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The First-Meeting Agenda Lock: Running a 60-Minute Team Working Session Where Every Rep Writes and Pressure-Tests the Pre-Sent Agenda That Stops Discovery Calls From Getting Hijacked, Downgraded, or Turned Into a Premature Demo — a 60-Minute Sales Training

📖 1,167 words⏱ 5 min read5/22/2026

The First-Meeting Agenda Lock

A 60-minute team working session for sales managers. The outcome: every rep leaves with a written, buyer-confirmed agenda template they will send before their next three first meetings — and the words to use when a prospect tries to rewrite it on the call.

Why This Session Exists

Most first meetings are lost in the first four minutes, before discovery ever starts. The prospect opens with "so just show me the product" or "I've only got 20 minutes, what've you got?" — and an unprepared rep folds, jumps to a demo, and burns the only at-bat they will get with a fresh buyer.

The fix is not a better demo. The fix is a pre-sent agenda the buyer has already agreed to, so the meeting runs on the rep's structure, not the prospect's improvisation.

An agenda sent and confirmed before the call does three things: it sets the expectation that the rep will ask questions first, it gives the buyer a reason to bring the right people, and it gives the rep a written reference to point back to when the call drifts. This session makes every rep build that artifact and rehearse defending it.

What Reps Walk Out With

The 60-Minute Agenda

The session runs 0:00 to 1:00. Every block is timed. The manager keeps a visible timer.

TimeBlockMinutes
0:00–0:06Open: the cost of an unstructured first meeting6
0:06–0:18Teach: the four parts of a winning pre-sent agenda12
0:18–0:34Build: each rep writes the agenda for a real upcoming meeting16
0:34–0:46Pair pressure-test: partners attack each other's agendas12
0:46–0:58Live drill: defending the agenda against "just demo it"12
0:58–1:00Commit: each rep names three meetings they will send it to2
Total60

Block 1 — Open (0:00–0:06)

Put one number on the board: the percentage of first meetings on the team that converted to a real second step last quarter. Then ask one question — "How many of you sent a written agenda before your last first meeting?" The honest answer is usually almost none. That gap is the session. Do not lecture; just make the cost visible and move on.

Block 2 — Teach the four parts (0:06–0:18)

Walk the team through the only four things a first-meeting agenda needs:

  1. Purpose line. One sentence on why the meeting exists, framed around the buyer's problem — not "intro call" but "confirm whether the renewal-leakage problem you mentioned is worth solving this quarter."
  2. What we will cover. Three to four bullets, and the first bullet is always discovery questions, never a demo. This is the load-bearing part.
  3. What we need from you. Names the right attendees and any context the rep needs ("anyone who owns the budget for this should be on the call").
  4. What you will leave with. A clear, low-pressure payoff — "a candid read on whether this is even a fit, and if so, the two or three numbers we'd need to build a business case."

Show one strong example and one weak example side by side. The weak one says "Agenda: 1) Intro 2) Demo 3) Next steps." The strong one earns the discovery.

Block 3 — Build (0:18–0:34)

Every rep picks one real first meeting on their calendar in the next two weeks and writes the full agenda using the four-part structure. No templates from the internet — their words, their deal, their buyer's language. The manager circulates and reads over shoulders, flagging any agenda where bullet one is a demo.

Block 4 — Pair pressure-test (0:34–0:46)

Reps pair up and swap agendas. Each partner plays a skeptical buyer and attacks: "This looks like a sales pitch." "Why do I need to bring my finance person?" "Can we skip the questions and just see it?" The author defends and edits in real time. Six minutes per direction.

Block 5 — Live drill (0:46–0:58)

The manager runs live two-minute role-plays. The manager plays a prospect who opens the call with "I've only got 20 minutes, just show me the product." The rep must hold the agenda without sounding rigid. The winning move sounds like: "Happy to — and the fastest way to make those 20 minutes worth it is two or three quick questions first, so what I show you is actually relevant and not a generic tour.

Fair?" Rotate three or four reps. Debrief what worked.

Block 6 — Commit (0:58–1:00)

Each rep states out loud the three upcoming meetings they will send the agenda to before end of week. The manager writes the names on the board. That public commitment is the accountability hook.

The Manager's Role

Counter-Case: When This Goes Wrong

How It Connects to the Rest of the System

This session pairs directly with the pre-call plan huddle (internal prep) and the discovery call frameworks — the agenda is the buyer-facing contract that protects the discovery work. Run it before a quarter of heavy new-pipeline activity, and re-inspect agendas in the forecast meeting.

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should we run this? Once, then reinforce it in deal reviews. It is a habit-installer, not a recurring meeting.

What if the prospect ignores the agenda anyway? Then the rep references it live on the call. The agenda's value is partly the email and partly the reference point mid-conversation.

Does this work for inbound demo requests? Yes — even when the buyer asked for a demo, the agenda reframes the first call as "a few questions so the demo is relevant," which protects deal quality.

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