Needs Discovery Engine: A Question-Framework Template for Team Practice

Direct Answer
This training template is a ready-to-run, 60-minute team practice session designed to transform your sales team from feature-pushers into needs-discovery engines. You will walk away with a repeatable question framework, a team practice drill, and a shared language for uncovering the "why" behind a prospect's budget.
The core output is a MEDDPICC-aligned discovery map that surfaces the Economic Buyer, Metrics, and Competition before you ever write a proposal. Use this template in your next weekly sales meeting or as a stand-alone workshop. No slides.
No theory. Just scripts, diagrams, and a timer.
1. Warm-Up: The "Bad Question" Audit (10 min)
Objective: Expose the questions that kill discovery. Every rep writes down one question they asked this week that got a "yes, we have that" answer. Then we fix it.
Script (Manager): "Open a note. Write down one discovery question you asked this week that got a short, dead-end answer. Something like: 'Do you use Salesforce?' or 'What’s your biggest challenge?' You have 2 minutes."
After 2 minutes: "Now, circle the question. On a scale of 1–10, how much did that answer help you predict the deal outcome? If it’s below 7, you’re wasting time. Let’s fix it."
Team share-out (5 min): Each rep reads their bad question. The group suggests a Challenger Sale-style reframe—teach the prospect something new about their own problem. For example:
- *Bad:* "What’s your biggest challenge?"
- *Reframe:* "Most companies in your vertical lose 20% of pipeline to late-stage competitor flips. Where does your team typically lose deals?"
Manager closes: "From now on, no question that can be answered with a single word. Every question must force the prospect to tell a story or give a number."
2. The Framework: MEDDPICC Question Engine (15 min)
Objective: Introduce the MEDDPICC question map. Each letter triggers a specific question type. Reps will memorize the map and practice one question per letter.
Diagram: MEDDPICC Question Flow
Script (Manager): "We’re using MEDDPICC because it forces us to ask about money, power, and timing—not just pain. Here’s the cheat sheet. Each letter maps to a question type. Your job is to ask at least one question per letter in every first call."
Handout (project or share screen):
- Metrics: "How do you measure success for this initiative? What’s the current baseline?"
- Economic Buyer: "Who signs the check? What do they care about most?"
- Decision Criteria: "What are the top three criteria you’ll use to evaluate vendors?"
- Decision Process: "Walk me through the steps from here to a signed contract."
- Pain: "What happens if you do nothing for six months?"
- Champion: "Who inside your org is most vocal about fixing this?"
- Competition: "Who else are you considering? What do they do better than us?"
- Implementation: "What needs to be true for a rollout to start within 30 days?"
Team drill (5 min): In pairs, each rep asks one question from each letter. Partner answers as a real prospect. Switch roles after 2 minutes.
Manager tip: "Don’t ask all eight in a row. Spread them across the call. Use Gong or Clari to track which letters you miss most. That’s your blind spot."
3. Live Demo: Manager Runs a 7-Minute Discovery (10 min)
Objective: See the framework in action. Manager roleplays a discovery call with a volunteer rep playing a skeptical VP of Sales.
Setup:
- Prospect persona: VP of Sales at a $50M B2B SaaS company. Uses Salesforce. Losing 20% of deals to late-stage competitor flips. No formal MEDDPICC process.
- Manager goal: Uncover the Economic Buyer and the Metrics for a new sales methodology tool.
Script (Manager): "Let’s say you’re the VP. I’m going to ask you questions. Your job is to give short, vague answers. I’ll push back. Ready?"
Demo flow (7 minutes):
- *Manager:* "You mentioned losing deals. What’s the exact dollar value of pipeline lost in the last quarter to competitors?"
*Rep:* "I don’t have that number." *Manager:* "That’s okay. Who in your finance team tracks win/loss by competitor? I can help you pull it from Salesforce."
- *Manager:* "Who signs off on a tool like this? Is it you, or someone above?"
*Rep:* "Probably my CEO." *Manager:* "What does your CEO care about more—win rate or average deal size?" *Rep:* "Both." *Manager:* "If you had to pick one, which one gets the CEO to approve a $50K spend?" *Rep:* "Win rate."
- *Manager:* "You mentioned Salesloft and Outreach in your stack. Are you considering replacing either, or adding a new layer?"
*Rep:* "Adding." *Manager:* "What’s the one feature you wish they had that they don’t?"
Debrief (3 min): Manager asks the group: "What did I uncover? What letter of MEDDPICC did I hit?"
- Answer: M (pipeline dollar value), E (CEO cares about win rate), C (Salesloft/Outreach gap).
4. Team Practice: The "Five-Question Sprint" (15 min)
Objective: Reps run a timed discovery drill. Each rep gets 5 minutes to ask five questions from the MEDDPICC map. Partner scores their questions on a 1–5 scale.
