Skill Drill: Closing Techniques for B2B Distribution
Skill Drill: Closing Techniques for B2B Distribution
Direct Answer
This drill builds disciplined, low-pressure closing skills for reps selling into distribution accounts — wholesalers, redistributors, and multi-branch dealers who buy on margin, terms, and reliability rather than features. A sales manager runs it with a team of 4 to 12 reps in 30 to 60 minutes using live role-play.
The team walks away able to ask for a committed order — a stocking program, a standing PO, or a category switch — without discounting reflexively or stalling on "let me think about it."
Why This Drill Matters in B2B Distribution
In distribution, the close is rarely a single signature. A branch manager at a redistributor like Watsco, Ferguson, or White Cap is buying inventory they have to turn, finance, and shelve against competing SKUs. The rep who cannot ask for a specific, sized commitment ends up with "we'll try a few cases" — which dies in the warehouse and never reorders.
The bottleneck is not product knowledge; it's the moment of asking for a stocking commitment with terms attached.
Closing here leans on three named methodologies your team should recognize. The Challenger Sale (Dixon and Adamson, CEB) frames the close as the natural endpoint of a reframe — you've taught the buyer something about their margin or turn rate, so committing is logical. Sandler Selling contributes the up-front contract: agreeing on the decision and the timeline before you present, so the close is never a surprise.
SPIN Selling (Rackham) gives the need-payoff question that gets the buyer to state the value out loud before you ask for the order. A distribution rep who blends these stops "checking in" and starts asking for a defined first PO and a reorder cadence.
What You'll Need (5 min prep)
- Group size: 4 to 12 reps. Split into pairs; odd numbers get one trio with an observer.
- Materials: Printed scenario cards (3 buyer profiles below), one "Closing Cue Card" per rep listing the four named closes, and a timer projected on a screen.
- Room setup: Pairs facing each other, chairs angled so the leader can circulate. Whiteboard for the debrief tally.
- Handouts: The Closing Cue Card (Trial Close, Summary Close, Assumptive Stocking Close, Alternative-of-Choice Close) and the three buyer scenarios.
- Leader prep: Read the three buyer profiles aloud once before starting so reps hear the voice you want them to push against.
Round 1 — Set the Scene (5 min)
Open by naming the skill and the failure mode out loud. Read this verbatim:
"Today we're drilling the close — specifically asking a distribution buyer for a sized, committed order with terms. Most of us soften at the exact moment we should get specific. We say 'want to try a few?' instead of 'I'm recommending a four-SKU stocking program with net-45, reordered monthly.' By the end of this hour you'll ask for the real commitment without flinching.
We do reps, not theory."
Hand out the Closing Cue Card. Walk through the four closes in 90 seconds:
- Trial Close — temperature check: "If the margin math works, is there any reason we wouldn't set this up this quarter?"
- Summary Close — restate the agreed value, then ask: "So we're aligned on turn rate and fill rate — let's lock the first PO."
- Assumptive Stocking Close — assume the program: "I'll set you up with the top four SKUs at one pallet each to start."
- Alternative-of-Choice Close — two yeses: "Do you want to start with the four-SKU set or the full eight-SKU category reset?"
What good looks like: every rep can name all four closes back to you in their own words.
Round 2 — Run the Reps (20 min)
Reps work in pairs: one is the seller, one is the buyer reading a scenario card. Run three rounds of reps, swapping buyer/seller after each. Each rep must land at least one named close per scenario — no "I'll follow up."
The three buyer scenarios:
Scenario A — The Margin Skeptic. "Your stuff is fine, but I make more on the private-label line. Why would I give you shelf space?" (Seller must reframe turn rate and reorder velocity, then close.)
Scenario B — The Stall. "Send me the spec sheet and I'll get back to you next quarter." (Seller must use an up-front contract and an alternative-of-choice close to compress the timeline.)
Scenario C — The Cherry-Picker. "I'll take a couple cases of your best seller and see how it moves." (Seller must convert a token order into a sized stocking program with a reorder trigger.)
Leader circulates. When you hear a rep go soft, freeze the pair and model one line yourself, then have them run it again. What good looks like: the seller names a specific SKU count, a specific term (net-30/45), and a specific reorder cadence in the ask.
