-up asks for a stakeholder intro).
- 3 bullet points maximum in any list.
- 3 sentences maximum per paragraph.
- 30 seconds maximum to read any email.
- 0 PDF attachments in initial outreach (PDFs are friction, not value).
The Cognitive-Load Test: before sending any communication, ask: "How many decisions am I forcing the buyer to make?" If the answer is more than 1, cut until it's 1.
Examples of cognitive load Konrath calls out:
- "Let me know when you have time" forces the buyer to scan their calendar, propose times, send the proposal. Bad.
- "Tuesday 10 AM or Wednesday 2 PM?" forces the buyer to choose between 2 options or say neither. Good.
- "Calendly link" forces the buyer to click out, navigate the page, scan options, commit. Worse than 2 options inline.
The bottom line: simplicity is a gift to the frazzled buyer. Sellers who give the gift get the meeting.
Chapter 6 — The Second SNAP Factor — Be iNvaluable
Konrath's framework for delivering value in every interaction, even before any commercial relationship exists.
The Invaluable Toolkit:
- Specific peer benchmark data ("3 of the top 10 wireless carriers reduced churn by 18-23%").
- Industry trend insights the buyer hasn't seen (Gartner, Forrester, McKinsey reports synthesized).
- Free assessments (ROI calculator, maturity model self-test, benchmark scorecard).
- Peer introductions (warm intro to another executive in the buyer's industry facing similar problems).
- Curated reading lists ("5 must-reads for CFOs navigating post-merger integration").
The Generosity-Compounding Principle: send 3 valuable interactions BEFORE any pitch. Buyers remember the giver and respond when the ask eventually comes. Sellers who lead with the ask never get the second interaction.
The Frazzled Buyer's Filter: when a buyer opens an email, they unconsciously ask: "What's in this for me, right now?" If the answer is "nothing — they want something from me," the email is deleted in 2 seconds. If the answer is "a specific insight relevant to my current problem," the buyer reads and remembers.
Chapter 7 — The Third SNAP Factor — Always Align
Konrath argues Alignment is what distinguishes sellers who become trusted advisors from sellers who remain vendors.
The 3 Alignment Layers:
Values Alignment: the seller's company values must be compatible with the buyer's stated culture. Buyers researching vendors increasingly check ESG positioning, DEI commitments, leadership transparency, and social media posture before engagement.
Linguistic Alignment: the seller must mirror the buyer's vocabulary — strategic priorities, KPIs, industry jargon, internal nicknames. Sellers who use their own vocabulary sound like outsiders; sellers who use the buyer's vocabulary sound like insiders.
Operational Alignment: the seller's process must fit the buyer's process — procurement requirements, security review timelines, legal templates, integration approaches. Sellers who demand the buyer adapt to them lose to sellers who adapt to the buyer.
The Alignment Test: before any major touch, ask: "Would this interaction feel like a natural extension of how the buyer thinks, talks, and operates?" If no, re-align.
Chapter 8 — The Fourth SNAP Factor — Raise Priorities
The chapter that connects SNAP to business strategy — the seller must understand and align with the buyer's top-3 strategic priorities for the current quarter.
The Priorities Research Discipline:
- Read the buyer's last 4 quarterly earnings transcripts. Identify recurring strategic themes.
- Read the most recent annual report (10-K). Identify the Strategic Initiatives section verbatim.
- Read the CEO's most recent shareholder letter. Identify the 3-5 priorities the CEO stakes the year on.
- Read industry analyst coverage (Gartner, Forrester, S&P) of the buyer's company. Identify the external narrative.
- Read the buyer's recent LinkedIn posts, podcast appearances, and conference keynotes. Identify the personal priorities.
Synthesize into a Priorities Briefing — 1 page per Tier 1 account, updated quarterly, referenced in every outreach.
The Priority Connection Sentence (mandatory in every outreach):
"Your [recent earnings call / 10-K / shareholder letter] named [specific strategic priority] as [top-3 / key / critical] for [fiscal year / quarter]. The reason I'm reaching out is [specific connection to that priority]."
The principle: buyers don't have time for conversations that aren't tied to their top-3 priorities. Skip the top-3 connection, lose the meeting.
What Holds Up in 2027 — and What Has Aged
What still works (and has only grown more critical):
- The Frazzled Buyer thesis — confirmed and amplified by Microsoft Work Trend Index 2027 showing 44% more meetings and 62% more email than 2010.
- The SNAP framework — embedded in every modern sales enablement curriculum at Force Management, Winning by Design, Pavilion, and Sales Assembly.
