Public archive tips tagged questions, collected from real Sales Micro Learning lessons.
Discovery cheat code: don’t stop at the first pain statement. “Our handoffs are messy” is useful, but it’s not enough to build a case for change. Use the Ripple Map: 1. Symptom: “Where does this show up day to day?” 2. Impact: “What does it slow down, cost, or put at risk?” 3. People: “Who gets pulled in when this happens?” 4. Metric: “How would you measure improvement?” 5. Stakes: “If this stays the same, what becomes harder?” This is classic SPIN Selling: implication questions make the cost of the problem visible. 🎯 Try this today: Pick one discovery call and add two Ripple Map questions before you join.
DiscoveryMost prospecting emails die in paragraph two. The buyer didn’t ask for your origin story; they need a sharp reason to believe you understand their world. Replace the pitch dump with one specific observation and one low-friction question. 🎯 Try this today: Take one outbound email and cut it to four lines: relevant observation, problem hypothesis, one proof point, and “Worth comparing notes?”
ProspectingNew role mistake: trying to look competent before you understand what “good” looks like. The fastest rampers don’t wing it—they build a feedback loop. Use the Ramp Loop: 1. Scoreboard: “What numbers matter most in my first 30/60/90 days?” 2. Model: “Who is already doing this well, and can I study their calls/emails?” 3. Pattern: “What are the top 3 reasons deals or meetings are won here?” 4. Feedback: “Can you review one real example of my work each week?” This is straight out of High Output Management: output improves when feedback cycles get tighter. 🎯 Try this today: Ask your manager or a top rep one question: “What does great look like here in the first 30 days?”
MindsetYour champion is not your messenger unless you give them a message worth forwarding. After a good call, don’t send a generic recap—send the exact internal language they can use to explain the problem, impact, and next ask without sounding like they’re pitching for you. 🎯 Try this today: Pick one active deal and write a 5-line “forwardable recap” your champion could send internally: problem, impact, why now, proposed next step, and who should weigh in.
Relationship BuildingDiscounts train buyers to ask twice. Concessions protect margin when you trade them instead of donating them. Use the Trade Ledger: 1. Clarify the ask: “What are you trying to solve with that request?” 2. Name the value: “That change affects scope, timing, or economics on our side.” 3. Request a give: “If we can do X, can you commit to Y?” 4. Package it: “So we’d agree to X in exchange for Y.” 5. Confirm in writing: No verbal “special exceptions” floating around. 🎯 Try this today: Write three acceptable “gets” you can ask for in your next negotiation: faster signature, annual prepay, longer term, reduced scope, reference, or executive intro.
NegotiationIf your closing question sounds like a survey—“Any thoughts?”—you’re inviting commentary, not commitment. A real close is clear, calm, and specific: “Are you ready to move forward with the 12-seat plan starting July 1?” Then stop talking. The pause is where the truth comes out. 🎯 Try this today: Write one direct closing question for a live opportunity and replace “thoughts?” with a clear ask for commitment.
ClosingA buyer can have pain and still not have a deal. In discovery, listen for the forcing function: board deadline, missed target, renewal, hiring plan, audit, exec mandate—the calendar event that makes inaction expensive. If you can’t name it, your next step is hope dressed as process. 🎯 Try this today: Open one active opportunity and write the answer to: “Why must they solve this now?” If you don’t know, ask it on your next call.
DiscoveryCold calls don’t fail because your offer is bad. They fail because the buyer’s brain labels you “interruption” before you earn relevance. Use the 20-Second Contract: 1. Disarm: “I know I’m catching you cold.” 2. Ask: “Can I take 20 seconds, then you can tell me if it’s worth continuing?” 3. Name the pain: “We’re seeing sales teams struggle with ___ and ___.” 4. Invite correction: “Is either of those on your plate, or am I off base?” The magic is not the script. It’s lowering resistance before making a claim. 🎯 Try this today: Rewrite your cold call opener using Disarm → Ask → Pain → Correction, then use it on your next five dials.
ProspectingUse the “Hidden Room Map” for any deal with more than one stakeholder. Deals rarely die in your meeting. They die in the meeting after your meeting. 1. User: Who feels the pain daily? 2. Owner: Who is accountable for the business outcome? 3. Blocker: Who could slow this down—IT, Legal, Finance, Procurement? 4. Skeptic: Who will question whether change is worth it? 5. Power: Who can approve budget when tradeoffs get real? Your job is not to “meet everyone.” It’s to know what each person cares about before they form opinions without you. 🎯 Try this today: Pick one active deal and label each role with a name or “unknown.” Then ask your contact for one missing perspective.
