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Power Phone Scripts by Mike Brooks — Cliff Notes Summary

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Power Phone Scripts: 500 Word-for-Word Questions, Phrases, and Conversations to Open and Close More Sales by Mike Brooks (Wiley, 2017) is a tactical script library written by the founder of Mr. Inside Sales training. Brooks's central thesis is that the gap between top-20% and bottom-80% inside-sales reps is not talent, charisma, or product knowledge — it is whether the rep has rehearsed today's call.

Brooks delivers 500 word-for-word scripts spanning Opening, Qualifying, Demo, Objection-Handling, and Closing so that no rep ever has to "ad-lib a bad call" again. Scripts, in Brooks's hands, are not constraints — they are the difference between a rep who hits quota every month and one who invents a new excuse every Friday.

In the modern sales canon the book sits between Stephan Schiffman's Cold Calling Techniques (1987) and Jeb Blount's Fanatical Prospecting (2015), and the patterns Brooks codified have since been industrialized inside Outreach, Salesloft, Apollo, Lavender, and Regie.ai cadence-script libraries.

1. Why Scripts — The Argument Before the Library

1.1 The "ad-libbed call" problem

Brooks opens with a confrontation. Most inside-sales reps believe scripts make them sound robotic and that "being natural" wins deals. Brooks argues the opposite: ad-libbed calls are how reps invent reasons buyers won't return their calls. A rep who freestyles the opener will, by the seventh dial of the morning, mumble through it, bury the lede, and trigger an instant brush-off.

Brooks's verbatim line: "Scripts don't constrain creativity — they free it." Once the opener, the qualifier, and the top five objection-handlers are committed to muscle memory, the rep's working memory is freed to actually listen to the prospect.

1.2 The 20/80 split

Brooks's second-chapter claim is the spine of the entire book: the difference between top 20% and bottom 80% reps is whether they practiced today's call. Top reps rehearse out loud, role-play with a peer, and re-read their scripts before every shift. Bottom reps "wing it" and call it authenticity.

Brooks frames practice as the only controllable input that compounds — product, territory, list quality, and comp plan are all set by the company; only rep preparation is owned by the rep.

2. The Cold Open — Brooks's Signature 4-Part Framework

2.1 The 4-Part Cold Open

Brooks's most-copied script is the 4-Part Cold Open, designed to clear the first 15 seconds of a cold call without triggering the buyer's reflexive brush-off:

  1. "Hi [name], this is [your name] from [company]." — Name + company in the first three seconds, said with downward inflection so the buyer hears a peer, not a pitch.
  2. "The reason for my call is [specific business issue]." — Not "I wanted to introduce myself." A named, concrete reason the buyer's role would care about.
  3. "[Peer reference] in [their industry] saved/gained [outcome] by [solution]." — A one-sentence social proof anchor, named company in the buyer's vertical.
  4. "Do you have 5 minutes to see if there's a fit?" — A small, time-boxed, fit-framed ask. Never "30 minutes," never "demo."

Brooks teaches the 4-Part Cold Open as the only opener a rep should ever use on a true cold dial, and devotes roughly 40 of the 500 scripts to variations by industry, persona, and time of day.

2.2 The "pattern interrupt" debate

Brooks explicitly rejects the Jordan Belfort "straight-line" style pattern interrupts ("Did I catch you at a bad time?") that were popular in 2017. His objection: pattern interrupts work once, then sales teams overuse them and buyers learn the trick. The 4-Part Cold Open is durable because it is honest — it tells the buyer who is calling, why, and asks for a small commitment.

3. Discovery and Qualifying Scripts

3.1 The qualifying call

Brooks dedicates a full section to the second call — the qualifying conversation — and provides scripts for budget, authority, need, timeline, competition, and decision-process questions. The signature qualifying script is the "Three-Deep" question pattern: ask the question, then ask the follow-up, then ask the follow-up to the follow-up.

Example: "What's prompting you to look at this now?" → "And what happens if you don't solve it by Q4?" → "Who else on the team feels that pressure?"

3.2 The pre-demo confirmation

Before any product demo, Brooks scripts a 60-second pre-demo confirmation: re-state what you heard on the discovery call, confirm who will be on the demo, and confirm what "good" looks like at the end. This script alone, Brooks claims, doubled demo-to-close rates in the Mr. Inside Sales training cohorts because it eliminated the "demo to nobody" problem where a rep pitches an influencer who can't buy.

