Objection Handling Roleplay Session Blueprint
Direct Answer
This blueprint delivers a 90-minute, high-intensity roleplay session designed to hardwire objection handling skills using the Challenger Sale framework and MEDDPICC qualification rigor. You will run three rounds of structured roleplay, each targeting a specific objection type: budget, authority, and timeline.
The session uses Gong call analysis principles to debrief and Clari-style forecasting to measure skill transfer. Every minute is scripted for a RevOps or sales enablement manager to execute without prep.
1. Warm-Up: The 3-Objection Sprint (10 min)
Objective: Activate pattern recognition for common objections.
Script (Manager reads): "Welcome. In the next 90 minutes, you will build muscle memory for three objections that kill 70% of enterprise deals: 'No budget,' 'Not the decision-maker,' and 'We are not ready.' We will use the Challenger method: Teach, Tailor, Take Control. No scripts—only frameworks.
Let’s start with a sprint. I will throw an objection. You have 10 seconds to respond with a single sentence.
Go."
Objection 1: "Your price is 30% above our competitor." Expected response: "I understand. Let’s map that 30% to the cost of downtime your team experienced last quarter. Our Winning by Design value engineering shows a 4x ROI within six months."
Objection 2: "I need to run this by my VP." Expected response: "Of course. To save you a meeting, what specific criteria will your VP use to approve? I can build a MEDDPICC-aligned one-pager for that conversation."
Objection 3: "We are not ready for a change right now." Expected response: "Understood. What would need to be true in the next 90 days for this to become a priority? Let’s set a Clari-based checkpoint for that trigger."
Debrief (2 min):
- Bold: "Notice how each response pivots to a framework. No 'I see' or 'Let me check.' Control the frame. "
2. Roleplay Setup: The MEDDPICC Grid (15 min)
Objective: Equip reps with a qualification lens for every objection.
Manager Script: "Every objection is a data gap. Use MEDDPICC to fill it. Draw this grid on a whiteboard or Miro board:
| Letter | Metric | Example Question |
|---|---|---|
| M | Metrics | "What is the current cost of this problem?" |
| E | Economic Buyer | "Who signs the PO?" |
| D | Decision Process | "What steps happen after this demo?" |
| D | Decision Criteria | "What are your top 3 evaluation criteria?" |
| P | Pain | "What happens if you do nothing for 6 months?" |
| I | Implication | "How does this affect your team’s quota?" |
| C | Champion | "Who in your org will advocate for this?" |
| C | Competition | "Who else are you evaluating?" |
Roleplay Drill (10 min): Pair reps. One is the seller, one is the buyer (use a Salesforce account like "Acme Corp"). The buyer reads: "We don’t have budget for a new CRM." The seller must ask three MEDDPICC questions before offering any solution. No solution talk until the grid is filled.
Example seller script:
- "What is the current cost of your manual data entry per month?" (M)
- "Who would need to approve a new budget line item?" (E)
- "What happens if your team misses quota because of data errors?" (P)
Debrief:
- "If you cannot fill the grid, you cannot handle the objection. MEDDPICC turns objections into discovery. "
3. Round 1: Budget Objection – The Commercial Teaching Pitch (20 min)
Objective: Use Challenger commercial teaching to reframe price objections.
Scenario: Buyer (played by manager) says: "We love your product, but we have a hard cap at $50k. Your proposal is $75k."
Seller Script (verbatim): "I hear you. Let me share a data point from Gartner: companies that underinvest in sales automation see a 23% longer sales cycle. If your team closes 10 deals per quarter, that delay costs $150k in lost revenue.
Our $75k is not an expense—it is a hedge against that $150k risk. Can we explore a phased approach where you invest $50k now and $25k after you see the first 3-month ROI?"
Manager Coaching Points:
- Bold: "Do not discount. Teach the cost of inaction."
- Use Gong call snippets: "The best reps talk about risk, not price."
- If buyer pushes back, ask: "What metric would make $75k acceptable? A 5x ROI? Let’s model that."