Relationship BuildingWhen a buyer says, “Can you do better on price?” don’t negotiate against yourself. If you respond with a discount, you just proved the first price was fake. Borrow from Never Split the Difference and use a calibrated question: “What part of the investment is hardest to justify?” Now you’re negotiating around the real constraint—not a reflexive ask. 🎯 Try this today: Write your one-sentence response to “Can you do better?” and use it before offering any concession.
NegotiationA “sounds good” is not a close. It’s a vibe. Use the Commit Check to turn positive energy into a real buying signal: 1. Outcome: “Are we aligned that the goal is ___?” 2. Fit: “Do you feel this approach solves it in the way your team needs?” 3. Process: “What has to happen internally before you can sign?” 4. Date: “What date are we working backward from?” 5. Ask: “Based on that, are you comfortable moving forward?” If they dodge any of these, don’t push harder. Diagnose the gap. 🎯 Try this today: Pick one late-stage deal and write your five Commit Check questions before the next call.
ClosingWhen a prospect says, “We already have a vendor,” don’t attack the vendor. That makes them defend a decision they probably helped make. Instead, respect the incumbent and question the fit against today’s reality: “Makes sense. What’s changed in the business since you picked them?” 🎯 Try this today: Write a one-line response to your “we already use ___” objection that starts with agreement, then asks what has changed.
Objection HandlingMost weak discovery sounds like a checklist. Great discovery builds contrast: how work happens today vs. how it needs to happen when the business is healthier. That’s the heart of Gap Selling: buyers move when the gap is clear. Use the “Before → Broken → Better” stack: 1. Before: “Walk me through how this gets done today.” 2. Broken: “Where does that process slow down, fail, or create extra work?” 3. Bleed: “Who feels that pain, and how often?” 4. Better: “If this were working well 90 days from now, what would be different?” 🎯 Try this today: Add these four questions to your next discovery call notes, then pick one deal and fill in any answer you’re currently missing.
DiscoveryNever send a proposal to “see what they think.” A proposal should confirm a decision path you’ve already shaped, not become a PDF they use to disappear, shop competitors, or negotiate internally without you. Before you send it, ask: “If this reflects the scope, outcomes, and investment we discussed, is there anything that would prevent us from moving forward?” 🎯 Try this today: Before sending one proposal, write and ask your pre-close question in one sentence.
ClosingMost reps answer objections too early. Use the 3-Beat Objection Reset before you defend anything: 1. Cushion: “That’s a fair concern.” 2. Clarify: “When you say implementation risk, do you mean timeline, IT bandwidth, or adoption?” 3. Convert: “If we could show a low-lift rollout plan, would that address the concern—or is there another blocker?” Objections get easier when you stop reacting to the headline and uncover the real fear underneath. 🎯 Try this today: Take one common objection you hear and write your Cushion → Clarify → Convert response in three lines.
Objection HandlingDiscovery gets sharper when you ask for the last concrete moment the problem showed up. “When did this last cause a miss, delay, or escalation?” beats “Is this a challenge?” because real pain has a timestamp, a person, and a consequence. 🎯 Try this today: Add this question to one discovery call: “Can you walk me through the last time this problem actually happened?”
DiscoveryUse the Trigger → Tension → Trade opener for cold outreach. The goal isn’t to prove you researched them—it’s to show why now might matter. 1. Trigger: Point to a real event. “Saw you’re hiring 12 SDRs this quarter.” 2. Tension: Name the likely pressure. “That usually exposes ramp inconsistency and manager bandwidth.” 3. Proof: Add one credibility line. “We helped a similar team cut new-rep ramp by 22%.” 4. Trade: Ask for a small next step. “Worth a 10-minute compare-notes call?” This is Challenger-style prospecting: lead with a useful commercial insight, not a compliment. 🎯 Try this today: Pick one target account and write a 4-line outbound message using Trigger → Tension → Proof → Trade.
