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The Closing Techniques Bootcamp — 90-Min Training — Pulse Sales Trainings

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The Closing Techniques Bootcamp is a 90-minute team training for B2B sales reps and their frontline managers that retires "always be closing" and replaces it with earned closing: trial-close throughout the call, summarize what you heard, propose the assumptive next step, and treat the mutual action plan as the close.

The big yes becomes a formality when discovery was done right. By the end, every rep can run a trial close, ask for the business in plain language, sit in silence after asking, and handle "let me think about it" without flinching.

The session runs six timed blocks totaling 90 minutes. Reps leave with verbatim scripts, a close-readiness checklist tied to MEDDPICC, and a commitment to apply the framework to a live deal in their commit forecast this week.


Section 1 — Why "Always Be Closing" Is Dead (5 min)

Open with the line every rep has heard since the *Glengarry Glen Ross* days: "Always be closing." Then kill it. The old model treats the close as a moment of pressure you manufacture at the end. The modern model treats the close as the natural result of a buying decision the customer already made with you during discovery.

The shift in one sentence: a close is earned, not forced. If you have to "overcome" the buyer at the finish line, you missed something at the start.

Frame this on the whiteboard:

Winning by Design and Force Management both teach the same thing in different language: the close is a checkpoint, not a battle. Sandler's version is the up-front contract — agreeing on the outcome before the conversation even starts. The common thread is that good closing is mostly good qualifying.

*Rule for the room: nobody closes a deal we did not earn. If discovery was thin, we go back, we do not push harder.*


Section 2 — The Modern Closing Framework (15 min)

Walk the team through the five moves that make up an earned close. These are not steps you run once at the end. Trial closes run the entire call.

1. Trial-close throughout. A trial close is a low-stakes temperature check: "Does that line up with how your team works today?" You are not asking for the order. You are asking whether you are still on track.

Gong's call analysis shows reps who check for alignment repeatedly across a call convert at a higher rate than reps who save one big ask for the end, because they never let a silent objection harden.

2. The summary close. Before you ask for anything, play back what you heard: the problem, the impact, the criteria, the timeline. When the buyer hears their own words reflected, they confirm the logic themselves. You are closing on their reasoning, not yours.

3. The assumptive next step. Instead of "Do you want to move forward?" you propose the specific next action: "The next step is a 30-minute working session with your security lead to clear the review. I have Thursday at 2 or Friday at 10 — which works?" You assume forward motion and let them redirect if needed.

4. The mutual action plan as the close. A mutual action plan (MAP) is the real close. It is a shared, dated, written document listing every step from now to signature and go-live, with owners on both sides.

Deals with a documented MAP close more reliably and slip less, because both parties have agreed in writing on what "yes" requires. When the buyer co-authors the path to signing, signing is no longer a decision — it is the last checkbox.

5. Urgency from a real compelling event. Urgency is legitimate only when it is the buyer's, not yours. A real compelling event is a board deadline, a contract expiry, a hiring freeze, a renewal date, a launch.

Find it, quantify the cost of missing it, and the timeline closes itself. Never invent end-of-quarter scarcity; buyers see through it and it poisons trust.

flowchart TD A[Discovery and Demo Done] --> B{MEDDPICC Complete?} B -->|No| C[Go Back: Fill Gaps. Do NOT Push] B -->|Yes| D{Economic Buyer Bought In?} D -->|No| E[Get Access to EB First] D -->|Yes| F{Mutual Action Plan Signed?} F -->|No| G[Co-Author MAP, Then Close] F -->|Yes| H[Summary Close + Ask for Business] H --> I[Stay Silent. Let Them Answer.]

*Coach note: the framework is a gate, not a script. If any diamond returns "no," the answer is more work, not more pressure.*


Section 3 — Verbatim Closing Scripts (15 min)

Read these aloud as a group, slowly. Reps should hear themselves say the words before they say them to a buyer. Scripts are the ST signature — steal them, then make them yours.

Trial-close phrases (use 3-5 per call):

  • "How does that compare to what you are using today?"
  • "If we could solve that, would it change your timeline?"
  • "On a scale of 1 to 10, how well does this fit what your team needs?"
  • "Is there anything we have covered that gives you pause?"

The summary close (verbatim):

Rep: "Before we talk next steps, let me make sure I have it right. You told me your renewals team is losing about 12 hours a week to manual reconciliation, that errors are costing you roughly $40K a quarter in clawbacks, and that your CFO wants this fixed before the fiscal-year close in March. Did I get that right?"

[Pause. Let them confirm or correct. Their 'yes' here is the close.]

Rep: "Then it sounds like the only question left is how fast we can get you live. Should we map that out?"

Asking for the business (verbatim, plain language):

Rep: "Based on everything we've covered, I think this is a fit and I'd like to earn your business. What do we need to do to get a contract in front of you this week?"

Handling "let me think about it" (verbatim):

Buyer: "Let me think about it."

Rep: "Totally fair — this is a real decision. So I can be useful while you think: is it the price, the timing, or whether the solution actually does what you need? Help me understand which one and I'll get you what you need to decide."

