Pulse ← Trainings
Reviews and Expert Analysis · sales-training

The Buying-Process Map — 60-Min Training

👁 0 views📖 1,536 words⏱ 7 min read5/22/2026

The Buying-Process Map

A 60-Minute Team Working Session Where Every Rep Reverse-Engineers the Prospect's Actual Internal Approval Path So Deals Stop Dying at Invisible Steps Nobody Saw Coming

Why Run This Session

Reps obsess over their own sales process. They know exactly what stage a deal is in on *their* side. But the deal does not close on their side — it closes on the *buyer's* side, and most reps have no idea what the buyer's side actually looks like.

That is why deals slip. The rep thinks the deal is "in legal" or "with procurement," but cannot answer the basic questions: How many approval steps are left? Who signs at each one? How long does each step historically take? Is there a security review? A board meeting that only happens once a quarter? A budget cycle that resets in two weeks?

When a rep cannot answer those questions, the forecast is fiction. A deal "closing this month" is really a deal closing whenever a procurement queue the rep never knew about decides to clear it.

This session fixes that. Every rep takes one real, late-stage deal and builds a step-by-step map of the buyer's *actual* internal buying process — every approval, every owner, every typical duration — and walks out knowing exactly where the deal can die and what to do about it.

What Reps Will Walk Out With

Who Should Be in the Room

The full sales team, the sales manager facilitating, and ideally someone from sales operations or deal desk who has watched many deals cross the finish line and knows where they typically stall. Every rep must bring one real deal in late stage — verbal interest exists, but it is not signed.

No early-stage deals; the map only matters once buying is genuinely on the table.

Before the Meeting (Manager Prep — 15 Minutes)

  1. Ask every rep to pick one real late-stage deal and have its CRM record and last few call notes open.
  2. Print or share the Buying-Process Map worksheet (the step table below).
  3. Pull two or three of your own deals that slipped a quarter because of an invisible step — a surprise security review, a procurement freeze, a missed budget window — 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 Invisible Killer (0:00-0:06, 6 minutes)

Open with a slipped deal of your own. Walk the room through it: "We forecast this for March. It closed in July. Here is the step we never saw — a quarterly security council that only meets once every 90 days." Establish the session's single rule: a deal you cannot map is a deal you cannot forecast.

Block 2 — Teach the Buying-Process Map (0:06-0:17, 11 minutes)

Walk the team through the seven step-types that appear in almost every B2B buying process. Not every deal has all seven, but every rep must check for each:

  1. Solution confirmation — the buyer's internal agreement that your solution is the choice.
  2. Business case / approval — a written justification that an approver signs off on.
  3. Budget verification — confirming the money exists in this period, not next.
  4. Technical / security review — IT, InfoSec, or compliance vetting; often the longest hidden step.
  5. Legal / contract review — redlines, MSA negotiation, terms.
  6. Procurement / purchasing — vendor onboarding, competitive quotes, PO issuance.
  7. Final signature & kickoff — who physically signs, and what triggers payment.

For each step, the rep needs three things: the owner (a named person), the typical duration, and the trigger (what has to happen for the step to start). A step with no named owner is a blind spot.

Block 3 — Solo Build on a Real Deal (0:17-0:34, 17 minutes)

Each rep fills out the Buying-Process Map worksheet for their chosen deal. They write down what they actually know, and — critically — circle every step where they cannot name the owner or estimate the duration. Those circles are the deliverable.

Manager and the deal-desk partner circulate, challenge soft assumptions, and ask the killer question on every deal: "Says who? Who told you that step takes a week?"

Block 4 — Pair Pressure-Test (0:34-0:47, 13 minutes)

Reps pair up. One plays the buyer's procurement lead; the other walks their map and defends each step's owner and timeline. The procurement player attacks: "We have a three-bid policy — did you know that?" "Our legal queue is six weeks right now." "That budget line is frozen until the new fiscal year." Then swap.

Every surprise the procurement player lands becomes a blind spot the rep must close.

Block 5 — Build the Discovery Questions (0:47-0:56, 9 minutes)

As a group, list the questions that surface a hidden buying process — for example: "Walk me through what happens internally after you say yes." "Who has signed a contract like this before, and what did they have to go through?" "Has a deal like this ever needed security or legal review here?" "When does your budget period end?" Each rep writes the three questions they will 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, the number of buying steps still ahead, their single biggest blind spot, and a revised close date based on the map. Manager records every revised date for the next forecast call.

