Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount

Stone Tablets, Trade Shows, and Telephones: 4,000 Years of Sales History

Feb 12, 2026
A tour of 4,000 years of selling, from a Mesopotamian stone complaint to the rise of professional sales in the 1600s. Stories about snake oil fraud, the invention of sales scripts and quotas, and the traveling salesman problem. Big moments like Vodafone’s massive takeover and how acquisitions reshape sellers round out the history.
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ANECDOTE

4,000-Year-Old Customer Complaint

  • A Mesopotamian merchant named Nani carved a customer complaint into a clay tablet in 1750 BCE over subpar copper delivery.
  • Jeb Blount highlights this as the oldest recorded B2B customer complaint showing sales headaches are ancient.
ANECDOTE

The Man Who Standardized Selling

  • John H. Patterson of NCR forced reps to memorize the world's first mandatory sales script, the NCR primer, and pioneered sales conventions and quotas.
  • Ashley and Jeb discuss how Patterson standardized sales and created modern expectations for reps.
ANECDOTE

From Helpful Oil To Snake Oil Fraud

  • Snake oil salesmen sold remedies to hard laborers; original snake oil likely had omega-3s but later mass versions were frauds.
  • Jeb and Ashley trace Clark Stanley's 1893 fair theatrics and the 1917 government test revealing mineral oil and beef fat.
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