Rotation: Each rep gets 5 minutes as seller. Manager provides real-time feedback: "You used 'I understand' three times. Replace with 'Let me show you why.'"
4. Round 2: Authority Objection – The MEDDPICC Champion Build (20 min)
Objective: Convert a gatekeeper into a champion using MEDDPICC’s Champion and Economic Buyer fields.
Scenario: Buyer (mid-level manager) says: "I like this, but my VP of Sales makes all final decisions. I cannot commit."
Seller Script (verbatim): "Great. Let’s make you the hero. What are the top three criteria your VP will use to evaluate this? I will build a MEDDPICC-aligned executive summary that positions you as the person who found the solution. Can we schedule a 15-minute call with your VP where you present the first slide? I will be your backup."
Manager Coaching Points:
- Bold: "Do not bypass the gatekeeper. Empower them."
- Use Salesloft cadence: "Send a follow-up with a one-pager titled 'For [VP Name] – Recommended by [Buyer Name].' This creates social proof."
- If buyer hesitates, ask: "What would happen if you brought this solution to your VP without my help? Would it get approved? If not, let’s change that."
Rotation: 5 minutes per rep. Manager grades on: "Did you ask for the champion role? Yes/No."
5. Round 3: Timeline Objection – The Clari-Based Urgency Map (20 min)
Objective: Create urgency using data from Clari and Outreach.
Scenario: Buyer says: "We are not ready. Maybe next quarter."
Seller Script (verbatim): "Let’s look at your team’s Clari forecast. If you delay, your Q3 pipeline will drop by 15% because your current tool cannot scale. We have three slots left for implementation this quarter.
If you sign by Friday, you get a dedicated Outreach onboarding specialist. If you wait, the next available slot is 60 days out. Which path protects your number?"
Manager Coaching Points:
- Bold: "Use time as a lever. Clari data makes it real."
- If buyer says "I need to think about it," respond: "What specific question is unresolved? Let’s answer it now. I have a Gong call from a similar company that faced the same decision—want to hear how they resolved it in 10 minutes?"
- Bold: "Do not let 'think about it' become a black hole. Close the loop. "
Rotation: 5 minutes per rep. Manager tracks: "Did you set a specific next step with a date?"
6. Debrief & Skill Transfer Plan (5 min)
Objective: Cement learning with a Clari-style action plan.
Manager Script: "Open your CRM ( Salesforce or HubSpot ). For your next three active deals, write down the top objection you expect. Then, using the MEDDPICC grid, draft one response for each. Share your plan in our Slack channel by end of day. I will review and give feedback within 24 hours."
Key Takeaways:
- Bold: "Objection handling is not about being clever. It is about having a system."
- Bold: "Use Challenger to teach, MEDDPICC to qualify, and Clari to create urgency."
- Bold: "Every objection is a data gap. Fill it, and the deal moves."
FAQ
Q: How do I handle a buyer who says 'I need to think about it' after every objection? A: Use the Gong technique: "What specific question is unresolved? Let me answer it now." If they cannot name one, set a 48-hour follow-up with a one-pager.
Q: What if the buyer refuses to share budget numbers? A: Use MEDDPICC Metrics: "What is the cost of the problem you are solving? That helps me align pricing to value." Never force a number.
Q: Can this session work for SDRs vs. AEs? A: Yes. For SDRs, focus on Round 2 (authority) and Round 3 (timeline). For AEs, add Round 1 (budget) with Challenger commercial teaching.
Q: How do I measure success after the session? A: Track objection-to-next-step conversion in Salesforce for 30 days. A 20% increase in "demo set after objection" is a win.
Q: What if my team has never used MEDDPICC? A: Run a 30-minute pre-session on the grid. Use Winning by Design’s free MEDDPICC template.
Q: How do I handle a buyer who says 'We already have a vendor'? A: Use MEDDPICC Competition: "What is one thing your current vendor does not do well? Let’s see if we can solve that in 10 minutes."
