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The Cost-of-Inaction Business Case — 60-Min Training

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The Cost-of-Inaction Business Case

A 60-Minute Team Working Session Where Every Rep Quantifies What the Prospect's Status Quo Is Costing Them in Real Dollars So the Deal Stops Losing to "Do Nothing"

Why Run This Session

Your single biggest competitor is not the other vendor. It is the prospect's status quo. Industry win-loss data consistently shows that 40% to 60% of qualified, well-run deals end in *no decision* — the buyer simply chooses to keep doing what they were already doing.

Reps lose to "do nothing" for one reason: they sell the value of their solution but never quantify the cost of the problem. The prospect agrees the product is good, agrees it would help, and then declines anyway — because "good to have" never beats "we're fine for now." The only thing that beats the status quo is a number: a concrete, prospect-specific dollar figure for what *not deciding* costs every month it continues.

This session forces every rep to build that number for a real, live deal. They leave with a quantified cost-of-inaction (COI) case they can take into their next call.

What Reps Will Walk Out With

Who Should Be in the Room

The full sales team, the sales manager facilitating, and ideally one person from finance or revenue operations who can sanity-check the math. Every rep must bring one real, currently open deal that is stalled, slow, or showing "we're happy with how we do it today" signals. No hypothetical deals — the session only works on live pipeline.

Before the Meeting (Manager Prep — 15 Minutes)

  1. Ask every rep to pick one real open deal and have its CRM record open.
  2. Print or share the COI worksheet (the four-part formula below).
  3. Pull two or three of your own closed-lost-to-no-decision deals as teaching examples.
  4. Have a whiteboard or shared doc ready for the live build.

The 60-Minute Agenda

This session runs 0:00 to 1:00. The agenda blocks below sum to exactly 60 minutes.

Block 1 — Frame the Real Competitor (0:00-0:07, 7 minutes)

Open with the data: most lost deals are not lost to a rival, they are lost to inaction. Put up one of your own closed-lost-to-no-decision deals and ask the room: "What number did we never put in front of this buyer?" The answer is always "none." Establish the session's single rule: no number, no urgency.

Block 2 — Teach the Four-Part COI Formula (0:07-0:19, 12 minutes)

Walk the team through the formula they will use for the rest of the session:

  1. Hard cost leak — direct dollars the status quo burns now: wasted spend, redundant tools, overtime, error rework, penalties.
  2. Productivity drag — hours lost to the problem, multiplied by a loaded labor rate. (Loaded rate, not salary — include benefits and overhead.)
  3. Opportunity cost — revenue, deals, or growth the problem actively prevents.
  4. Risk exposure — the probability-weighted cost of a bad outcome the status quo leaves open (a breach, a churn event, a compliance miss).

Total the four, express it per month, and that is the cost of inaction. The decision reframes instantly: it is no longer "spend money on a tool" — it is "stop the bleeding."

Block 3 — Solo Build on a Real Deal (0:19-0:35, 16 minutes)

Each rep fills out the COI worksheet for their chosen deal. They write down what they actually know, and — critically — flag every input they are *guessing* at. Manager and the finance partner circulate, pressure-test the math, and challenge soft numbers. The goal is a defensible figure, not an inflated one.

Block 4 — Pair Pressure-Test (0:35-0:48, 13 minutes)

Reps pair up. One plays a skeptical CFO; the other presents the COI number and defends it. The CFO's job is to attack: "Where did that hours figure come from?" "That's a worst case, not a real cost." Then swap.

Every weak input that gets exposed becomes a discovery question the rep still needs to ask. This block converts a fragile estimate into a credible case.

Block 5 — Map the Missing Discovery Questions (0:48-0:56, 8 minutes)

As a group, list the discovery questions that surface real COI inputs — for example: "How many hours a week does your team spend on this today?" "What did the last failure cost you?" "If this stays unsolved for another two quarters, what does that prevent?" Each rep writes the two or three questions they must ask on their deal's next call.

Block 6 — Commit and Close (0:56-1:00, 4 minutes)

Each rep states out loud: their deal, their COI number, and their single next action with a date. Manager records every commitment for the next forecast call.

Agenda check: 7 + 12 + 16 + 13 + 8 + 4 = 60 minutes.

The COI Worksheet

SectionPromptYour Deal's Number
Hard cost leakDirect dollars wasted monthly by the status quo$______ /mo
Productivity dragHours lost weekly x loaded labor rate x 4.3$______ /mo
Opportunity costRevenue/growth the problem blocks monthly$______ /mo
Risk exposureProbability x cost of the bad outcome, monthly$______ /mo
Total COISum of the four, per month$______ /mo
AnnualizedTotal x 12$______ /yr
ConfidenceWhich inputs are solid vs. guessed?______

How to Present the Number to the Buyer

The COI case fails when it sounds like a sales trick. Three rules:

  1. Build it with them, not at them. Walk the buyer through each input and ask them to confirm or correct it. A number the buyer helped build is a number the buyer defends internally.
  2. Be conservative on purpose. Use the low end of every range. A defensible $18,000/month beats an inflated $45,000/month that one skeptical stakeholder can dismantle — and dismantle your credibility with it.
  3. Frame the decision as a comparison, not a purchase. "Your status quo costs roughly $18,000 a month. Our solution is $4,000 a month. The real question is whether the $14,000 monthly gap is worth acting on this quarter." That sentence is what beats "do nothing."

Manager Coaching Notes

The Bottom Line

Deals do not stall because the buyer dislikes your product. They stall because no one ever made the cost of the problem feel as real as the cost of the solution. This session gives every rep a repeatable formula, a defensible number, and the discovery questions to back it up — so the next time a prospect says "we're fine for now," your rep has a figure that says otherwise.

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