name: sales-enablement description: "When the user wants to create sales collateral, pitch decks, one-pagers, objection handling docs, or demo scripts. Also use when the user mentions 'sales deck,' 'pitch deck,' 'one-pager,' 'leave-behind,' 'objection handling,' 'deal-specific ROI analysis,' 'demo script,' 'talk track,' 'sales playbook,' 'proposal template,' 'buyer persona card,' 'help my sales team,' 'sales materials,' or 'what should I give my sales reps.' Use this for any document or asset that helps a sales team close deals. For competitor comparison pages and battle cards, see competitor-alternatives. For marketing website copy, see copywriting. For cold outreach emails, see cold-email." tags: [nontechnical, corey-marketingskills, sales-enablement, documentation, presentation, sales, marketing, writing, grants] metadata: version: 1.1.0
Sales Deck / Pitch Deck
10-12 Slide Framework
- Current World Problem — The pain your buyer lives with today
- Cost of the Problem — What inaction costs (time, money, risk)
- The Shift Happening — Market or technology change creating urgency
- Your Approach — How you solve it differently
- Product Walkthrough — 3-4 key workflows, not a feature tour
- Proof Points — Metrics, logos, analyst recognition
- Case Study — One customer story told well
- Implementation / Timeline — How they get from here to live
- ROI / Value — Expected return and payback period
- Pricing Overview — Transparent, tiered if applicable
- Next Steps / CTA — Clear action with timeline
Deck Principles
- Story arc, not feature tour. Every deck tells a story: the world has a problem, there's a better way, here's proof, here's how to get there.
- One idea per slide. If you need two points, use two slides.
- Design for presenting, not reading. Slides support the conversation — they don't replace it. Minimal text, strong visuals.
Customization by Buyer Type
| Buyer | Emphasize | De-emphasize |
|---|---|---|
| Technical buyer | Architecture, security, integrations, API | ROI calculations, business metrics |
| Economic buyer | ROI, payback period, total cost, risk | Technical details, implementation specifics |
| Champion | Internal selling points, quick wins, peer proof | Deep technical or financial detail |
For full slide-by-slide guidance: See references/deck-frameworks.md
One-Pagers / Leave-Behinds
When to Use
- Post-meeting recap — Reinforce what you discussed, keep momentum
- Champion internal selling — Arm your champion to sell for you
- Trade show handout — Quick intro that drives follow-up
Structure
- Problem statement — The pain in one sentence
- Your solution — What you do and how
- 3 differentiators — Why you vs. alternatives
- Proof point — One strong metric or customer quote
- CTA — Clear next step with contact info
Design Principles
- One page, literally. Front only, or front and back maximum.
- Scannable in 30 seconds. Bold headers, short bullets, whitespace.
- Include your logo, website, and a specific contact (not info@).
- Match your brand but keep it clean — this is a sales tool, not a brand piece.
For templates by use case: See references/one-pager-templates.md
Objection Handling Docs
Objection Categories
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Price | "Too expensive," "No budget this quarter," "Competitor is cheaper" |
| Timing | "Not the right time," "Maybe next quarter," "Too busy to implement" |
| Competition | "We already use X," "What makes you different?" |
| Authority | "I need to check with my boss," "The committee decides" |
| Status quo | "What we have works fine," "Not broken, don't fix it" |
| Technical | "Does it integrate with X?," "Security concerns," "Can it scale?" |
Response Framework
For each objection, document:
- Objection statement — Exactly how reps hear it
- Why they say it — The real concern behind the words
- Response approach — How to acknowledge and redirect
- Proof point — Specific evidence that addresses the concern
- Follow-up question — Keep the conversation moving forward
Two Formats
- Quick-reference table for live calls — objection, one-line response, proof point. Fits on one screen.
- Detailed doc for prep and training — full context, talk tracks, role-play scenarios.
For the full objection library: See references/objection-library.md
ROI Calculators & Value Props
Calculator Design
Inputs (current state metrics the prospect provides):
- Time spent on manual processes
- Current tool costs
- Error rates or inefficiency metrics
- Team size
Calculations (your formula for value):
- Time saved per week/month/year
- Cost reduction (tools, headcount, errors)
- Revenue impact (faster deals, higher conversion)
Outputs (what the prospect sees):
- Annual ROI percentage
- Payback period in months
- Total 3-year value
Value Prop by Persona
| Persona | Cares About | Lead With |
|---|---|---|
| CTO / VP Eng | Architecture, scale, security, team velocity | Technical superiority, integration depth |
| VP Sales | Pipeline, quota attainment, rep productivity | Revenue impact, time savings per rep |
| CFO | Total cost, payback period, risk | ROI, cost reduction, financial predictability |
| End user | Ease of use, daily workflow, learning curve | Time saved, frustration eliminated |
Implementation Options
- Spreadsheet — Fastest to build, easy to customize per deal. Works for inside sales.
- Web tool — More polished, captures leads, scales better. Worth building if deal volume is high.
- Slide-based — ROI story embedded in the deck. Good for executive presentations.