ProspectingUse the Champion Stress Test. A real champion doesn’t just like you—they can create motion when you’re not in the room. 1. Pain: Can they explain the business problem in their own words? 2. Power: Can they name who signs, blocks, influences, and uses? 3. Personal win: Do they care enough to spend political capital? 4. Proof: Can they tell your story internally without forwarding your deck? 🎯 Try this today: Pick one “champion” and score them 1–4 on the test. If they miss one, ask one question to strengthen it on your next touch.
Relationship BuildingA discount is not a pricing event. It’s a behavior-setting event. If you drop price without asking for something back—faster signature, longer term, upfront payment, reduced scope—you teach the buyer that pressure works. 🎯 Try this today: Pick one active deal and write your “give-get” before the next call: “If they ask for ___, I’ll trade it for ___.”
NegotiationWhen a prospect says, “We’re not prioritizing this right now,” don’t rush to prove ROI. That often sounds like you didn’t hear them. Use a Chris Voss-style label first: “Sounds like this feels important, but not urgent enough to displace what’s already on your plate.” 🎯 Try this today: Write one label for your most common objection, then use it on your next call before asking any follow-up question.
Objection HandlingPeople rarely fight a plan they helped improve. Before asking for approval, show a near-finished draft with one intentional “open joint” and ask a stakeholder to strengthen it; that small contribution creates ownership, not just feedback. 🎯 Try this today: Pick one person whose support you need and send: “I’m close on this plan—what’s one change that would make it easier for you to back?”
ClosingUse the Bet–Signal–Shift loop to make your team smarter after every decision. Peter Senge’s learning organization idea is simple: teams improve when they expose assumptions, not just outcomes. 1. Bet: Name what you expected. “We thought shorter demos would increase trial signups.” 2. Signal: Pick the evidence that would prove or disprove it. “Signup rate within 48 hours.” 3. Surprise: Ask what happened that you didn’t predict. This is where learning lives. 4. Shift: Change one behavior, process, or assumption based on the signal. 🎯 Try this today: Pick one recent decision and write three lines: “Our bet was ___, the signal says ___, so we should shift ___.”
MindsetGood strategy looks past the first domino. A “quick launch” may win speed today but create support tickets, rework, and trust debt next month; the sharper question is, “What does this decision make more likely?” 🎯 Try this today: Before approving one plan or task, write two bullets: “If this works, it creates ___” and “If this fails, it creates ___.” Then adjust the plan for the second-order effect.
MindsetUse CARE Feedback when you need to correct something without bruising trust—Radical Candor in practice: care personally, challenge directly. 1. Context: Name the exact moment. “In yesterday’s client review…” 2. Action: Describe observable behavior. “You answered before Maya finished.” 3. Result: Show the impact. “We missed her risk flag and had to reopen the decision.” 4. Expectation: State the future behavior. “Next time, pause and ask if anyone has concerns before we close.” 5. Support: Offer help. “Want to practice the close before Friday’s meeting?” 🎯 Try this today: Pick one piece of feedback you’ve been avoiding and draft it in CARE format—five short lines, no judgment words.
Relationship BuildingPeople don’t resist your idea; they resist the version of it that threatens their priorities. Before you ask Product, Legal, Finance, or Sales to support something, translate the request into their scoreboard: speed, risk, cost, revenue, customer trust. 🎯 Try this today: Pick one stakeholder you need buy-in from and rewrite your ask in this sentence: “This helps your team protect/improve ___ by ___.” Then send that version, not the generic one.
Relationship BuildingEvery new request is a stowaway stealing time from work you’ve already committed to. Before you say “Sure,” name the hidden passenger: “Taking this on means Feature X ships a week later.” The explicit trade-off forces real prioritization—yours and theirs. 🎯 Try this today: When the next ask lands, open a blank email (even if you won’t send it) and write one sentence starting with “If I accept, ____ will slip by ____.” Decide only after you’ve seen that cost in black and white.
NegotiationFRAME — 5-step pre-flight that turns a 30-minute zombie meeting into a 15-minute decision. 1. Final outcome: one sentence on what will exist by the end (“choose launch date”). 2. Roles: name the decider, advisors, and listeners—unneeded folks stay out. 3. Agenda questions: max three questions that must be answered to hit the outcome. 4. Minutes per question: set a timer; when it dings, move on. 5. Exit actions: last two minutes, say the decisions + next steps aloud while someone types and hits Send. 🎯 Try this today: For your next calendar invite, paste “F R A M E” in the description and fill each letter before you hit send—watch the attendee list and meeting length shrink.