Setup:
- Pairs. One rep is the seller, one is the prospect.
- Prospect scenario: A manufacturing company with 200 employees. Uses HubSpot for CRM. Wants to automate quoting. Budget is $30K.
- Timer: 5 minutes per round. Then switch.
Scoring rubric (project or handout):
- 1 point for a closed-ended question (yes/no).
- 3 points for an open-ended question that gets a story.
- 5 points for a question that uncovers a MEDDPICC letter with a number or a name.
Script (Manager): "Go. You have 5 minutes. Your goal is to score 15 points. If you ask a yes/no question, you get 1 point. If you ask a question that gets a specific number or a person’s name, you get 5 points. Ready? Go."
After 5 minutes, switch. After 10 minutes, debrief:
- "What was your highest-scoring question? What made it powerful?"
- "Which MEDDPICC letter did you miss? Why?"
Manager note: "If you missed Competition, you’re flying blind. Use Gong to listen to your own calls and count how many times you ask about competitors. If it’s zero, you’re losing deals you never saw coming."
5. The "Economic Buyer" Deep Dive (10 min)
Objective: Most reps never talk to the decision-maker. This drill forces them to map the org chart and script the ask.
Diagram: Economic Buyer Identification Flow
Script (Manager): "Pull up a real deal in your pipeline. Write down the name and title of the person you think is the Economic Buyer. Now, answer these three questions out loud to your partner:
- What is their #1 metric this quarter? (e.g., revenue, retention, margin)
- How does our product move that metric by at least 20%?
- If you can’t answer #2, what question do you need to ask to find out?"
Partner feedback (3 min): Partner challenges: "That metric doesn’t sound right. What if the buyer cares about cost reduction instead of revenue? How would you pivot your pitch?"
Manager closes: "Never present a proposal without first confirming the Economic Buyer’s metric. Use Clari to track whether your forecast includes a verified EB conversation. If it doesn’t, the deal is a pipe dream."
6. Action Plan & Accountability (5 min)
Objective: Every rep leaves with a specific, measurable action for the next 7 days.
Script (Manager): "Open your CRM. Find your top 3 deals by value. For each deal, write down:
- The MEDDPICC letter you are weakest on.
- One question you will ask in your next call to fill that gap.
- The date of that call."
Example:
- Deal: Acme Corp ($100K)
- Weakness: Competition
- Question: "Who else are you evaluating, and what is their biggest weakness in your eyes?"
- Next call: Thursday, 2 PM
Accountability check: "Next week, we start this meeting by reading your question and the answer you got. If you didn’t ask it, you owe the team a coffee."
Final script (Manager): "You now have a repeatable engine for needs discovery. Use it. Record your calls in Gong and tag every MEDDPICC letter you hit. If you miss one, that’s your homework. Go sell."
FAQ
Q: How do I get a prospect to give me a real number for their metric? A: Use the "assume the number" technique. Say: "Most companies I work with see a 20% increase in win rate after fixing discovery. Does that sound high or low for you?" Then ask for their actual number.
Q: What if the Economic Buyer refuses to talk to me? A: Ask your champion: "If you were in my shoes, what one question would you ask the EB to get them to approve this?" Then script that question for your champion to ask.
Q: Can I use this framework with a Challenger Sale approach? A: Yes. The Challenger method teaches you to reframe the prospect’s problem. Use MEDDPICC to find the data that supports your reframe. For example, if you discover they lose 20% of deals, teach them a new way to think about competitor risk.
Q: How do I practice this alone? A: Record yourself asking each MEDDPICC letter question into your phone. Listen back. Count how many times you use filler words. Then re-record until you sound confident.
Q: What if the prospect lies about their budget? A: Don’t ask for the budget directly. Ask: "What is the cost of doing nothing for one quarter?" If they can’t answer, the budget is not real. Use MEDDPICC to uncover the Pain first.
Q: How do I handle a prospect who says "I’ll let you know" after every question? A: That’s a soft no. Say: "I’ve noticed you’re not sure about the answer. Let me help. Would it be fair to say you need to check with [name]? If so, what’s the best way to get that answer for both of us?"
Q: Is this framework useful for outbound cold calls? A: Yes. On a cold call, you have 30 seconds. Ask one MEDDPICC question: "Who else are you evaluating for this?" That’s Competition. If they say "no one," you have no deal.
Sources
- MEDDPICC Framework by Winning by Design
- Challenger Sale: Reframing Discovery Questions
- Gong: How to Improve Discovery with Conversation Intelligence
- Clari: Forecasting with MEDDPICC Data
- Salesforce: Using Opportunity Fields for MEDDPICC
- HubSpot: Discovery Call Template for Sales Reps
- Outreach: Question Frameworks for Enterprise Sales
- Gartner: The Cost of Poor Discovery in B2B Sales





