The Sales Process Audit Reboot — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
Section 1 — Frame the Reboot (5 minutes)
Open by naming the problem out loud. Most audits die because reps see the auditor as a threat, not a partner. Jason Jordan's research in *Cracking the Sales Management Code* found that managers who audit activities without linking them to objectives create defensive behavior in 60-70% of reps.
We are rebooting the posture before we touch the process.
State the contract with the room: this audit produces two shipped fixes in 14 days, or it did not happen. Write that on the whiteboard. Findings without turnaround are the failure mode.
Section 2 — The Five Audit Dimensions (15 minutes)
Walk the room through each dimension. Spend three minutes per dimension. Use the verbatim scripts.
- Stage hygiene — Are deals sitting in stages that no longer describe the buyer's reality? Ask: *"Show me three deals in Stage 3 right now. What did the buyer do to earn that stage?"* If the rep cannot point to an exit criterion the buyer completed, the stage is decorative. Mark Roberge's *Sales Acceleration Formula* calls this the buyer-verifiable outcome test.
- Activity-to-outcome math — Do the inputs predict the outputs? Pull 90 days of activity data and ask: *"How many discovery calls did it take to produce one closed-won last quarter? Is that number trending up, flat, or down?"* If nobody knows, the funnel is a feeling, not a model.
- Playbook adoption — Is the documented playbook actually running on calls? Listen to four randomly sampled Gong/Chorus calls per rep. Ask: *"Where in this call did the rep run the discovery framework we shipped in Q1?"* If you cannot find it in 3 of 4 calls, adoption is the problem, not the playbook.
- Coaching consistency — Are 1:1s coaching the rep or status-checking the forecast? Pull last month's 1:1 notes. Ask the manager: *"What skill did you coach this rep on, and what did the next call look like?"* No skill named = no coaching happened.
- Tech-stack drag — Is the stack helping or taxing? Ask reps: *"Walk me through every tool you opened to close your last deal. How many minutes of admin per deal?"* Pavilion's RevOps community benchmarks healthy stacks at under 45 minutes of rep admin per closed deal in $25K-$500K ACV.
The thread connecting all five: you are auditing the system, not the human. Say that out loud twice.
Section 3 — The Auditor's Posture (10 minutes)
Run a live role-play. One person plays auditor, one plays AE. The auditor's job is to ask three curiosity questions before any judgment question. Force Management's MEDDICC coaches teach this as "diagnose before you prescribe."
- Curiosity opener — *"Walk me through how you'd describe our sales process to a new hire on day one."* You learn what reps actually believe versus what the deck says.
- Mirror back — Repeat what you heard in their words. *"So you're saying Stage 3 means the buyer agreed to a technical eval — did I get that right?"* If the rep corrects you, that gap is the finding.
- Ask permission to dig — *"Can I pull up the last deal you lost and walk it backwards with you?"* Permission converts the rep from defendant to co-investigator.
- No gotcha language — Replace *"Why didn't you..."* with *"What got in the way of..."* — same data, zero defensiveness. McKinsey's 2024 sales operations research found teams using non-judgmental audit language self-reported 40% more honest pipeline data.
Debrief the role-play. Ask the room: *"What did the curious version surface that a gotcha version would have missed?"* Always something.
Section 4 — Findings to Action Turnaround SLA (10 minutes)
This is where most audits collapse. Findings get filed; nothing ships. Install a hard SLA on the wall.
- Day 0-3: Findings doc — One page per dimension. Each finding has evidence (the deal ID, the call timestamp, the metric), not adjectives.
- Day 5: Team readout — 30-minute live session with the whole sales team. Not email. Not Slack. Faces.
- Day 5: Pick exactly two fixes — Resist the urge to ship eight. Two fixes shipped beats eight fixes queued. Every audit picks two; the rest go in the backlog.
- Day 14: Both fixes live — Process change, playbook update, dashboard tweak, whatever the fix is, it is in production by day 14 or you owe the team a written explanation.
- Next quarter: Verify — The first finding of the next audit is whether last quarter's two fixes stuck.
Section 5 — What to Share Back With the Team (15 minutes)
Build the readout deck live. Five slides, no more. Every team should be able to recite this in 10 minutes flat.
- Slide 1 — What we audited and why — Name the five dimensions. Remind the team this is a system audit, not a person audit. Set the tone the auditor's posture worked to create.
