Which question should I ask to test a rep’s understanding of the competitor landscape?
Direct Answer
Ask your rep: "If our top competitor just released an AI-powered forecasting module that claims 40% less pipeline leakage, walk me through the specific three accounts in our pipeline where that would hurt us most—and exactly what you’d do to neutralize it." This forces them to map competitor moves to real deals, not recite a generic SWOT.
A strong rep will name the accounts, cite specific data points (e.g., "Account X has a 60-day close window and uses their legacy tool"), and propose counter-strategies tied to your product’s unique strengths. A weak rep will fumble, give vague answers, or default to "we have better support."
The 2027 RevOps Reality Check
By 2027, the competitor market is no longer a static list of rivals—it’s a dynamic battlefield shaped by AI embedded in every funnel stage, vendor consolidation (think Salesforce buying a Gong competitor or HubSpot acquiring a Clari-like forecasting tool), buying committees averaging 11–14 stakeholders (Gartner), and sales cycles stretching 8–14 months for enterprise deals (McKinsey).
Your rep’s ability to navigate this directly impacts win rates. A MEDDPICC-trained rep who can map competitor threats to specific deal stages (e.g., "Competitor X’s new AI feature threatens our Champion access in Account Y") is worth 3x a rep who just says "they’re cheaper."
The One Test Question That Exposes True Competitor Fluency
The question above works because it tests three layers of understanding:
- Account-level specificity: Can they recall which accounts are vulnerable? This requires CRM hygiene (e.g., Salesforce data on competitor usage) and active pipeline reviews.
- Feature-to-deal mapping: Do they know the competitor’s new capability and how it maps to your product’s gaps? For example, if Clari launches an AI win-rate predictor, can they explain why your Gong-powered deal scoring still wins on
Championvalidation? - Actionable counter-strategy: Do they have a playbook? A strong rep might say: "For Account X, I’ll schedule a technical demo with their VP of Sales Ops to show our
Championdata integration with Salesforce—something their tool can’t do yet."
Why This Works in 2027
- AI in the funnel: Competitors now use AI to predict churn, upsell, and competitor moves. Your rep must counter with real-time data from Outreach or SalesLoft sequence analytics.
- Vendor consolidation: A rep who only tracks "Salesforce vs. HubSpot" misses that Microsoft just acquired a Gong-like call analytics tool. The question forces them to think about ecosystem threats.
- Longer cycles: With 12-month deals, a competitor’s new feature can kill a deal in month 8. The rep must have a risk mitigation plan for each stage.
How to Evaluate the Rep’s Answer
Use a scoring rubric based on three tiers:
Tier 1: The "Pass" Answer
- Names 2–3 accounts with specific deal values (e.g., "Account A is a $500K deal in
Negotiationstage—they use Salesforce but just added Clari forecasting. I’d schedule a joint call with our CSM to show how our Gong-poweredChampionvalidation reduces their risk.") - Cites real data from Gong Labs or Gartner (e.g., "Gong found that deals with
Championaccess close 2.5x faster.") - Proposes a MEDDPICC-aligned counter (e.g., "We’ll strengthen our
Economic Buyerrelationship by showing ROI calc that proves 30% lower TCO over 3 years.")
Tier 2: The "Partial" Answer
- Names one account but no deal stage or value.
- Mentions the competitor feature but can’t explain why it matters (e.g., "They have AI forecasting, but we have better support.")
- No specific counter-strategy—just "we’ll do a demo."
Tier 3: The "Fail" Answer
- No accounts named. Generic statements like "We compete well on price."
- Unaware of the competitor’s new feature.
- Blames the product or marketing for lack of competitor intel.
Building a Competitor Fluency Loop for 2027
The best reps don’t just answer the question once—they build a continuous learning loop. Here’s the process:
This loop ensures the rep’s competitor knowledge stays current. For example, if Outreach launches a new AI sequence optimizer, the rep logs it, maps it to deals in Proposal stage, and updates their playbook. Winning by Design frameworks recommend this as a quarterly ritual for RevOps teams.