Round 3 — Pressure Test (10 min)
Now the buyers get harder and the leader plays the toughest buyer against your two weakest closers in front of the group. Read this buyer line cold and do not break:
"I've heard the pitch from four of your competitors this month. Everyone says their fill rate is better. Give me one reason I switch a category I've stocked for nine years — and don't tell me it's a relationship."
The rep must use a Challenger-style reframe (teach them a cost they're not seeing — dead SKUs, slow turns, freight on small reorders) and then close with a summary or alternative-of-choice. The group scores each attempt 1 to 5 on the whiteboard: did the ask name a real commitment?
What good looks like: the rep does not discount to win the close — they re-anchor on the buyer's economics and still ask.
Round 4 — Debrief & Lock It In (10 min)
Tally the whiteboard scores. Ask the group three questions and write the answers up:
- Which close felt most natural against the Cherry-Picker?
- Where did we default to discounting instead of re-anchoring?
- What's the one verbatim line you'll steal?
Each rep writes one specific close on the back of their cue card — exact words, exact SKU count, exact terms — to use on a real account this week. Collect commitments out loud, one per rep. Read this to close:
"The order you didn't ask for is the order you didn't get. This week, one real account, one sized ask. Bring the result to Monday's stand-up."
What good looks like: every rep leaves with a written, account-specific close and a named buyer to use it on.
Scaling It: 5-Minute, 30-Minute, and 60-Minute Versions
- 5-minute version (stand-up): Pairs run Scenario C once. One rep asks, one resists, then swap. Name the close out loud and sit down.
- 30-minute version: Run Round 1, Round 2 (two scenarios instead of three), and a five-minute debrief. Skip the group pressure test.
- 60-minute version: All four rounds, plus rotate every rep through the Round 3 pressure test against the leader so no one hides.
Common Mistakes & Coaching Cues
- Asking for "an order" instead of a sized program. Coach: every ask names SKU count, terms, and reorder cadence.
- Discounting at the first stall. Coach: re-anchor on turn rate and freight cost before you ever touch price.
- Skipping the up-front contract. Coach: agree on the decision and timeline before presenting, Sandler-style, so the close isn't a surprise.
- Treating a trial order as a win. Coach: a few cases with no reorder trigger is a loss; convert it to a stocking commitment.
- Going quiet after the ask. Coach: ask, then stop talking — let the buyer answer the alternative-of-choice.
- Confusing rapport with progress. Coach: a friendly branch manager who won't commit shelf space is a polite no, not a yes.
FAQ
How is closing in distribution different from closing a software deal? You're asking a buyer to commit physical inventory, shelf space, and working capital they have to finance and turn. The ask must be sized — SKU count, pallet quantity, terms, and reorder cadence — not just "do we have a deal?"
What if my reps don't know the buyer's margin math? Then they're not ready to close. Run a discovery drill first so they can reframe on turn rate and freight cost. The Challenger reframe only works when you know an economic fact the buyer is underweighting.
Isn't the assumptive close too aggressive for relationship-driven distribution? Used as a stocking-program setup ("I'll start you with four SKUs at one pallet each"), it's a service, not pressure. It's aggressive only when there's no agreed value behind it.
How often should we run this drill? Every two to three weeks, rotating scenarios. Closing is a muscle; one workshop fades. Pair it with real-deal debriefs at Monday stand-up.
What if a rep refuses to ask and just keeps presenting? Freeze the role-play and have them ask the very next sentence as an alternative-of-choice close. The fix is reps, not lectures — make them say the words on the spot.
Can I run this with a mixed team of new and veteran reps? Yes. Put new reps on the Alternative-of-Choice close only, and have veterans stack a Challenger reframe before they close. Pair a veteran buyer against a new seller for safe pressure.
Bottom Line
After this drill, your team can ask a distribution buyer for a specific, sized, terms-attached stocking commitment — and re-anchor on economics instead of discounting when they hit resistance. Re-run it every two to three weeks with fresh scenarios, and tie each session to a real account ask the reps report back on.
Sources
- The Challenger Sale — CEB/Gartner
- SPIN Selling — Neil Rackham / Huthwaite
- Sandler Training — Up-Front Contracts
- Miller Heiman / Korn Ferry Sales Methodology
- RAIN Group — Sales Negotiation & Closing
- Gong — Closing & Sales Conversation Data
- Harvard Business Review — Sales Negotiation
- Association for Talent Development (ATD)
*B2B distribution closing skill drill — a runnable team training exercise for wholesale and distribution sales teams, with verbatim scripts, timing, and coaching cues.*