The Sales Whiteboarding Reboot — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The Sales Whiteboarding Reboot is a 60-minute, run-it-tomorrow training that rewires AEs and SEs to draw, not click. Reps drill the "tell, then draw" rule, master four high-leverage whiteboards (current-state/future-state, value-chain, before/after, decision-tree), build a "drawing while talking" muscle on physical and virtual canvases (Miro, FigJam), and leave with a one-page playbook.
The 5/15/10/10/15/5 minute block runs cleanly on Zoom or in-room and produces measurable lift in discovery depth, multi-thread coverage, and demo-to-opportunity conversion within two weeks.
SECTION 1 — Cold Open & The Tell-Then-Draw Rule (5 min)
Open with a 90-second story. Tell the room about the last deal where a rep pulled out a marker, drew the prospect's process on the wall, and the economic buyer leaned in and grabbed the pen. That moment — the pen handoff — is the win condition for this hour.
Then introduce the rule that governs everything else: tell, then draw. Inspired by Dan Roam's "Back of the Napkin" and reinforced by Force Management's "Whiteboard Hook" methodology, the rule is simple: say the sentence out loud first, then sketch the picture that proves it.
Reps who draw silently look like architects. Reps who narrate without drawing sound like podcasts. Reps who do both, in that order, sound like consultants.
- Tell first — "Most RevOps teams we work with have three disconnected systems and one human stitching them together."
- Then draw — three boxes, one stick figure in the middle, arrows everywhere.
- Then ask — "How close is that to your world?"
Set the bar: by the end of the hour, every rep will have run this loop four times, on four canvas types, against a live peer.
SECTION 2 — The Four High-Leverage Whiteboards (15 min)
Walk through the four diagrams that win deals in $25K–$500K ACV B2B SaaS. Drawn from Corporate Visions' "Power Messaging" and Tim Riesterer's insight that buyers need contrast, not features, these four cover ~90% of sales scenarios.
1. Current-State / Future-State. Two columns. Left: their world today (manual, fragmented, slow).
Right: their world with you (automated, unified, fast). The gap in the middle is your value. Drawing script: "Today, you're here [draw left column].
Where you want to be is here [draw right column]. The bridge is what we'll talk about for the next 20 minutes."
2. Value-Chain. A horizontal arrow with 4–6 stages of the customer's process. Mark where pain accumulates with red dots; mark where your product inserts with green stars. Drawing script: "Your revenue flows left to right. Pain stacks up here [red dot], here [red dot]. We collapse three of these stages into one."
3. Before / After. A timeline with a "you adopt us" inflection point. Plot two or three metrics (cycle time, headcount, error rate) above and below. Drawing script: "Before: 21-day close cycle, 4 SDRs, 12% reply rate. After: 9 days, 4 SDRs, 31%. Same team, different motion."
4. Decision-Tree. A branching diagram exposing the consequence of inaction. Root: "Do nothing." Branches: cost goes up, talent leaves, board asks questions. Drawing script: "If we don't fix this in Q3, here's what Q4 looks like [draw three branches, each worse]."
SECTION 3 — Virtual Whiteboarding on Miro & FigJam (10 min)
Half your meetings are remote. Drawing in Miro or FigJam is a different sport than a physical wall and needs its own reps.
- Pre-stage one frame per whiteboard — load the four templates above as locked frames before the call so you're not fumbling shapes live.
- Use the pen tool, not sticky notes — sticky notes look like a backlog; freehand strokes look like thinking.
- Share early, share messy — paste the link in chat at minute three, not minute thirty. Invite the buyer to point with their cursor.
- End with a screenshot — drop the final canvas into the follow-up email within 30 minutes. Peter Cohan's "Great Demo!" rule applies here: the artifact is the deliverable.
Cover one trap: do not screen-share a finished diagram. A pre-built picture is a slide wearing a costume. Draw at least 60% of the strokes live.