ClosingFOCUS Filter — 5 quick questions that block shiny-object drift 1. Fit: Does it push one of this quarter’s top 3 goals? 2. Outcome: Can you name the win in a single metric? 3. Cost: Will the hours/cash pay back at least 2x? 4. Urgency: Is there a real window that slams shut if you wait? 5. Sacrifice: What will you delay or drop to make room? Score ≥4 yeses → green-light. 2-3 → park. 0-1 → kill. 🎯 Try this today: Grab the newest request in your queue and run FOCUS in writing. If it scores under 4, reply with a polite “parking for now” and reclaim the time.
MindsetPACT Check — stack the odds before you pitch 1. Pain: Name the issue in their words (“Renewals down 2 pts this quarter”). 2. Allies: Line up one respected voice who’ll nod publicly. 3. Currency: Decide what you’ll trade—data, resources, or future help. 4. Timing: Pick a moment when attention is high (right after the churn report lands). If any box is blank, you’re not ready. When all four click, approval feels inevitable. 🎯 Try this today: Grab a sticky note, write P-A-C-T down the left side, and fill in each square for the ask you’ll make this week.
ClosingSkip the tired compliment-critique-compliment sandwich. State one clear fact, then ask, “How would you tackle this differently next time?” The question flips their brain from defense to co-creator—Radical Candor in 10 seconds. 🎯 Try this today: Draft one overdue feedback note: 1) the fact, 2) its impact, 3) that forward-looking question. Hit send before you overthink it.
Relationship BuildingGet a “micro-yes” before you ever pitch the plan. Fire a quick poll or DM to the key players: “Top goal for Q3 = cut churn below 3 %. Agree?” Once they click ✅, Cialdini’s commitment principle kicks in—saying yes to your churn-killer proposal later feels like keeping their word. 🎯 Try this today: Send one single-question poll (or 10-second DM) to the decision makers on your next project. Lock in the shared goal first; the solution sell will glide.
ClosingSOAP Answer — four lines that keep exec Q&A under 30 seconds 1. Statement: give the straight answer first (“Yes, we can ship by 6/30.”) 2. Outcome: name the metric or risk at stake (“Hits FY churn target—saves ~$140k.”) 3. Approach: one sentence on how you’ll make it true (“Pulling two contractors onto QA, nightly regression kicks off Monday.”) 4. Proof: a concrete data point or precedent (“Same swap cut bug backlog 23 % last quarter.”) 🎯 Try this today: Pick one hard question you expect in your next leadership meeting—draft its four-line SOAP Answer and rehearse it once before you log on.
Objection HandlingCAPO Filter — four questions that keep shiny objects from hijacking your roadmap 1. Customer value: If we ship this, what pain does it kill or desire does it unlock for our users? Name the metric it will move. 2. Advantage: Does it deepen a moat (speed, data, cost, brand) or could a rival copy it tomorrow? 3. Probability: Given our current talent, budget, and time, what’s the honest % chance we nail it? Round to the nearest 10. 4. Opportunity cost: What project of equal effort gets bumped? Say it out loud—if the swap feels dumb, walk away. If a proposal scores high on 1–3 and low on 4, green-light. Anything else is strategic noise. 🎯 Try this today: The next request that hits your inbox—run CAPO in 60 seconds, then reply “yes,” “no,” or “later” before context-switching steals another minute.
MindsetExecutives don’t fear your idea’s cost—they fear being stuck with it. Add an explicit rollback clause: “If churn isn’t down 2 % in four weeks, we revert in under 30 minutes with zero customer impact.” You’ve turned a one-way door into a swing gate, and risk-averse brains relax enough to say yes. 🎯 Try this today: Draft one ask you’ll make today and append a single sentence that names the success metric, the deadline, and the exact reset step.
Objection HandlingC.R.I.S.P. Brief — package any exec update in 5 laser lines 1. Conclusion: open with the headline metric or decision (“Churn down 2.1 % in 30 days”). 2. Reason: why leadership should care right now (revenue, risk, brand hit). 3. Insight: the one fact that explains the movement (“90 % of saves came from the new onboarding video”). 4. Step: the concrete next move you’re driving (“Rolling the video to Enterprise accounts next”). 5. Permission: the specific ask or green light needed (“Need $8k for pro voice-over, decide by Friday”). Executives scan top to bottom; this gives them the movie trailer, not the blooper reel. 🎯 Try this today: Draft your next status email in the C.R.I.S.P. sequence—trim to 100 words, hit send, and clock how fast replies come back with a clear “yes” or “no.”
