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60-Min Sales Training: Qualifying with BANT in 2027

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This 60-minute Monday training rewires your team's discovery calls around a 2027-modernized BANT — one that treats Budget, Authority, Need, and Timing as a four-quadrant scoring lens rather than an interrogation checklist. By the end of the hour your reps will know exactly which BANT questions to ask, which to skip, and how to disqualify a deal in under nine minutes without burning the relationship.

1. Setup (5 min)

Open the meeting with a hard reset. Most teams have been running classic 1959 IBM BANT — Budget, Authority, Need, Timeline — like an airport-security pat-down. That is why your conversion from Stage 1 to Stage 2 is sub-22% and your average discovery-to-demo is taking 14 days.

The fix is not to abandon BANT. The fix is to modernize the four letters for a buying committee that now averages 6 to 10 stakeholders per the Bridge Group 2026 SDR Report.

Agenda on the whiteboard:

Warm-up question, go around the room (60 seconds each): "Tell me the last deal you disqualified and which BANT letter killed it." If anyone says "they ghosted me," that is not a BANT answer — that is a missed BANT signal. Mark it on the board.

2. Framework Teach (15 min)

Modern BANT is not a script and not a gate. It is a scoring lens you wear during discovery so you walk out of the call with a confidence score on each of the four letters from 0 to 3. A deal needs 8 of 12 to advance to Stage 2. Anything less and you either multi-thread or you disqualify.

Here is what each letter means in 2027 SaaS reality:

Show the framework diagram on screen:

flowchart TD A[Discovery Call Opens] --> B{Budget Quadrant} B -->|Cost of inaction quantified| B1[Score 3] B -->|Discretionary spend confirmed| B2[Score 2] B -->|Net-new with no CFO path| B3[Score 0-1] A --> C{Authority Quadrant} C -->|5+ named stakeholders| C1[Score 3] C -->|Champion + economic buyer named| C2[Score 2] C -->|Single contact, no map| C3[Score 0-1] A --> D{Need Quadrant} D -->|Pain in top-3 priorities| D1[Score 3] D -->|Pain quantified but not top-3| D2[Score 2] D -->|Vague pain, no metric| D3[Score 0-1] A --> E{Timing Quadrant} E -->|Dated compelling event| E1[Score 3] E -->|Internal initiative deadline| E2[Score 2] E -->|We'll buy someday| E3[Score 0-1] B1 & B2 & B3 & C1 & C2 & C3 & D1 & D2 & D3 & E1 & E2 & E3 --> F[Sum the 4 scores] F --> G{8 of 12 or higher?} G -->|Yes| H[Advance to Stage 2] G -->|No| I[Multi-thread or Disqualify]

The reason this works is that it forces a number instead of a feeling. A rep who comes back and says "great call, super qualified" is no longer allowed in your pipeline review. They have to say "B=2, A=1, N=3, T=2, total 8 of 12, advancing."

3. Verbatim Scripts (15 min)

Hand each rep the script card. These are word-for-word. Practice them out loud right now, twice, with the person next to you.

Budget — the cost-of-inaction question:

"Help me understand the scale of the problem on the other side. If you do nothing about this for the next two quarters, what does it cost you in hours, dollars, or missed revenue? I ask because the investment to fix it has to be smaller than the cost of leaving it broken, and right now I do not have the numerator."

Budget — the discretionary-spend probe:

"Quick logistics question — if we landed on the right solution today, would you be signing the contract or routing it to someone else? And do you have a dollar threshold under which you can sign without finance involvement?"

Authority — the committee-mapping line:

"Last three customers who looked exactly like you had a five-person buying committee — usually a VP champion, a director-level user, IT security, procurement, and a finance approver. Can you walk me through who plays each of those roles on your side, even if some of them are not in the loop yet?"

Authority — the economic-buyer flush:

"If we get to a proposal, who signs it? Not who recommends, who signs. And what does that person care about most — is it cost, risk, or speed?"

Need — the top-3 priority test:

"I want to be respectful of your time. Is solving this problem in the top three things you and your team are being measured on this quarter and next? If it's number seven on the list, I would rather we talk in three months when it moves up."

Need — the quantified-pain prompt:

"Tell me about the last time this pain showed up. What happened, who got pulled in, and what did it cost — in hours or dollars?"

Timing — the compelling-event probe:

"What forces a decision here by a specific date? A contract expiration, a board commitment, a regulatory deadline, a headcount change? No date, no decision — and I would rather know now than chase you for six months."

Timing — the no-decision pre-mortem:

"Six months from now, if we're not working together, what is the most likely reason? Walk me through that scenario."

Hand each rep a 3x5 card with these eight lines. They keep it on their desk for two weeks.

