name: discovery-call description: > Structure and prepare for a sales discovery call. Use when the user says "prep for discovery call", "discovery call questions", "how to structure my discovery call", "first call with a prospect", "what to ask on a discovery call", "sales call prep", "plan my discovery call", "initial call framework", or wants to prepare for or debrief a first sales conversation.
Overview
Based on "SPIN Selling" by Neil Rackham. Rackham's 12-year, 35,000-call research study found that top performers don't pitch - they ask questions in a specific sequence that leads prospects to articulate their own pain and desired outcomes. The SPIN framework (Situation, Problem, Implication, Need-Payoff) structures discovery to surface explicit needs before any solution discussion.
Workflow
Step 1: Set call objectives before dialing
Define three things before the call starts:
- Minimum outcome: the one thing you must leave with (e.g., a confirmed pain point, a next meeting)
- Ideal outcome: what a perfect call ends with (e.g., confirmed budget, sponsor identified, demo scheduled)
- Opening statement: one sentence on why this call is worth their 30 minutes
Write these down. Do not improvise the opening.
Step 2: Run Situation questions - establish context (5-8 min)
Gather facts about the prospect's current state. Keep this section short - prospects find these questions low-value. Limit to 3-4 questions.
Examples:
- "How does your team currently handle [relevant process]?"
- "How many people are involved in [relevant workflow]?"
- "What tools are you using today for [relevant area]?"
Do not ask questions whose answers are on their website or LinkedIn. That signals you didn't prepare.
Step 3: Run Problem questions - surface dissatisfaction (8-12 min)
Shift to asking about difficulties, frustrations, and gaps. This is where top performers spend the most time.
Examples:
- "Where does that process break down for you?"
- "What's the biggest friction point when [relevant scenario] happens?"
- "How often does that cause issues downstream?"
- "What happens when it doesn't work the way you need it to?"
Listen for language that signals explicit pain. Write it down verbatim - you'll use their words back in your proposal.
Step 4: Run Implication questions - expand the problem (5-8 min)
Make the prospect feel the cost of inaction. Connect the problem to business impact: revenue lost, time wasted, team morale, customer churn, competitive risk.
Examples:
- "When that breaks down, what's the downstream effect on [team/metric/customer]?"
- "How much time does your team spend working around that?"
- "What does that mean for your [quarterly target / renewal rate / customer satisfaction]?"
- "If this isn't solved in the next six months, what happens?"
You are not inventing urgency - you are helping them calculate the cost of the status quo.
Step 5: Run Need-Payoff questions - let them sell themselves (5 min)
Ask questions that get the prospect to articulate the value of solving the problem. Do not pitch. Let them describe the benefit.
Examples:
- "If you could eliminate that friction, what would that unlock for your team?"
- "How valuable would it be to get that time back?"
- "What would it mean for your roadmap if this was no longer a bottleneck?"
The prospect describing the solution in their own words is worth more than any demo slide.
Step 6: Confirm, summarize, and advance
Before ending the call:
- Summarize what you heard: "So the core issue is [X], and if left unaddressed it impacts [Y]. Is that right?"
- Confirm explicit interest: "Does solving this feel like a priority right now?"
- Propose a specific next step with a date: "I'd like to put together a recommendation and walk through it with your team on [date]. Does that work?"
Never leave a call with "I'll follow up." Leave with a confirmed next step.
Anti-Patterns
1. Pitching too early Bad: "Great, sounds like you have [problem] - we actually solve that. Let me show you how..." Good: Ask an Implication question to expand the problem before saying anything about your product.
2. Asking Situation questions you could have researched Bad: "How many employees does your company have?" Good: "Your team grew 40% last year - how has that affected your [relevant process]?"
3. Treating a surface-level pain as a green light Bad: Moving to demo scheduling the moment a prospect says "yeah, that's a challenge for us." Good: Follow up with an Implication question to understand scope and severity before advancing.
4. Vague next steps Bad: "I'll send over some materials and we can reconnect." Good: "Can we put 45 minutes on the calendar for Thursday at 2pm? I'll bring [specific deliverable]."
Quality Checklist
- Wrote down minimum outcome and ideal outcome before the call
- Asked fewer than 5 Situation questions - did not over-research on the call
- Asked at least 2 Implication questions that tied the problem to business impact
- Asked at least 1 Need-Payoff question and let the prospect answer fully
- Captured the prospect's exact words for their pain and desired outcome
- Left the call with a specific next step confirmed (not "I'll follow up")
- Did not pitch the product before the prospect articulated an explicit need