Relationship BuildingW.I.N. Filter — purge busywork in 3 questions 1. Worth: If this succeeds, what hard number or clear risk reduction shows up? Can’t name one? Kill it. 2. Inevitable: Will the task boomerang if ignored (compliance, customer promise, critical path)? If not, let it drift. 3. Now: Is there a cost for waiting a week—lost revenue, momentum, trust? If the meter isn’t running, park it. Only items that score “yes” on all three earn calendar space. Everything else is noise. 🎯 Try this today: Scan your to-do list, run W.I.N. on each line, and delete or defer at least three tasks before lunch.
MindsetThe first voice anchors the room. Before a meeting where you’ll pitch an idea, Slack one respected attendee the 30-second version and ask them to open with, “What I like about ___ is…” Their early endorsement triggers instant social proof and makes dissent feel like deviation, not prudence. 🎯 Try this today: Pick one proposal you’re sharing today, message a trusted peer right now with a short topline and the ask: “Can you kick us off by highlighting why this solves X?”
ClosingT.R.A.C.E. Scan — read any room in 15 seconds 1. Tone – Is the volume tight and clipped or loose and warm? Tension and openness sound different. 2. Rhythm – Rapid back-and-forth means urgency; long pauses signal caution or confusion. 3. Attention – Eyes on you/slide = engagement. Eyes on laptops = check-out. 4. Constraints – Crossed arms, leaning away, tight lips = resistance; open posture = green light. 5. Emotion – Name the dominant vibe in one word (“anxious,” “amped”). Just labeling it sharpens your response options (Never Split the Difference). 🎯 Try this today: Before speaking in your next meeting, run T.R.A.C.E.; if you spot resistance (Tone + Constraints), start with a question instead of a statement to reduce friction.
Relationship BuildingExecutives skim slides like billboards—they read the headline, glance at the picture, and decide. If your title isn’t a full takeaway sentence (“Un-activated admins drive 56 % of churn”), they’ll write their own story and your ask will wobble. 🎯 Try this today: Open one slide in your next deck, rewrite the title as a 12-word, verb-led conclusion with a concrete number, then delete any bullet that merely repeats it.
ClosingE.C.H.O. Reach-Out — the 4-step note that builds genuine connections without the ick 1. Earned hook: open with a line proving you’ve done homework (“Your talk on zero-downtime releases solved our rollout pain”). 2. Common ground: name one shared thread—mission, alma mater, mutual colleague (“We both started in QA before product”). 3. Help first: offer a bite-sized give—resource, intro, data point (“Happy to share our post-mortem template if useful”). 4. Open loop: propose a tiny next step that respects time (“If 15 min next week works, I’ll bring two questions and be done by :15”). No vague flattery, no “pick your brain.” Just relevance, reciprocity, and a clear runway. 🎯 Try this today: Draft an E.C.H.O. message to one person you admire but rarely speak with—send it before lunch and calendar the follow-up if they bite.
Relationship BuildingV.I.E.W. Lens — the 4-point scrub every exec slide or email should pass 1. Value: open with the business win or risk in one sentence (“+$1.2 M ARR at stake”). 2. Insight: surface the core driver they don’t know yet (“56 % of churn comes from un-activated admins”). 3. Evidence: one chart, stat, or quote that proves it—no data buffet. 4. Way forward: the single decision or action you need by when (“Approve $25k for onboarding revamp by Friday”). If a piece is missing, you’ll get questions instead of a green light. 🎯 Try this today: Grab the slide or draft you’ll share with leadership next—run the V.I.E.W. check and tweak until all four parts snap into place.
ClosingDelegation fails in the space between what you said and what they heard. Before ending the hand-off, ask the teammate to recap the goal, guardrails, and first milestone in their own words; gaps show up instantly, and ownership clicks into place. 🎯 Try this today: At your next assignment hand-off, close with “Can you give me the 30-second version of what success looks like and your first step?”—listen, clarify, then let them run.