Demo Scripts & Talk Tracks
Script Structure
- Opening (2 min) — Context setting, agenda, confirm goals for the call
- Discovery recap (3 min) — Summarize what you learned, confirm priorities
- Solution walkthrough (15-20 min) — 3-4 key workflows mapped to their pain
- Interaction points — Questions to ask during the demo, not just at the end
- Close (5 min) — Summarize value, propose next steps with timeline
Talk Track Types
| Type | Duration | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Discovery call | 30 min | Qualify, understand pain, map buying process |
| First demo | 30-45 min | Show 3-4 workflows tied to their pain |
| Technical deep-dive | 45-60 min | Architecture, security, integrations, API |
| Executive overview | 20-30 min | Business outcomes, ROI, strategic alignment |
Key Principles
- Demo after discovery, not before. If you don't know their pain, you're guessing which features matter.
- Customize to their use case. Use their terminology, their data (if possible), their workflow.
- Leave time for questions. A demo where the prospect doesn't talk is a demo that doesn't close.
For full script templates: See references/demo-scripts.md
Case Study Briefs (Sales Format)
How Sales Case Studies Differ
Marketing case studies tell a story. Sales case studies arm reps with fast-access proof. Keep them short, outcome-focused, and tagged for retrieval.
Structure
- Customer profile — Industry, company size, buyer role
- Challenge — What they were struggling with (2-3 sentences)
- Solution — What they implemented (1-2 sentences)
- Results — 3 specific metrics (before/after)
- Pull quote — One sentence from the customer
- Tags — Industry, use case, company size, persona
Organization
Organize case studies so reps can find the right one instantly:
- By industry — "Show me a case study for healthcare"
- By use case — "Show me someone who used us for X"
- By company size — "Show me an enterprise example"
Proposal Templates
Structure
- Executive summary — Their challenge, your solution, expected outcome (1 page max)
- Proposed solution — What you'll deliver, mapped to their requirements
- Implementation plan — Timeline, milestones, responsibilities
- Investment — Pricing, payment terms, what's included
- Next steps — How to move forward, decision timeline
Customization Guidance
- Mirror their language from discovery calls
- Reference specific pain points they mentioned
- Include only relevant case studies (same industry or use case)
- Name the stakeholders you've spoken with
Common Mistakes
- Too long — If it's over 10 pages, it won't get read. Aim for 5-7.
- Too generic — Templated proposals signal low effort. Customize the exec summary at minimum.
- Burying the price — Don't make them hunt for it. Be transparent and confident.
Sales Playbooks
What Goes in a Playbook
- Buyer profile — Who you're selling to, their goals and pains
- Qualification criteria — BANT, MEDDIC, or your framework
- Discovery questions — Organized by topic, not a script
- Objection handling — Top 10 objections with responses
- Competitive positioning — How you win against each competitor
- Demo flow — Recommended sequence for each persona
- Email templates — Follow-up, proposal, check-in, breakup
When to Build
- New product launch — Reps need a single source of truth
- New market segment — Different buyers need different approaches
- New hire ramp — Playbooks cut ramp time significantly
Keeping It Living
Playbooks die when they're not updated. Review quarterly, get input from top reps, and remove anything outdated. Assign an owner — if nobody owns it, it rots.
Buyer Persona Cards
Card Structure
| Field | Description |
|---|---|
| Role / title | Common titles and reporting structure |
| Goals | What success looks like for them |
| Pains | What frustrates them daily |
| Top objections | The 3-5 objections you'll hear from this role |
| Evaluation criteria | How they judge solutions |
| Buying process | Their role in the decision, who they influence |
| Messaging angle | The one sentence that resonates most |
Persona Types
- Economic buyer — Signs the check. Cares about ROI and risk.
- Technical buyer — Evaluates the product. Cares about capabilities and integration.
- End user — Uses it daily. Cares about ease and workflow fit.
- Champion — Advocates internally. Needs ammunition to sell for you.
- Blocker — Opposes the purchase. Understand their concern to neutralize it.
Output Format
Deliver the right format for each asset type:
| Asset | Deliverable |
|---|---|
| Sales deck | Slide-by-slide outline with headline, body copy, and speaker notes |
| One-pager | Full copy with layout guidance (visual hierarchy, sections) |
| Objection doc | Table format: objection, response, proof point, follow-up |
| Demo script | Scene-by-scene with timing, talk track, and interaction points |
| ROI calculator | Input fields, formulas, output display with sample data |
| Playbook | Structured document with table of contents and sections |
| Persona card | One-page card format per persona |
| Proposal | Section-by-section copy with customization notes |
Task-Specific Questions
If context is missing, ask:
- What collateral do you need? (deck, one-pager, objection doc, etc.)
- Who will use it? (AE, SDR, champion, prospect)
- What sales stage is it for? (prospecting, discovery, demo, negotiation, close)
- Who is the target persona? (title, seniority, department)
- What are the top 3 objections you hear most?
Tool Integrations
For partner sales enablement, see the tools registry:
| Tool | What It Does | Guide |
|---|---|---|
| Introw | Partner engagement tracking, deal registration, mutual action plans | introw.md |
Related Skills
- competitor-alternatives: For public-facing comparison and alternative pages
- copywriting: For marketing website copy
- cold-email: For outbound prospecting emails
- revops: For lead lifecycle, scoring, routing, and pipeline management
- pricing-strategy: For pricing decisions and packaging
- product-marketing-context: For foundational positioning and messaging