That’s it.
Everything else, the systems, the strategies, the org charts, exists to make those three functions work together. Yet too often, leaders fail to name them as distinct but interconnected roles. And when we don’t name them, we don’t manage them.
Whether you’re running a small business on Main Street, leading a civic organization, or directing a nonprofit campaign, the same architecture applies. Every successful enterprise depends on three interconnected systems, how you sell the vision, how you serve the mission, and how you support the people who believe in it.
Sales is where everything begins. It’s the act of creating a promise, a vision of what could be possible for a customer, a donor, or a community.
When I put on my CEO hat, I’m selling the whole bank. I’m not just selling loans or deposits. I’m selling trust. I’m selling alignment. I’m selling the idea that we are the right partner to help a customer move forward.
That first conversation is about connection and credibility. It’s about seeing the world through someone else’s eyes and saying, “Here’s how we can help you win.”
Good sales isn’t about the close; it’s about clarity. It’s about connecting your institution’s purpose with someone’s need, whether that need is financial, social, or spiritual.
Once the promise is made, service brings it to life.
Service is the delivery of the promise, the performance that proves your word means something.
In banking, this is where my team steps in to implement solutions, from treasury management to cash flow systems.
But the same holds true across every sector.
When I led United Way, the same pattern held true.
We had a campaign team that went out to share the vision, that was our sales function, even though we weren’t selling a product. We were selling belief in a cause.
Once companies committed, our service teams went to work, making sure pledges were processed, donations logged, and commitments honored.
Then came support, the behind-the-scenes work of reconciling transactions, answering questions, and ensuring every donor felt confident that their contribution was used well.
Even in the nonprofit world, those three domains, sales, service, and support, drive mission performance. When any one of them breaks down, trust erodes.
Service, in every context, is about execution with empathy. It’s about follow-up, not just follow-through. It’s about knowing who’s on first, who’s on second, and who’s on third , even if you’re covering more than one base yourself.
Finally, support is where trust is tested, and often where it’s earned all over again.
Support is what happens when something doesn’t go as planned.
It’s when systems stumble or customers have questions. It’s when a donor can’t find their receipt, a small business owner needs help navigating a platform, or an investor can’t locate documentation from a capital raise.
Regardless of the situation, the truth is the same: People don’t care about our internal silos, they just want the promise to work.
The best leaders don’t run from support. They lean into it. Because when handled well, support doesn’t just fix problems, it deepens loyalty. It shows that your organization stands behind its promises.
In any organization, every leader occupies all three spaces, sales, service, and support, even if one is primary.
As the CEO, my job is to connect all three:
• Selling the vision externally,
• Serving by ensuring our teams deliver with excellence, and
• Supporting by stepping in when relationships or trust are at risk.