Relationship BuildingSPOT Ping — the 4-line update that builds your brand without sounding like a braggart 1. Success – name the concrete thing you shipped (“Launched the new pricing calculator”). 2. Proof – one data point or quote that shows it matters (“Cut checkout time by 18 % in A/B test”). 3. Others – spotlight at least one collaborator (“Huge assist from Priya on the API fix”). 4. Trajectory – state the very next move (“Rolling to 100 % of traffic on Tuesday”). Result, evidence, gratitude, momentum—execs see impact, teammates feel valued, and you stay top-of-mind. 🎯 Try this today: Draft a SPOT Ping in Slack or email, drop it in your team channel before the day ends, and note how many thumbs-ups and follow-up questions it earns.
Relationship BuildingG.I.V.E. Trade Stack — four moves that turn a flat “no” into a creative “yes” 1. Goals – open by stating the outcome they’re guarding (“You need to cut Q4 spend without dinging uptime”). 2. Interests – probe one layer deeper: “Which matters more—cash savings or predictability?” Hidden drivers surface. 3. Variables – list every knob beyond money: scope, timeline, risk, head-count, visibility, data access. 4. Exchange – pair each ask with a give: concede on a low-cost chip for you, win a high-value chip in return (“If we drop on-site visits, can we keep priority tickets?”). Multiple small swaps grow the pie and keep both sides feeling respected. 🎯 Try this today: Ahead of your next negotiation, write three variables you can cheaply give and three you dearly want—walk in ready to G.I.V.E. rather than fight over one number.
NegotiationEvery “yes” silently kills another priority. Before you accept a shiny request, write one blunt line that starts, “Saying yes to ___ means I’ll delay/ditch ___.” When the hidden trade-off is in plain sight, you (and the requester) can judge if it’s truly worth it. 🎯 Try this today: The next time someone pings you for help, pause 30 seconds, draft the single trade-off sentence, and include it in your reply—watch how often the ask shrinks or disappears.
MindsetT.E.S.T. Meeting Triage — four yes/no checks that rescue hours 1. Topic: Do I directly own part of the agenda? 2. Expected decision: Is a concrete decision due in-room? 3. Stakes: Will the outcome materially hit my OKRs? 4. Tight crew: Is the invite list the smallest needed to decide? If you score two or more “No,” decline or ask for an async update. Time you don’t spend in low-impact rooms is time you can ship real work. 🎯 Try this today: Open next week’s calendar, run T.E.S.T. on the first five invites, and free at least one hour by responding with “Happy to weigh in async—send the decision doc and I’ll add comments.”
MindsetKick off every meeting by asking, “What decision will exist at 10:45 that doesn’t exist now?” The moment the room names the decision and the deadline, side quests vanish and everyone aims at the same target—Drucker would call it “feeding the task, not the talk.” 🎯 Try this today: At the very start of your next meeting, pose that question; if the answer isn’t crisp, cancel or reset the agenda in under 60 seconds.
ClosingS.A.L.E. — the 4-step ask that busy colleagues find hard to refuse 1. Shared win – start with the goal you both own (“Faster onboarding boosts CS NPS and our renewal target”). 2. Advance gift – offer value first (“I mocked up the email copy—just need your API endpoint”). 3. Legitimizer – cite proof others are in (“Ops queued the job for tonight’s batch run”). 4. Easy step – make the commitment tiny and time-boxed (“Can you green-light line 14 by 3 p.m.? Takes 5 min.”). Reciprocity + social proof + foot-in-the-door, served in 30 seconds. 🎯 Try this today: Grab one stalled request, recast it with S.A.L.E., and fire it off—track how quickly the “yes” lands.
ClosingWhen a shiny request lands, put it shoulder-to-shoulder with your current top priority and ask the requester, “Which should I drop to make room?” The moment they confront the swap, the true value—or lack of it—shows up. 🎯 Try this today: The next time someone pings you with “quick help,” reply: “Can do—should I pause X or Y to fit it?” Hit send and watch clarity emerge.
MindsetLIFT Email — the 4-line ping that grows your network minus the awkward small talk. 1. Lob praise: open with a specific, genuine compliment (“Your Q3 churn teardown was razor-sharp.”). 2. Identify overlap: tie their work to yours (“I’m rebuilding onboarding flows and hit a similar retention wall.”). 3. Float a question: one bite-size ask that fits a 15-min chat (“How did you spot the ‘silent churn’ users so fast?”). 4. Tee up next step: offer two concrete times or invite an async reply (“Free Thu 10:00 or Fri 2:30—happy to adapt if Slack’s easier.”). Four sentences, zero schmooze, instant rapport. 🎯 Try this today: Target one person you admire inside the org, write a LIFT Email in under two minutes, and press send—you’ll plant a relationship seed that compounds all year.