SECTION 4 — The Drawing-While-Talking Muscle (10 min)
This is the section reps will resist and remember. Most AEs go silent the moment a marker hits a board. The fix is mechanical.
- Drill 1: Narrate every stroke. Pair reps. One draws a value-chain while saying out loud what each shape represents. No silent strokes allowed. Two minutes each side.
- Drill 2: Draw upside down. Stand on the buyer's side of the table and draw inverted. It is uncomfortable, it slows you down, and it forces eye contact. Two minutes.
- Drill 3: One-color rule. Use only a black marker for structure, then add a single red mark for the "so what." Forces editorial discipline. Two minutes.
- Drill 4: The pen handoff. Finish a sketch, then say, "What did I get wrong?" and physically extend the marker. The rep who lands the handoff wins the round.
SECTION 5 — Live Role-Play & Peer Coaching (15 min)
Three rounds, five minutes each. Pair reps; one plays AE, one plays VP RevOps at a 400-person SaaS company evaluating a $120K platform.
- Round 1 — Current-state/Future-state. AE has 4 minutes to draw and narrate, 1 minute peer feedback. Coaches score on: spoke first, drew second, asked a question within 90 seconds.
- Round 2 — Value-Chain or Before/After (rep picks). Same structure. Coaches score on: at least one red mark, at least one number, pen offered to buyer.
- Round 3 — Decision-Tree under objection. Buyer says, "We're going to wait until next year." AE must draw the cost of waiting. Coaches score on: composure, branch logic, recovery.
SECTION 6 — Commitments & The One-Page Playbook (5 min)
Close by handing every rep a one-page playbook: the four diagrams, the tell-then-draw rule, the four drills, and a 30-day commitment line. Each rep writes one named account where they will run a whiteboard within seven days and the specific diagram they will use.
Manager follow-up: review call recordings the next two Fridays. Track three metrics — whiteboards drawn per week, pen handoffs achieved, next-meeting rate after whiteboarded calls. Expect a 15–25% lift in discovery-to-demo conversion within 30 days based on Force Management deployment data.
FAQ
Q: What if the buyer hates whiteboarding? A: Roughly 1 in 8 buyers prefer slides. Read the room in the first 90 seconds — if they take notes on a laptop and never look up, switch to a clean two-slide visual built from the same diagram.
Q: How do we whiteboard on a phone-only call? A: You can't. Convert the call to a 15-minute video follow-up, send a Miro link in advance, and tee up one diagram. Half a whiteboard beats none.
Q: Should SEs whiteboard or just AEs? A: Both. SEs draw the technical value-chain; AEs draw the business current-state/future-state. The handoff between them in a single call is a buying signal generator.
Q: How do we coach this at scale across 40+ reps? A: Cohort drills weekly, recordings scored against the four-criteria rubric (spoke / drew / asked / handed off), and a public leaderboard on pen-handoffs-per-week.
Q: What tools beyond Miro and FigJam are worth piloting? A: Lucidspark for enterprise-stack alignment, and a 4x6 paper notebook for in-person calls — analog still wins for trust.
Sources
- Roam, Dan. *The Back of the Napkin: Solving Problems and Selling Ideas with Pictures*. Portfolio, 2008.
- Force Management. "The Whiteboard Hook: Compelling Sales Conversations." forcemanagement.com training framework.
- Corporate Visions. "Power Messaging: Conversations That Win the Complex Sale." Riesterer, T. & Peterson, E.
- Riesterer, Tim. *The Three Value Conversations*. McGraw-Hill, 2015.
- Cohan, Peter. *Great Demo! How to Create and Execute Stunning Software Demonstrations*. 3rd ed., 2018.
- Miro. "Sales Discovery Templates Library." miro.com/templates/sales.
- FigJam by Figma. "Workshop and Discovery Templates." figma.com/figjam.
- Gartner. "The B2B Buying Journey: Sense-Making and Visual Frameworks." Gartner Research, 2024.