- Slide 2 — What is working — Lead with strength. Pavilion's RevOps community consistently sees teams that lead readouts with wins get 3x more engagement on the fixes that follow. *"Stage 4 conversion is up 18 points quarter-over-quarter — here is what you're doing that is working."*
- Slide 3 — Where the system is drag — Be specific. *"Reps are spending 62 minutes of admin per closed deal — 17 above benchmark. The drag is in handoff from SDR to AE."* Evidence, not adjectives.
- Slide 4 — The two fixes we are shipping — Name them, name the owner, name the due date. *"Fix 1: SDR-to-AE handoff form goes live Tuesday. Owner: Priya. Fix 2: Stage 3 exit criteria rewritten with buyer-verifiable language. Owner: Marcus. Both live by [date]."*
- Slide 5 — How you'll know it worked — The single metric that will move if the fix lands. *"If the handoff fix works, admin minutes per deal drops below 50 by next quarter's audit."*
Practice the readout once in the room. Time it. If it runs long, cut a slide.
Section 6 — Close the Loop (5 minutes)
Three closing moves. Do all three before the room leaves.
- Owners on the wall — Write the two fix owners and due dates on a visible artifact. Slack channel pin, physical whiteboard, Notion page — somewhere the team sees daily.
- Calendar the next audit — Quarterly cadence only works if it is on the calendar before this one ends. Book it now.
- One sentence each from the room — Go around: *"What is one thing you'll do differently because of this audit?"* Public commitment beats private intention every time.
End with the contract you opened with: two fixes, 14 days, or the audit did not happen.
FAQ
Q: How long should a full audit take to execute end-to-end? A: Three to five business days of focused work for one auditor on a 10-25 person sales team. Larger orgs split by segment. The 60-minute training above is the kickoff and readout structure — the actual data pull and call review happens between.
Q: Who should run the audit — the sales leader or RevOps? A: RevOps owns the data dimensions (stage hygiene, activity math, tech drag). The sales leader owns the human dimensions (playbook adoption, coaching consistency). They co-deliver the readout. Splitting it prevents the "boss is grading us" defensiveness.
Q: What if we find more than two fixes worth shipping? A: Backlog them with priority scores, but still only ship two this cycle. Jason Jordan's research is blunt on this: organizations that ship two fixes per audit cycle compound 4x faster than organizations that queue ten and ship none.
Q: How do we handle a rep who is the finding — meaning the system is fine but one person is not running it? A: That is a coaching conversation, not an audit finding. Pull it out of the audit readout entirely and run it as a 1:1. Mixing personnel issues into a system audit poisons the posture for the whole team.
Q: What if leadership wants a monthly audit instead of quarterly? A: Push back. Monthly audits do not leave room for the 14-day fix cycle to actually land and measure. Quarterly gives you one audit, two fixes, a verification window, and time to rest.
McKinsey's sales ops research shows quarterly cadence outperforms monthly on fix-stick rate by roughly 2x.
Q: How do we know the auditor's posture is actually working? A: Reps volunteer information they would not have volunteered before. If three reps in a row surface a problem the auditor did not ask about, the posture is working. If reps are still giving one-word answers in week two, the posture is not yet earned.
Sources
- Jordan, Jason and Vazzana, Michelle. *Cracking the Sales Management Code: The Secrets to Measuring and Managing Sales Performance.* McGraw Hill, 2011. The activities-objectives-results framework underpinning the activity-to-outcome math dimension.
- Roberge, Mark. *The Sales Acceleration Formula: Using Data, Technology, and Inbound Selling to Go from $0 to $100 Million.* Wiley, 2015. Buyer-verifiable outcomes and stage-exit criteria.
- Pavilion RevOps Community benchmarks (2024-2025). Tech-stack drag baselines for $25K-$500K ACV B2B SaaS, including the under-45-minute admin-per-deal target.
- Force Management — MEDDICC and Command of the Message methodology. Diagnose-before-prescribe coaching posture used in the audit role-play.
- McKinsey & Company. "The state of B2B sales operations." McKinsey Insights, 2024. Findings on non-judgmental audit language and quarterly versus monthly audit cadence fix-stick rates.
- Gartner. "Future of Sales 2025" research. Sales process audit cadence benchmarks across B2B SaaS segments.
- Adamson, Brent and Dixon, Matthew. *The Challenger Sale.* Portfolio, 2011. Background on the cost of process drift in complex B2B sales motions.
- Salesforce State of Sales Report, 8th Edition (2024). Industry data on rep admin minutes per closed deal and tech-stack saturation.