Relationship BuildingSCORE Outline — a 5-step snap-brief that gets execs from “What?” to “Go.” 1. Stakes – open with the consequence of inaction or upside on the table (“Churn is creeping toward 6 %, risking $1.2 M ARR”). 2. Current state – one sentence on where we stand (“Onboarding emails ship 48 hrs late, users never activate”). 3. Option – your recommended move, verb first (“Cut email lag to 2 hrs via auto-triggered Zapier flow”). 4. Reason – the one data point or insight that proves it will work (“Teams that message <2 hrs see 40 % higher Day-7 retention”). 5. Endgame – the precise ask with owner + deadline (“Need $5 k for Zapier upgrade; approve by Friday so build starts Monday”). Slip SCORE at the top of any deck, email, or hallway pitch and watch decisions pop. 🎯 Try this today: Open the next update you owe leadership; rewrite the first five lines using SCORE—time yourself, it’ll take under three minutes and halve the back-and-forth.
Closing“Can you look into this?” is delegation kryptonite. Swap it for Outcome + Why + When: “By Thursday, give me a one-page summary of the top 3 vendor options so I can prep the exec review.” Crystal finish line, context, deadline—no boomerang questions. 🎯 Try this today: Before firing off your next request, rewrite it to include the concrete deliverable, its purpose, and the date; then hit send.
Relationship BuildingP.A.U.S.E. Button — a 5-step circuit breaker for when a meeting, email, or Slack thread spikes your pulse. 1. Pause: stop typing/talking for one full beat. 2. Air: inhale for 4, exhale for 4 to move from Cialdini’s fight-or-flight “fast brain” to the slower one Kahneman celebrates. 3. Unlabelled emotion travels—Label it in two words (“irritated, cornered”). Naming tames it. 4. Stakes Scan: ask, “Will this still matter next week?” If no, shrink your response; if yes, proceed. 5. Engage: pick one move—clarify with a question, state impact, or schedule a calmer follow-up. 🎯 Try this today: When the next thorny message lands, hit P.A.U.S.E. before replying—time yourself; you’ll spend <30 seconds and cut the risk of a regret email to zero.
MindsetHEAD Pass — four moves that turn any slide into exec catnip 1. Headline – Rewrite the title as a full-sentence takeaway (“Q2 churn fell 20% after onboarding revamp”). 2. Evidence – Keep only one chart or number that proves that claim. 3. Annotation – Add an arrow or label that directs the eye to the critical data point. 4. Delete – Strip everything that doesn’t serve the headline: extra colors, gridlines, clip-art, even the logo. 🎯 Try this today: Grab the clumsiest slide in your next deck, run the HEAD Pass, then ask a peer to glance for 5 seconds and repeat the point—if they nail it, you’re ready for the C-suite.
ClosingWhen a colleague touts a shiny idea, nod once and ask, “Then what?”—then ask it again. The first answer surfaces the obvious upside; the second exposes the domino costs and dependencies no one modeled. Two words flip you from order-taker to strategist. 🎯 Try this today: In the next meeting or Slack thread where a proposal pops up, fire the double “Then what?” and capture the ripple effects that appear—share the top risk or opportunity you hear.
DiscoveryWhen you’ll need a big “yes,” secure a tiny one first. Ping the decision-maker today and ask for a 60-second gut-check on a slide title or metric; that micro-commitment triggers Cialdini’s consistency bias, so backing your larger request later feels like sticking to their own script. 🎯 Try this today: Identify one stakeholder you’ll approach for budget soon, DM them a single sentence—“Quick sanity check: does this KPI wording land?”—and thank them for the fast nod.
Closing“How’s it going?” invites polite fluff. Swap it for, “What’s one thing chewing at your focus this week?” The concrete hook signals you’re ready for candor and flushes out the concern that’s quietly stealing their bandwidth. 🎯 Try this today: In your next 1-on-1, ask that exact question, then stay silent for five seconds—listen for the real issue they finally voice.
