What is the first question you ask when a prospect says they have no timeline?

Direct Answer
When a prospect says they have no timeline, the first question you must ask is: "What would need to be true in your business for this project to become a priority in the next 90 days?" This reframes the conversation from a passive "no timeline" to an active exploration of the triggers, consequences, and internal momentum required to move forward.
In the 2027 RevOps reality—where AI agents accelerate early-stage research, buying committees have grown to an average of 11 stakeholders, and vendor consolidation is forcing longer, more rigorous evaluations—a vague timeline is almost always a signal of unresolved internal friction, not a lack of interest.
Your job is to diagnose whether the friction is budgetary, political, or technical, and this question surfaces the specific condition that would break the logjam.
The 2027 Buying Reality: Why "No Timeline" Is a Red Flag
The classic "no timeline" objection has evolved. In 2027, B2B buying cycles have stretched by 20–40% compared to 2020, according to Gartner's latest buying group surveys. This isn't due to indecision—it's due to structural changes:
- AI in the funnel: Prospects now use AI agents (like Gong's Deal Intelligence or Clari's Revenue AI) to auto-generate shortlists, compare pricing, and even draft RFPs before a single sales call. This means they often have more data than you do when they say "no timeline." The real blocker is that their AI-driven research has surfaced a risk they haven't shared.
- Vendor consolidation: Companies are reducing their tech stacks by 15–25% (per Bessemer's 2026 Cloud Report). A "no timeline" prospect is likely in the middle of a stack audit, waiting for a renewal cycle, or holding out for a bundled deal from an incumbent.
- Buying committees: Forrester reports that the average B2B purchase now involves 11 decision-makers, up from 6 in 2020. "No timeline" often means one or two key stakeholders are absent, unconvinced, or blocked by a procurement gatekeeper who demands a formal RFP process.
Your first question must cut through this noise. It's not about pressuring for a date—it's about uncovering the specific condition that would trigger action.
The Decision Tree: Diagnosing the "No Timeline" Objection
Use this flowchart to navigate the first 5 minutes of the conversation. Each branch leads to a different follow-up strategy.
Why this works: The question forces the prospect to either articulate a real trigger (e.g., "We need to hit Q3 revenue targets") or reveal that they're still in the dark. In both cases, you gain control of the narrative.
The Trigger Loop: How to Build Momentum from a "No Timeline" Response
Once you've identified the condition, you need to create a feedback loop that turns "no timeline" into a sequence of small commitments. This is where MEDDPICC (Metrics, Economic Buyer, Decision Criteria, Decision Process, Paper Process, Identify Pain, Champion, Competition) becomes your framework.
Real-world example: A SaaS company selling to enterprise manufacturing prospects used this loop. When a VP of Operations said "no timeline," the rep asked the trigger question. The VP revealed they needed a $500K cost savings case to present to the CFO by end of quarter.
The rep built a Challenger Sale-style ROI model using the prospect's own data (downtime costs, manual labor hours). The VP became the champion, the deal closed in 45 days.
Three Real-World Follow-Up Strategies Based on the Trigger
1. The Budget/ROI Trigger: Build a Joint Business Case
If the condition is financial, don't ask for a budget number—ask for the cost of inaction. Use Clari's Revenue Intelligence to pull industry benchmarks, or Gong's Deal Intelligence to surface similar deals where ROI models accelerated timelines.
- Script: "If we could show that delaying this project by 6 months costs you $X in lost revenue or $Y in wasted labor, would that change the timeline?"
- Tool: Salesforce Revenue Cloud can model subscription vs. One-time costs, but a simple spreadsheet with their numbers is often more persuasive.
2. The Internal Alignment Trigger: Offer to Facilitate a Meeting
If the condition is "my boss needs to see it" or "procurement is dragging," your job is to become a resource, not a salesperson.
- Script: "Who else needs to be in the room for this to move forward? I can prepare a 15-minute overview that addresses their top concerns—no pricing, just the business case."
- Framework: MEDDPICC explicitly identifies the "Economic Buyer" and "Champion." Use this to map the committee and offer to present to the blocker directly.
3. The Technical/Implementation Trigger: Propose a Scoped Pilot
If the condition is "we're worried about integration" or "we need to see it work with our stack," a full rollout is too big. Offer a 30-day pilot focused on one specific pain point.
- Script: "Let's pick the one use case that would save your team the most time. I'll set up a pilot with your data, and we'll measure the results together. If it works, we build the business case from there."
- Tool: Outreach or Salesloft can automate the pilot follow-up sequences, but the key is to keep the scope tiny.
Why "No Timeline" Is Actually a Gift in 2027
In the current market, a prospect who says "no timeline" is often more qualified than one who says "next quarter." Here's why:
- They've done the research. AI agents mean they already know your competitors' pricing, features, and reviews. They're not wasting your time.
- They're not lying. The average B2B deal now takes 8–12 months (Gartner). A "no timeline" is honest—they don't know when the stars will align.
- You can control the triggers. By asking the right first question, you shift from passive to active. You become the person who helps them build the internal case, not the one who pushes for a close.
Bold truth: The reps who win in 2027 are the ones who stop asking for a date and start asking for a condition. The date will follow.
FAQ
What if the prospect says "no timeline" but also says "we're not interested"? That's a different objection—likely a budget or priority issue. Ask: "What would need to change for this to be relevant?" If they can't answer, it's a soft no. Move on.
Should I push for a specific date after they answer the trigger question? No. Push for a micro-commitment, not a date. For example: "Can we schedule a 30-minute meeting in two weeks to review the business case?" Dates come from actions, not pressure.
What if the trigger condition is "we need a new CEO" or "the market changes"? That's a true external blocker. Ask: "What's the earliest possible date that condition could change?" Set a reminder to follow up. Use Clari or Salesforce to automate the touchpoint.
How do I handle "no timeline" from a buying committee of 11 people? Identify the champion first. Ask the trigger question to the champion, then ask: "Who else on the committee would give a different answer?" This surfaces the blockers.
What if the prospect lies about the trigger? Cross-check with data. If they say "budget is fine" but their company just laid off 10%, use Gong to review past calls for clues. Trust but verify.
Can AI help me predict the trigger before the call? Yes. Clari and Gong can analyze past deals with similar prospects to predict common triggers. Pre-call, review their LinkedIn for recent funding, layoffs, or leadership changes.
Sources
- Gartner: The B2B Buying Journey Has Changed Forever
- Forrester: The 2027 B2B Buying Committee Is 11 People
- McKinsey: B2B Sales Cycles Are 20% Longer Than Pre-Pandemic
- Gong Labs: How to Handle the "No Timeline" Objection
- Bessemer Venture Partners: 2026 Cloud Report on Vendor Consolidation
- SaaStr: The Only Question That Matters When a Prospect Says No Timeline
- Salesforce: Revenue Cloud for Deal Acceleration
- Challenger Sale: The Condition-Based Selling Framework
Bottom Line
The first question you ask when a prospect says "no timeline" must shift the conversation from a passive calendar to an active trigger. "What would need to be true for this to be a priority in the next 90 days?" forces them to reveal the real blocker—budget, alignment, or technical risk—and gives you a roadmap to build a business case.
In the 2027 RevOps reality, where AI has already done the research and committees have multiplied, the reps who win are the ones who diagnose conditions, not dates.
*RevOps 2027: The first question to ask when a prospect says they have no timeline is a trigger-based diagnostic, not a date push.*