Common Pitfalls in Competitor Testing
- Asking "Who are our top three competitors?" – This tests memory, not application. A rep can list names but fail to connect them to deals.
- Using hypothetical scenarios – "What if Competitor X drops price?" is useless. Real deals with real data are the only valid test.
- Ignoring AI’s role – By 2027, AI tools like Clari or Gong can auto-generate competitor intel. The test should be: can the rep *synthesize* that intel into action?
How to Train Reps for This Question
- Build a "Competitor Impact Matrix" in Salesforce – For each deal over $100K, tag the primary competitor and their latest feature. Use Gong to analyze call transcripts for competitor mentions.
- Run monthly "Deal Threat Drills" – Present a real deal with a new competitor move. Reps must verbally walk through their response in 3 minutes.
- Use MEDDPICC as the framework – For each competitor threat, map it to a
Metric(e.g., "Their AI cuts forecast error by 20%") and aChampion(e.g., "Our contact at the VP level prefers our data integration"). - Leverage Gartner and Forrester reports – Subscribe to their competitor analysis feeds. Reps should be able to cite a specific report: "Forrester’s Q1 2027 report shows their AI module has a 15% failure rate in multi-cloud environments."
FAQ
What if the rep says "I don’t know the competitor’s new feature"? That’s a red flag. In 2027, competitor news is available via Gong alerts, Salesforce Einstein, or your own RevOps team. The rep should have a weekly ritual of checking Bessemer or SaaStr blogs for updates.
Coach them to set up Google Alerts for top 5 competitors.
How do I handle a rep who names accounts but can’t propose a counter-strategy? This is a partial pass. Use the Challenger Sale framework: teach them to "challenge" the competitor’s narrative. For example, "Their AI forecasting is great, but it doesn’t integrate with Salesforce’s Opportunity stages the way ours does." Role-play this weekly.
Should I test this question in a live deal review or a mock scenario? Always use a real deal from the pipeline. Mock scenarios lack the pressure and data richness of actual accounts. In 2027, Clari can pull a random deal for you.
What if the rep uses an AI tool to answer? Allow it—but require them to cite the source (e.g., "I asked Gong’s AI assistant, and it flagged that Competitor X’s new feature targets our Technical Buyer in Account Y"). The test is *application*, not memory.
How often should I ask this question? Quarterly, but with a twist: each time, focus on a different competitor or a new feature. In 2027, vendor consolidation means a competitor might be acquired—test if they know the new parent company’s strategy.
The Role of AI in Competitor Intelligence (2027)
By 2027, AI tools like Clari’s Deal Risk module or Gong’s Competitor Radar can auto-flag deals at risk from competitor moves. But the rep must still interpret and act. For example, if Clari flags that Account X has a 60% win probability drop after Competitor Y’s launch, the rep must decide: do I escalate to an executive sponsor, or schedule a technical demo?
The test question above forces that human judgment.
Bottom Line
The single best test question forces reps to map competitor moves to specific accounts, deal stages, and counter-strategies—not recite a list. In 2027, with AI, consolidation, and long cycles, a rep who can’t do this will lose 30%+ of deals to competitors who can. Use the MEDDPICC framework and real data from Gong Labs or Gartner to evaluate their answer.
Coach the rest.
Sources
- Gartner: The Future of Sales in 2027
- Forrester: AI in the Revenue Funnel
- McKinsey: Sales Cycle Trends
- Gong Labs: Competitor Impact on Win Rates
- SaaStr: Vendor Consolidation in RevOps
- Bessemer: AI in Sales Tech
- Salesforce Blog: Competitor Intelligence in CRM
- Winning by Design: MEDDPICC Framework
*The one question that tests a rep’s competitor market understanding in 2027 is a specific, account-level scenario with a counter-strategy requirement.*