4. The Demo Open and Trial-Close Sequence

4.1 The Demo Open

The demo opener is scripted in three beats: agenda, time-check, and confirmation question. "Here's what I'd like to cover in our 30 minutes — does that match what you wanted?" Brooks insists on the confirmation question because it surfaces hidden agendas before the screen-share starts.

4.2 The Trial-Close Sequence

The heart of the demo section is the Trial-Close Sequence. After every value point in the demo, the rep asks a small closing question:

Brooks's verbatim coaching: never deliver a feature without a trial close. A demo without trial closes is a monologue; a demo with trial closes is a negotiation already in progress.

5. Objection-Handling — The 100 Most-Cited Scripts

5.1 The Objection-Bridge Phrase

Every objection-handler in Brooks's library opens with the same bridge: "I understand, and here's why other [titles] in [industry] decided to keep talking..." The bridge does two things — it validates the buyer (reducing their defensive posture) and pivots to a peer-reference rebuttal instead of a feature dump.

5.2 The 100 most-cited objections

Brooks ranks the 100 most common objections by frequency in his training cohorts and gives 3-5 word-for-word responses to each. The five highest-frequency objections and the canonical Brooks responses:

Each script is rehearsed in the Mr. Inside Sales training program until the rep can deliver it in under three seconds without thinking. Brooks's claim: the rep who pauses to think after "we're already with Salesforce" has already lost the call.

6. Closing Scripts

6.1 The Final Close

Brooks rejects the high-pressure "Always Be Closing" school. His final-close script is a quiet question after a strong trial-close sequence: "Based on what we've covered, does it make sense to get the paperwork started?" No assumption, no urgency theater — just a small confirming ask after the buyer has already said yes four times in trial closes.

6.2 The Take-Away Close

For stalled deals, Brooks scripts a Take-Away Close: "It sounds like the timing might not be right — should we revisit this in 90 days?" Counter-intuitively, the take-away frequently surfaces the real objection (price, authority, or competing priority) that the buyer was hiding behind "let me think about it."

7. Voicemail, Email, and LinkedIn Scripts

7.1 The Voicemail Template — under 18 seconds

Brooks's voicemail rule is strict: under 18 seconds, name + company + ONE specific reason + number twice, no pitch. The full script:

"Hi [name], this is [your name] from [company]. The reason for my call is [one specific reason]. You can reach me at [number]. Again, that's [name] at [number]. Thanks."

Brooks's data: voicemails over 22 seconds are deleted before the number is heard. Voicemails under 18 seconds with a single concrete reason get callbacks at roughly 3x the rate of "pitch" voicemails.

7.2 The Cold Email Script

Brooks ports the 4-Part Cold Open into email: subject line is a peer reference ("How [peer] cut [cost] 30%"), body is three sentences (reason, proof, ask), signature is plain text. No "Hope this finds you well," no calendar link in the first touch.

7.3 LinkedIn Connection Scripts

LinkedIn was nascent for cold outreach in 2017, but Brooks already scripts the connect note (under 280 characters, name a mutual contact or shared group, no pitch) and the post-accept message (the same 4-Part Cold Open compressed into a DM).

8. The Daily Script Block

8.1 60 minutes of practice — every day

Brooks's operating cadence for reps is the Daily Script Block: 60 minutes per day rehearsing scripts out loud, preferably with a peer in role-play, before the dialing shift begins. Brooks's verbatim coaching: "Top reps practice; average reps wing it." The 60-minute block is non-negotiable in the **Mr.

Inside Sales** training program. Reps who skip it for two consecutive weeks revert to ad-libbing and quota performance drops within the month.

8.2 The script-review cadence for managers

Managers run a weekly script review — pick one call recording per rep, compare against the scripted version, identify the drift, re-rehearse. Brooks insists managers must do this even with their top reps, because scripts degrade without reinforcement.