The silence-after-asking technique:

After you ask for the business, stop talking. Count to ten in your head. The first person to break the silence usually concedes — and it should not be you. Sandler calls this letting the buyer fill the vacuum. Force Management calls it holding the question. Same discipline: ask, then wait.

*Bad example to call out: "So, yeah, no pressure, but if you wanted to maybe think about possibly moving forward, that'd be, you know, great whenever." Mumbled, hedged, apologetic. Never close like you are sorry you asked.*


Section 4 — Live Roleplay: Rep Closes, Partner Resists (25 min)

This is the heart of the session. Pair reps up. One plays the AE attempting to close; one plays a buyer who likes the product but resists at the finish line. Run two rounds, swap roles, then debrief in Section 5.

Setup paragraph for the room: Each pair gets one deal scenario from a real opportunity in the commit or best-case forecast. The closer must run a summary close, ask for the business directly, and survive at least two resistance moves. The buyer's job is to resist realistically — not to be a jerk, and not to fold instantly.

Buyer resistance script (the partner uses these, in order):

Round 1 resistance: "This looks good, but let me run it by the team and circle back."

Round 2 resistance: "Your competitor came in 15% cheaper. Why should I pay more?"

Round 3 resistance (silence test): [Buyer goes quiet for 8 seconds after the rep asks for the business. Rep must NOT fill the silence.]

What the closer must demonstrate:

Closer (summary close): "Let me play back what matters most: you need this live before March, your team can't keep eating the clawback costs, and your CFO has already greenlit the budget line. That's the picture, right?"

[Buyer confirms.]

Closer (asking for business): "Then I'd like to earn this. What needs to happen to get a signed agreement before month-end?"

[Buyer resists with a Round 1 or Round 2 move. Closer responds, then re-asks.]

Hyperbound's AI roleplay bots and Gong's conversation data both make the same point that managers see live here: reps systematically under-ask. They build great rapport and then never actually request the order. The roleplay forces the ask under mild pressure so the real call is not the first time.

Do NOT during roleplay:


Section 5 — Debrief Plus the Closing Checklist (20 min)

Debrief each pair against one question: was this deal closeable, and did the rep close it the right way? Use the checklist below. This is also where you connect the roleplay to MEDDPICC and the live commit forecast.

flowchart TD A[Roleplay Round Ends] --> B[Closer Self-Assesses First] B --> C[Partner Gives One Win, One Fix] C --> D{Summary Close Landed?} D -->|No| E[Re-Run the Summary Only] D -->|Yes| F{Asked Directly for Business?} F -->|No| G[Drill the Ask in Isolation] F -->|Yes| H{Held the Silence?} H -->|No| I[Practice the 10-Count] H -->|Yes| J[Log Technique, Move to Next Pair]

The closing checklist — what must be true BEFORE you close:

A deal is close-ready only when every box is checked. Reps tape this to the monitor.

The math on why this works:

Common objections from the team (rehearse the comebacks):

Tie it back to the live forecast: every rep names one commit-stage deal and states which checklist box is still open.


Section 6 — Commitments and Applying to Deals in Commit (10 min)

Close the session by making it real on live pipeline. Each rep writes three commitments and applies the framework to a deal they have in commit this quarter.

Pull the Gong or Chorus recording of each rep's next closing call into the following week's 1:1. The recording is the proof — talk-time near the close should drop sharply once the rep asks and goes silent.

*Final research finding for the room: across analyzed B2B calls, the strongest closers talk less in the final third of the call, not more. They ask, then they let the buyer decide. The quiet rep is usually the one who closes.*

Adjourn with the standing order: we close deals we earned, we ask in plain language, and we never manufacture urgency that isn't the buyer's.


FAQ

Isn't trial closing just a manipulative tactic with a nicer name? No. A manipulative tactic engineers a yes the buyer doesn't mean. A trial close is a sincere alignment check — "does this fit?" — that lets you catch a problem early instead of at the finish line.

The intent is the difference: you are surfacing objections to solve them, not burying them to win.

What do I do when the buyer genuinely needs time to think? Honor it, but make the wait useful. Ask which of the three real reasons is in play — price, timing, or fit — and give them exactly what they need to decide. "Let me think about it" is almost never about thinking; it is an unspoken objection. Name it kindly and you can address it.

How is a mutual action plan different from just sending a follow-up email? A follow-up email is your list of next steps. A mutual action plan is a shared, dated document with owners on both sides, co-authored with the buyer, covering everything from now through signature and go-live.

The buyer agreeing to the MAP is the real commitment; the signature is the formality that follows.

What if discovery was weak but the deal is in commit anyway? Then it does not belong in commit, and the fix is qualification, not pressure. Go back and complete MEDDPICC — especially the economic buyer and decision criteria. Pushing a poorly qualified deal harder only produces a slip or a no-decision later.

Earned closing means we do not force what we did not qualify.

How do we use Gong or Chorus to actually coach closing? Pull the recording of a rep's closing call and watch the final third. Check three things: did they run a summary close, did they ask for the business in plain language, and did they go silent after asking? Talk-time should drop near the close.

The data turns "you seemed nervous" into a specific, reviewable moment.


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