Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount
Sales Gravy: Jeb Blount
Jeb Blount
5 Ways to Stop Sales Territory Disputes From Destroying Your Team (Ask Jeb)
18 minutes Posted Aug 26, 2025 at 10:32 pm.
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Here's a question about sales territory disputes that'll make your head spin: What do you do when overlapping territories and shared relationships turn your sales team into a collection of lone wolves fighting over who owns what?
That's the exact predicament faced by Kayla Lujan, VP of Sales at Down to Earth Landscape and Irrigation in Orlando, Florida. Her team manages defined territories, but their business model creates inevitable crossover with HOA managers who oversee multiple properties spanning across different reps' territories.
As she put it: "I've really seen the team kind of lose focus on working as one or team selling and more of kind of like a what's mine versus working together."
If you're nodding your head right now, you're not alone. Territory disputes are one of the most destructive forces in sales organizations, and they're costing companies their collaborative culture and their best deals.

The Psychology Behind Sales Territory Wars
Here's the brutal truth about salespeople: we're wired to win. And when territories overlap, that competitive drive turns inward, creating internal battles that hurt everyone.
I learned this lesson the hard way when I was a VP of sales managing local and regional account executives. We had big regional accounts sitting in local territories, and the fighting was relentless. Local reps would work around the system, hide opportunities, and go through back doors to protect "their" accounts.
The result? We lost major deals because the wrong person with insufficient skills was working them solo, or we'd win the business only to have explosive commission disputes after the fact.
But here's what shocked me most: When we gave people the choice between money or credit on the ranking report, they fought harder over the credit than the commission. They'd take 100% of the money but wage war over who got recognition for closing the deal.
That tells you everything you need to know about sales psychology. It's not just about money—it's about winning, recognition, and status.

The Real Cost of Territorial Thinking
Territory disputes don't just create uncomfortable team meetings. They destroy your sales effectiveness in three critical ways:
Lost Deal Value: When the wrong rep works a deal alone because they're protecting their turf, you lose the collective expertise that could close bigger opportunities.
Relationship Damage: Customers get confused when multiple reps approach them without coordination, making your organization look disorganized and unprofessional.
Top Performer Exodus: Your best salespeople get frustrated with the politics and infighting, leading them to seek opportunities at companies with better team cultures.
The companies that figure this out win big. The ones that don't hemorrhage talent and revenue to organizations that actually know how to build high-performing sales teams.

The Solution: Strategic Commission Pools and Clear Ownership
For Kayla's HOA challenge—and similar overlapping territory situations—here's the framework that actually works:
Assign Relationship Ownership: The rep with the core relationship (the HOA headquarters contact) owns account retention and expansion. They're responsible for keeping that account long-term and get compensated accordingly.
Create Local Opportunity Roles: Local reps in each territory focus on building relationships with on-site contacts—facility managers, groundskeepers, community center staff. They get compensated for new project acquisition and spot opportunities within their geographic area.
Implement Commission Pools: Instead of fighting over who gets what percentage, create a commission pool for each major account.