Phone-Call Anatomy

flowchart TD A[Cold Dial] --> B[Opener: 4-Part Cold Open] B -->|Brush-off| C[Objection Bridge: I understand, and here's why...] B -->|Engaged| D[Qualifier: Three-Deep Questions] C --> D D --> E[Pre-Demo Confirmation] E --> F[Demo: Agenda + Time-Check] F --> G[Trial Close: Does that make sense?] G -->|Yes| H[Trial Close: Could you see using this?] G -->|Concern| I[Objection Script: top-100 library] I --> H H --> J[Trial Close: When would you want to start?] J --> K[Final Close: Does it make sense to start the paperwork?] K -->|Stall| L[Take-Away Close: revisit in 90 days?] K -->|Yes| M[Booked Revenue] L --> M

Frameworks at a Glance

The Inside-Sales Daily Operating Loop

flowchart LR A[60-min Script Block: rehearse out loud] --> B[Dialing Shift: 80-120 dials] B --> C[Scripted Openers + Qualifiers] C --> D[Booked Discovery Calls] D --> E[Scripted Demos with Trial Closes] E --> F[Scripted Closes + Take-Aways] F --> G[Closed Revenue + Pipeline] G --> H[Weekly Call-Review with Manager] H --> I[Script Drift identified + corrected] I --> A

What Holds Up, What Has Aged

What holds up. The structural patterns Brooks codified are durable. The 4-Part Cold Open, the Objection Bridge, the Trial-Close Sequence, and the sub-18-second voicemail are still the canonical templates inside every modern sales-development org. Gong call-pattern research, published in 2019-2024 from millions of recorded calls, validated Brooks's scripts almost line-for-line — top reps do open with a named reason, do confirm with trial closes, and do keep voicemails short.

The Daily Script Block discipline also held up: Salesloft and Outreach both ship "rep practice" tools in their 2024+ platforms that are direct descendants of Brooks's role-play cadence.

What has aged. Three things needed updating by 2027. First, AI-generated personalization at scale — Lavender, Regie.ai, and Apollo Conversations now generate variant scripts personalized to the prospect's LinkedIn, news, and tech stack at scale, which Brooks's static library cannot match.

Second, PLG (product-led growth) selling has reduced cold-call volume in many software categories — a rep at Figma or Notion spends more time on expansion and product-qualified leads than on cold dials, so the cold-open scripts apply to a narrower slice of the day. Third, LinkedIn and email cadence design has been industrialized since 2017 — Brooks treats them as bolt-ons; modern cadence design treats them as co-equal channels with the dial.

FAQ

Is this book worth reading if I work in modern PLG SaaS where cold calls are rare? Yes, but read it as a structural-pattern book, not a tactical playbook. The Trial-Close Sequence and Objection Bridge apply word-for-word to expansion calls, customer-success renewal calls, and demo conversations even when nobody is cold-dialing.

Is the Mr. Inside Sales training program still active? Yes. Brooks's training company is still operating in 2027 and the 500-script library has been updated through several editions, though the 2017 Wiley book remains the canonical reference text.

Should I memorize all 500 scripts? No. Brooks's recommendation is to memorize the 4-Part Cold Open, the Objection Bridge, the Trial-Close Sequence, the Voicemail Template, and the top 20 objection responses. The other 480 scripts are a reference library you look up by call-stage.

How does this compare to Fanatical Prospecting by Jeb Blount? Blount is the manager-of-managers book — it argues prospecting cadence, time-blocking, and pipeline math. Brooks is the rep's tactical script library. Most modern sales-development orgs use both: Blount sets the cadence, Brooks provides the words.

Does the book work for field sales or only inside sales? Brooks wrote it for inside sales, but field reps report the qualifying and trial-close scripts transfer directly to in-person discovery and demos. The cold-open scripts assume the buyer answered a phone — adapt them for in-person walk-ins or trade-show floor conversations.

Is there an audiobook version that's worth listening to? The audiobook helps because Brooks reads the scripts aloud with the correct inflection — particularly the downward inflection on the opener and the pause before the trial close. Reps who only read the print edition often miss the cadence cues.

Bottom Line

Power Phone Scripts is the reference library every inside-sales rep should keep within arm's reach of the dialer. The Monday-morning action: pick the 4-Part Cold Open, the top 20 objection responses, and the sub-18-second voicemail template, rehearse them out loud for 60 minutes before the shift starts, and measure the connect-to-conversation rate change over the next two weeks.

Brooks's enduring contribution to the sales canon is the operating insight that scripts are not the opposite of authenticity — they are the only way to be authentic on the seventh dial of the morning.

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