4. Role-Plays (15 min)

Three rounds of 4 minutes each, plus 60 seconds of observer feedback between rounds. Pair reps senior-junior so the senior models first, then the junior runs it.

Role-Play 1 — Budget Squeeze (4 min):

Scenario: You are selling a $48K/year revenue-intelligence platform to a VP of Sales at a 200-person Series B SaaS company. Two minutes in, the VP says "we don't really have budget allocated for this." Run the cost-of-inaction script verbatim. Goal: extract a dollar figure for the cost of doing nothing, and confirm whether this is net-new or rip-and-replace from an existing Gong, Clari, or Outreach seat.

Role-Play 2 — The One-Contact Trap (4 min):

Scenario: A director-level prospect from a 1,200-person company is excited, wants to "move fast," and refuses to bring anyone else into the call. Run the committee-mapping line. Goal: get the prospect to name at least four other humans by role, and surface the security review that always lives behind enterprise procurement in 2027.

Role-Play 3 — The "End of Q3" Mirage (4 min):

Scenario: Prospect says "we want to have something in place by end of Q3." Run the compelling-event probe. Goal: convert "end of Q3" into either (a) a dated, owned, consequenced event, or (b) an admission that the date is aspirational. If aspirational, push the deal to nurture.

Observer rubric — 1 point each, 5 possible:

Anyone scoring 3 or below repeats the role-play at end of week.

5. Common Pitfalls (5 min)

These are the failure modes I see every week in call reviews. Recognize them, name them, recover.

6. Action Items + Drill (5 min)

This week every rep runs the 5-Call BANT Drill.

The drill: On the next 5 discovery calls, the rep must (1) ask at least one verbatim line from each of the four letters, (2) log a 0-3 score per letter in the CRM within 10 minutes of the call ending, (3) post the total score and disposition in the team Slack channel #bant-drill, and (4) bring one call recording to Friday's pipeline review.

Accountability metric: By Friday I want to see 20 BANT-scored opportunities in the CRM (5 calls x 4 reps). Anyone with fewer than 5 logged calls runs the drill again next week. Anyone whose average score across 5 calls is below 6 of 12 sits with me 1:1 for a coaching block on Monday.

flowchart LR A[Monday Training Ends] --> B[Tuesday-Thursday: 5 Discovery Calls Each Rep] B --> C[Score 0-3 per letter logged in CRM within 10 min] C --> D[Post total + disposition in Slack #bant-drill] D --> E[Pull 1 call recording each] E --> F[Friday Pipeline Review] F --> G{Avg score >= 8 of 12?} G -->|Yes| H[Advance to Stage 2 review] G -->|No| I[Multi-thread coaching block Monday] H --> J[Next week: deeper objection-handling drill] I --> J

End the meeting on time. Do not run over. The cadence of "60 minutes Monday, 5 calls during the week, debrief Friday" is the engine. If you run 75 minutes today, reps lose trust that next week will end on time and they will mentally clock out. The training only compounds if it is predictable.

FAQ

Q: My team already uses MEDDPICC for enterprise — do I throw out BANT entirely?

No. Run a hybrid stack like the better-performing teams do: SDRs use modernized BANT for the first call (under 30 minutes, fast disqualification), and AEs layer MEDDPICC on top once the opportunity is in Stage 2. BANT does the screening; MEDDPICC manages the deal.

Trying to run full MEDDPICC on call one is why your SDR-to-AE handoff is broken — there is not enough time to capture all 8 letters in 30 minutes.

Q: What if my reps push back that "the prospect won't answer budget questions"?

That is the point of the modernized script. You are not asking "what's your budget." You are asking "what's the cost of inaction?" Buyers always answer cost-of-inaction questions because they get to vent. Once you have a dollar figure on the pain, you do not need their budget — your pricing either fits under the pain number or it does not.

Q: How do I keep this from becoming a one-off training that everyone forgets by Wednesday?

Two answers. First, the 5-Call Drill is not optional — it is your forcing function. Second, every Friday pipeline review opens with "read me the BANT score" before anyone talks about next steps. If you do those two things for four weeks straight, the language becomes automatic and the framework stops needing reinforcement.

Q: Should I score deals already in pipeline retroactively, or only new ones?

Both. Spend 30 minutes Friday afternoon back-scoring your top 20 open deals. You will find 4 to 6 of them are sub-6 of 12 — those are your commit-to-best-case downgrades. Better to find them now than at end of quarter.

Q: One of my reps is a top performer who hates frameworks. How do I get buy-in?

Tell them this is a language and forecast hygiene exercise, not a selling-method change. Their gut still drives the call. The BANT score is so the rest of the team and your forecast can speak the same language about what they already do intuitively.

Top performers almost always score their own deals accurately within a half-point once they sit down to do it.

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