Skills · 15 June 2026 · 3 min read

How to Manage Your Energy in Sales So You Can Keep Performing.

Big bursts then a crash is no way to sell. Here is how to manage your energy in sales so your output stays steady, week after week, without burning out.
Will Koning
Will Koning
Founder, meritt
meritt illustration: work ethic & self motivation

Some weeks you go all out. You hammer the phones, smash your numbers, and feel like a hero. Then you hit a wall. The next two days you can barely lift the phone. Sound familiar? Managing your energy in sales isn't about working harder. It's about not flaming out by Wednesday. Get this right and your good days stop being rare.

The mistake most people make

Most people work in hard bursts and then crash. They go full speed all morning, skip lunch, push through the afternoon, and feel great for a day. Then the tank is empty. The calls get sloppy. The energy in your voice drops, and buyers hear it. You end up with one big day and three flat ones. That's not grit. That's a habit that quietly costs you deals.

What good energy looks like

Steady beats spiky. The best sellers I know don't have one heroic day a week. They have five solid ones. Their output looks the same on Monday as it does on Friday. They take small breaks on purpose, not when they collapse. They start and stop at the same time. It looks boring from the outside. It also wins, week after week.

How to do it

Build short breaks into your call blocks

Don't wait until you're drained to rest. Plan a few minutes off inside every block of calls, while your energy is still up. Stand up, get water, look out the window.

After every 45 minutes of calls at meritt, I take 5 minutes away from the desk before the next block.

Keep the same start and stop time each day

A set finish line protects your energy more than you think. When you know the day ends at a fixed time, you pace yourself instead of sprinting and stalling.

"I'm on at 9 and off at 5:30. That's it. No heroics at 7pm, no slow starts at 11."

See the difference

Weak

Burst-and-crash week: Monday you do 80 calls and feel unstoppable. You work through lunch and stay late. By Wednesday you're foggy, you make 20 calls, and they sound tired. Thursday you barely start. One big day, three lost ones.

Strong

Steady week: You do 45 calls a day, every day, with a short break every block. You stop at the same time and switch off. By Friday you're still sharp, your voice still has life in it, and you've made more calls in total than the burst week. The numbers add up because you never crashed.

Same person, same hours, a totally different result. The steady week wins because you never let the tank run dry.

How you'll know it's working

You've got this when your output stays steady and you're not burning out. Look at your week, not your day. Are Friday's calls as strong as Monday's? Are you ending the day with something left in the tank? If yes, you're there. Energy isn't luck. It's a habit you build, and it's the quiet thing that keeps you in the game long after the burst-and-crash crowd has given up.

Questions people ask

How do I manage my energy in sales without burning out?

Build short breaks into your call blocks before you feel drained, and keep the same start and stop time every day. The goal is steady output, not one heroic day. The big mistake is going full speed until you crash, because that gives you one strong day and several flat ones. A set routine keeps you sharp all week.

Why do I crash after a big sales day?

You crash because you spent all your energy in one burst with no breaks, often skipping lunch and working late. Your body and focus can only sprint for so long. The fix is to pace yourself with small, planned breaks inside each call block, so you finish the day with something left instead of running the tank to empty.

How often should I take breaks during call blocks?

A simple rhythm is a short break every 45 minutes to an hour. Step away from the desk for around five minutes, stand up, and get water. Take the break while your energy is still up, not when you're already flat. Small, regular breaks protect your focus far better than one long rest after you've crashed.

Does working longer hours help me sell more?

Usually no. Longer hours often lead to tired, sloppy calls that buyers can hear, and then a crash the next day. Steady output across the whole week beats one long, heroic day. A fixed start and stop time helps you pace yourself, so your Friday calls are as strong as your Monday ones. Consistency wins more deals than overtime.

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