- The 3 Buyer Decisions model — operationalized in MEDDPICC's Decision Process and Force Management's Command of the Sale.
- Simplicity discipline — universal in 2027 outbound; Outreach, Salesloft, and Apollo AI-coach reps toward shorter, simpler messages.
- Priority alignment — table stakes for enterprise outbound; 6sense, Demandbase, Common Room all surface buyer priorities automatically.
What has aged:
- Manual priorities research — Konrath's 3-hour research process has been replaced by 15-minute AI workflows (Clay, Apollo, 6sense) that synthesize earnings calls, 10-Ks, LinkedIn posts, and news automatically.
- The 8-12 meetings/day baseline has grown to 15-20 in 2027 post-remote-work — the frazzled buyer is more frazzled than 2010.
- Email response rate baselines have collapsed — Konrath's 8-12% is now 2-5% for SNAP-compliant outreach as AI-generated outbound saturates inboxes.
- The PDF attachment problem has been solved by shared deal rooms (Aligned, GetAccept, Mediafly Coffee) that present materials interactively without download friction.
- Calendar-link discomfort has reversed — 2027 buyers actually prefer Calendly and Chili Piper over email back-and-forth for routine bookings.
FAQ
Q: Should I read SNAP Selling before or after Selling to Big Companies? Read Selling to Big Companies first (the foundational enterprise prospecting framework), then SNAP Selling (the refinement focused on the frazzled buyer's mental state). Both are short and complementary — together they cover strategy + execution for enterprise outbound.
Q: How does SNAP relate to Gap Selling and SPIN Selling? SNAP focuses on access and engagement (Decisions 1 and 2 in Konrath's framework). SPIN focuses on diagnostic questioning within the meeting. Gap Selling focuses on Current State diagnosis and business case quantification.
Use SNAP for outbound and meeting design, SPIN for discovery questioning, and Gap Selling for opportunity development. All three are complementary frameworks in a modern enablement curriculum.
Q: Does SNAP Selling work in a PLG / self-serve motion? The principles apply, the tactics change. PLG motions execute Decision 1 (Allow Access) through free trial signups rather than cold outreach. Decision 2 (Change from Status Quo) happens in-product through activation.
Decision 3 (Choose Solution) is the conversion event. Sales-assist for enterprise expansion uses full SNAP framework identically.
Q: What's the single most impactful change I can make tomorrow? Rewrite every cold email template using the BEFORE/AFTER exercise from Chapter 4. Audit your current emails for cognitive load, ask count, value density, and priority connection. The typical seller cuts 70% of words and 3X the response rate in the first week.
Q: How does AI change SNAP execution in 2027? AI accelerates the research and personalization layers but doesn't change the framework. Use Apollo, Clay, 6sense to auto-generate the Priorities Briefing; use Gong, Chorus to score outbound against SNAP filters; use Sales Navigator to surface trigger events.
The human judgment on what value to lead with and which priority to connect to remains irreplaceable.
Bottom Line
SNAP Selling is the operational playbook for the frazzled, frantic, fried buyer that every enterprise seller now faces. **Make every interaction Simple, iNvaluable, Aligned, and tied to top-3 Priorities. Separate the 3 buyer decisions and sell each one discretely.
Lead with value-before-pitch in every cold touch. Combine with AI-driven account research, SPIN questioning, Gap Selling diagnosis, and modern deal rooms to operationalize for 2027** enterprise B2B reality.
Sources
- Konrath, Jill. *SNAP Selling: Speed Up Sales and Win More Business with Today's Frazzled Customers.* Portfolio / Penguin Random House, 2010. ISBN-13: 978-1591843306.
- Konrath, Jill. Founder of Jill Konrath Sales Strategies — speaker, sales strategist, and author of four enterprise-sales books referenced throughout.
- Konrath, Jill. *Selling to Big Companies* (Kaplan Publishing, 2005), *Agile Selling* (Portfolio, 2014), and *More Sales, Less Time* (Portfolio, 2016) — companion volumes extending different facets of the SNAP framework.
- Microsoft Work Trend Index — annual research report tracking knowledge-worker meeting load, email volume, and cognitive overhead; validates Konrath's Frazzled Customer thesis with current data.
- Gartner — buyer journey research and B2B Sales surveys tracking 6.8-stakeholder average buying committees and 53% no-decision rates that intensify the SNAP imperative.
- Pavilion and Sales Assembly — modern membership communities where SNAP frameworks are debated, refined, and combined with AI-driven prospecting tooling for 2025-2027 enterprise teams.