Agenda check: 6 + 11 + 17 + 13 + 9 + 4 = 60 minutes.

The Buying-Process Map Worksheet

Buying StepOwner (Named Person)Trigger to StartTypical DurationBlind Spot?
Solution confirmation__________________Y / N
Business case / approval__________________Y / N
Budget verification__________________Y / N
Technical / security review__________________Y / N
Legal / contract review__________________Y / N
Procurement / purchasing__________________Y / N
Final signature & kickoff__________________Y / N
Total realistic time-to-close______ days

How to Use the Map With the Buyer

The map is not a private rep document — its full power comes from building it *with* the buyer:

  1. Ask the buyer to walk you through it. "After you say yes, what actually happens next on your side?" A buyer who narrates their own process is a buyer who has just told you every step you need to manage.
  2. Confirm durations, do not assume them. A rep's guess of "a week for legal" against the buyer's reality of "six weeks right now" is the entire gap between a hit and a missed forecast.
  3. Turn the map into a mutual action plan. Once you and the buyer agree on the steps, attach a date to each one and confirm it in writing. The map becomes the close plan.
  4. Re-map when the deal changes. A new stakeholder, a bigger contract value, or a fiscal-year boundary can add steps. Treat the map as living, not a one-time exercise.

Manager Coaching Notes

The Bottom Line

A deal does not close when the rep is ready. It closes when the buyer's last internal approval clears. Reps who cannot name those approvals are forecasting blind — and blind forecasts are why the quarter that looked safe in week two falls apart in week twelve.

This session gives every rep a step-by-step map of the buyer's real process, a list of the steps they still cannot see, and the questions to close those gaps — so the next time a rep says a deal is "closing this month," they can prove it.

Download:
Was this helpful?  
Deep dive · related in the library
sales-training · cost-of-inactionThe Cost-of-Inaction Business Case — 60-Min Trainingsales-training · discoveryThe First-Meeting Agenda Lock — 60-Min Trainingsales-training · price-increaseThe Annual Price Increase Rollout — 60-Min Trainingsales-training · closed-won-handoffThe AE-to-CSM Closed-Won Handoff — 60-Min Trainingsales-training · multi-threadingMulti-Threading Enterprise Deals — 60-Min Trainingsales-training · sales-meetingThe Mock-Call Role-Play Workshop Reboot — 60-Min Trainingsales-training · sales-meetingThe Sales Forecasting Reboot — 60-Min Trainingsales-training · sales-meetingThe Pipeline Review Reboot — 60-Min Trainingsales-training · sales-meetingThe Closing Conversation Reboot — 60-Min Trainingsales-training · mutual-action-planThe Mutual Action Plan Co-Build — 60-Min Training
More from the library
sales-training · sales-meetingThe Sales Org Health Check Reboot — 60-Min Trainingsales-training · sales-meetingThe Cold Outreach Personalization Reboot — 60-Min Trainingrevops · current-events-2027What is the 2027 AE quota benchmark for B2B SaaS at different ACVs?industry-kpi · kpi-guideWhat are the key sales KPIs for the Commercial Laundry and Linen Services industry in 2027?sales-training · sales-meetingThe Sales-to-CS Handoff Reboot — 60-Min Trainingsales-training · sales-meetingThe Sales Whiteboarding Reboot — 60-Min Trainingrevops · current-events-2027What is Challenger Sale in 2027 and is it still relevant?sales-training · sales-meetingThe Account Tiering Reboot — 60-Min Trainingrevops · current-events-2027What is Salesloft Rhythm Agents and what does it do for RevOps in 2027?industry-kpi · kpi-guideWhat are the key sales KPIs for the Audio Visual and AV Integration industry in 2027?sales-training · sales-meetingThe Win-Story and Reference Program Reboot — 60-Min Trainingindustry-kpi · kpi-guideWhat are the key sales KPIs for the IT Services / MSP industry in 2027?sales-training · sales-meetingThe Sales Coaching Cadence Reboot — 60-Min Trainingindustry-kpi · kpi-guideWhat are the key sales KPIs for the Promotional Products and Branded Merchandise industry in 2027?sales-training · sales-meetingThe Executive Sponsor Program Reboot — 60-Min Training