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The Deal Strategy Review Reboot — 60-Min Training

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Run a Deal Strategy Review the moment a $250K+ ACV opportunity gets quiet, complicated, or contested. Not pipeline review — a 60-minute single-deal war-room where the AE walks the room through the buying committee, the five war-room questions, two contingency branches, and leaves with a named action, an owner, and a date for every gap.

One deal. One whiteboard. One hour.

One decision: advance, pause, or kill.

Pipeline review asks "where is every deal?" A Deal Strategy Review asks "how do we actually win *this* one?" Force Management's *Command of the Plan*, Robert Miller's *Strategic Selling* blue/red/green sheets, and Anthony Iannarino's *Eat Their Lunch* all converge here: enterprise deals do not die from lack of activity — they die from unexamined assumptions about power, pain, and process.

The Reboot session below burns 60 minutes to surface those assumptions before they cost you the quarter.


Section 1 — Trigger Check & Frame (5 min)

Open by re-stating *why this deal earned the hour*. Deal Strategy Reviews are expensive — three to five people, one full hour — so the AE must pass a trigger gate:

Manager opening script (verbatim): *"We're here for sixty minutes on the Acme deal only. No pipeline talk. No other accounts. By 11:00 we leave with named actions, owners, and dates. AE drives the whiteboard — I'm here to challenge, not to rescue. Everyone agree?"*

Jeb Blount's *Sales EQ* line applies: the manager's job in the room is disruptive empathy — pressure the logic, protect the person.


Section 2 — The 5-Question War-Room (15 min)

The AE answers all five out loud. No slides. Whiteboard only. If they cannot answer in two sentences, that is the gap to plan against.

  1. Why buy anything? What business outcome — quantified — does the customer lose by doing nothing for another six months? *Force Management: "no compelling event, no deal."*
  2. Why buy us? Name the two differentiated proof points the competitor cannot match this quarter. Vague answers ("we're more flexible") get rejected.
  3. Why buy now? What event — board meeting, contract expiry, headcount plan, regulatory date — creates urgency on the *buyer's* calendar, not yours?
  4. Who actually signs? Name the economic buyer. Confirm the AE has met them at least once in the last 30 days. *Miller-Heiman: an unmet economic buyer is a red flag, always.*
  5. What would make us lose? Force a pre-mortem. The AE must name the most likely failure mode out loud — that is the contingency we plan in Section 4.

Strong tell: the AE answers questions 1–3 fluently but stalls on 4 or 5. That is exactly the deal that slips next quarter.


Section 3 — Buying-Committee Whiteboard (10 min)

Draw the org map live. Iannarino calls this "trading value for access" — every box on the board is a person the AE owes one specific insight to.

flowchart TD EB[Economic Buyer<br/>CFO / VP Finance] CH[Champion<br/>VP Ops] TB[Technical Buyer<br/>Director IT] UB[User Buyer<br/>RevOps Lead] BL[Blocker<br/>Procurement] CO[Coach<br/>former colleague] EB --> CH CH --> UB CH --> TB EB --> BL CO -.intel.-> CH CO -.intel.-> EB

For every box, the AE states three things:

Manager challenge script: *"You've got four boxes red and one unnamed. Walk me through how a single AE covers five executives in fourteen days — or tell me who else on our bench we deploy."*


Section 4 — Contingency Planning: The "What If X Decommits" Branches (10 min)

This is where most deal reviews fail — teams plan the happy path and ignore the two scenarios most likely to kill the deal. Mike Weinberg's *New Sales. Simplified.* rule: plan two losses, then plan the win.

flowchart TD BASE[Current path: signature by EOQ] Q1{Champion gets reorg'd?} Q2{Procurement adds 45-day legal review?} Q3{Competitor drops price 30%?} BASE --> Q1 BASE --> Q2 BASE --> Q3 Q1 -->|Activate Coach<br/>warm intro to new VP within 5 days| W1[Recover] Q1 -->|No coach available| L1[Pause: re-qualify] Q2 -->|MSA pre-redlined<br/>by our counsel this week| W2[Hold timeline] Q3 -->|Lead with TCO model<br/>+ executive sponsor call| W3[Reframe value] Q3 -->|Cannot defend value gap| L3[Walk]

The AE must verbalize the *trigger* and the *first 48-hour move* for each branch. "We'd figure it out" is not a contingency — it is a confession.


Section 5 — Named-Action Close: Owner + Date + Outcome (15 min)

The final fifteen minutes convert conversation into commitments. Every gap surfaced in Sections 2–4 becomes a row on the action board. Force Management's discipline: no action exists without an owner and a date.

ActionOwnerDueOutcome we'll see
Confirm compelling event w/ CFO via 1:1AEMay 30Written quote: "we must close gap by Q3"
Get CEO-to-CFO exec sponsor call on calendarManagerMay 2930-min slot booked
Pre-redline MSA & DPA with our legalDeal DeskJune 2Draft sent to procurement
Coach call: read the room post-reorg rumorAE + RVPMay 28Updated org map by Friday
TCO model defending price vs. competitorSEMay 31Two-page PDF, board-ready
Decision: advance, pause, or killManagerJune 6Recorded in CRM, all notes attached

AE closing script (verbatim): *"By next Friday I will have re-confirmed the compelling event, run the exec sponsor call, and delivered the TCO model. If any of those three slip, I'll call this deal back to the war-room before it slides another stage."*

That sentence — said out loud, in front of peers — is the actual close of the meeting.


Section 6 — Manager Debrief & CRM Capture (5 min)

The manager closes solo for five minutes. Three questions, written into CRM the same day:

Then close the room. Anthony Iannarino's *The Lost Art of Closing* rule: every meeting ends with a next meeting on the calendar. The Deal Strategy Review is no exception.


FAQ

Q: How often do we run these? A: Every $250K+ deal gets one at stage 3 (proposal) and one at stage 4 (negotiation), plus on-demand whenever a trigger fires. Expect three to five per quarter per senior AE.

Q: Who must attend? A: AE (drives), front-line manager (challenges), one peer AE (fresh eyes), and ideally the SE or CS partner on the account. Cap at five people — bigger rooms produce smaller commitments.

Q: What if the AE refuses to share a struggling deal? A: That is the diagnostic. Mike Weinberg: AEs hide deals they are losing. The cure is making Deal Strategy Reviews routine and blameless — celebrate the *kills* as loudly as the wins.

Q: Is this the same as MEDDICC or MEDDPICC review? A: MEDDICC is the *checklist*; the Deal Strategy Review is the *meeting that uses it*. Bring your MEDDICC scorecard to Section 2 — it answers questions 1, 4, and 5 directly.

Q: How is this different from a pipeline review? A: Pipeline review is one hour for fifteen deals. Deal Strategy Review is one hour for one deal. Different muscle, different cadence, do not collapse them.


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