DiscoveryPAUSE Gate — your 5-question brake before you say “yes” 1. Priority fit: Does it advance this quarter’s top goal? 2. Alternatives: What’s a better use of the same people/time/money? 3. Upside: Best-case ROI you can quantify (“adds $500k ARR”). 4. Second-order effects: What costs or dependencies appear after the first win? 5. Exit cost: If we bail in 60 days, what’s the write-off? Four greens → proceed. Two reds → decline or redesign. 🎯 Try this today: When the next “quick favor” pings you, silently run PAUSE; if you hit two reds, turn it down and explain why.
MindsetExecs skim like day traders; bury the request and it never trades. Lead with “Ask + Impact + Deadline” right in the subject line: “Need OK for $15k vendor spend — cuts release cycle 2 wks — reply by Wed.” Barbara Minto would applaud—you’ve surfaced the answer before the explanation. 🎯 Try this today: Rewrite one email subject you’ll send to leadership with Ask-Impact-Deadline; watch how fast the reply comes back.
ClosingCALM Card — your 15-second brake when a meeting heats up 1. Catch the spike: feel shoulders tighten, jaw clamp? That’s your alarm. 2. Assess the stakes: will this still matter next quarter? If no, lower the volume in your head. 3. Label the emotion (to yourself or out loud): “I’m feeling defensive about this metric.” Naming it tames it (Goleman’s “name it to tame it”). 4. Move to curiosity: ask one neutral question—“Walk me through your concern?” Curiosity flips adversaries into partners. 🎯 Try this today: Before your next call, jot “CALM” on a sticky. If tension rises, run the four steps in order and note how the room’s energy shifts.
MindsetCOIN Flip — a 4-line pitch that wins quick buy-in 1. Context: Start with their metric or pain (“Customer churn just blew past the 5% threshold”). 2. Outcome: Quantify the win your idea creates (“A self-serve FAQ could cut support tickets 30%”). 3. Implication: Spell out the cost of inertia (“If churn holds, we leave $2M ARR on the table this quarter”). 4. Next step: Ask for one low-risk move (“Kick off a 2-week pilot—no code changes, just new copy”). 🎯 Try this today: Draft your next request in four COIN bullets, then deliver it verbatim; notice how framing the cost of doing nothing sharpens attention.
ClosingMost project debates die at the first-order win (“Flash sale boosts Q3 revenue”). The pros force a quick sequel: “And then what?”—three times. By round three you’re seeing the downstream drag on margin, support load, and brand positioning that makes a smarter move obvious. 🎯 Try this today: Pick one decision on your plate; ask “And then what?” three successive times and jot the answers. If the third answer stings, revise the plan or decline the task.
MindsetS.C.A.N. Sweep — a 10-second room read that keeps you emotionally one move ahead 1. See the baseline: on entry, clock overall energy—faces, posture, chatter. 2. Contrast outliers: spot the 1–2 people whose body language deviates (arms crossed, eyes down). 3. Ask a micro-check: “Track so far?” or “Thumbs up to proceed?” Watch who hesitates. 4. Navigate the Next move: if you sensed drag, pause to probe; if green, accelerate; if tension, label it (“Looks like we’re wrestling with this piece”). 🎯 Try this today: Mid-meeting, run SCAN in silence; adjust one thing—pace, tone, or invite a question—based on what you saw.
Relationship BuildingM.I.N.T. — a four-step snap check for turning “I’ll think about it” into “Deal.” 1. Motive — open with how it advances THEIR goal (“Cuts your ticket backlog 25%”). 2. Impedance — remove the friction (“My team handles the rollout; you just review the doc”). 3. Norms — show peers already on board (“Ops and Legal signed off yesterday”). 4. Tradeback — offer a give they value (“You’ll get first dibs on the beta metrics”). 🎯 Try this today: Draft your next ask as four bullets labeled M, I, N, T. If one feels thin, bolster it before you hit send or speak.
Objection HandlingSenior execs skim for decisions, not back-story. Start every update with the ask (“Need green-light on the $120k pilot by Friday—30% ROI in 6 months”) and follow with two bullet facts as proof; stop talking and let them probe. It feels abrupt, but per the Pyramid Principle clarity beats suspense. 🎯 Try this today: Rewrite your next leadership email so the first line states the decision and deadline, the second line lists two data points that back it up—then hit send.
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