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Skill Drill: Discovery Questions for Building Materials

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Skill Drill: Discovery Questions for Building Materials

Direct Answer

This drill builds the discovery skill your building-materials reps need most: asking layered, project-specific questions that surface the contractor's real timeline, decision-makers, and pain before quoting a price. A sales manager runs it live with 4–12 reps in 30–45 minutes (compressible to 5, extendable to 60).

The team walks away able to run a full discovery conversation that uncovers budget, spec authority, and project stage instead of jumping straight to a SKU and a number.

Why This Drill Matters in Building Materials

In building materials — lumber, fasteners, insulation, roofing, drywall, concrete accessories, millwork — the rep who quotes fastest usually loses margin, and the rep who *asks best* keeps it. The buyer is rarely one person. A typical commercial order pulls in a general contractor's project manager, a purchasing agent, an estimator who already locked the spec months ago, and sometimes an architect or the building owner who wrote the original submittal.

If your rep talks only to the purchasing agent, they're quoting against a spec they can't influence and competing purely on price.

Discovery is the bottleneck because building-materials deals are governed by project stage. The same SKU sold to the same contractor is worth wildly different things depending on whether the job is in pre-bid estimating, post-award buyout, or already framed and screaming for material on a Friday.

A rep who doesn't ask "where are you in this job?" can't tell a margin opportunity from a commodity bid.

Three methodologies anchor this drill. SPIN Selling (Neil Rackham) gives the question sequence: Situation, Problem, Implication, Need-payoff — perfect for moving a contractor from "I need 200 sheets" to "this delay is costing me my framing crew." The Sandler Pain Funnel drives depth: keep asking "tell me more about that" until the real cost of a stockout, a wrong order, or a missed inspection comes out.

And MEDDIC (used by firms like ABC Supply and large distributors' national-account teams) forces the rep to confirm the Economic buyer, the decision Criteria (often a written spec or submittal), and the Champion on the jobsite. Together they turn an order-taker into a consultant the contractor calls first.

What You'll Need (5 min prep)

Round 1 — Set the Scene (5 min)

Open by naming the trap. Read this aloud, verbatim:

"Here's what kills our margin: a contractor calls, says 'I need 200 sheets of 5/8 fire-rated,' and we quote it in ninety seconds. We just competed on price against three other yards and learned nothing. Today we practice the opposite — we earn the right to quote by finding out what's actually going on with the job.

Nobody quotes a price in this drill. If you say a dollar amount, you owe the room a coffee."

Then hand out the Discovery Ladder. Walk the four tiers in 90 seconds:

Tell them: "Your job this round is just to climb the ladder one rung at a time. Don't skip to the bottom."

Round 2 — Run the Reps (15 min)

This is the core. Pairs run a live discovery role-play. One person is the rep, one is the contractor holding a scenario card. Five minutes per turn, then switch, so everyone runs both seats.

Sample scenario cards (read these to the contractor before each turn):

The rep's mission: climb at least to Implication before the timer ends. The leader roams and listens for one thing — did the rep ask a *second* "why" instead of accepting the first answer? That's the Sandler Pain Funnel in action.

What good looks like: The rep uncovers project stage, names the other decision-makers ("who signed off on the spec?"), and gets the contractor to say a cost of inaction out loud ("if I don't get those sheets I lose my crew Monday"). A weak rep stays in Situation questions and never asks what the problem *costs*.

Round 3 — Pressure Test (10 min)

Now raise the difficulty. Same pairs, new rule: the contractor stonewalls. Read this to the room first:

"Real contractors don't volunteer anything. This round, contractors — your job is to give one-word answers until the rep earns more. 'How's the job going?' 'Fine.' Make them work. Reps, your job is to keep climbing without sounding like an interrogation."

Run two quick 4-minute reps. The stonewall forces reps to use bridging language — a Miller Heiman staple — instead of firing questions: "A lot of PMs I work with on medical jobs get burned on the 'or equal' substitution. How's that landed on your end?" Naming a peer pattern lowers the contractor's guard far better than another direct question.

What good looks like: The rep softens a one-word answer into a real one by referencing how *other contractors in the same situation* experience the problem, then asks a follow-up tied to that.

Drill Flow

flowchart TD A[Round 1: Set the Scene 5 min] --> B[Round 2: Run the Reps 15 min] B --> C[Round 3: Pressure Test 10 min] C --> D[Round 4: Debrief and Lock It In 10 min] D --> E{Team hit Implication tier consistently?} E -->|Yes| F[Advance to objection-handling drill next week] E -->|No| G[Re-run Round 2 with new scenario cards] G --> D

Round 4 — Debrief & Lock It In (10 min)

Bring the room back together. Go around once — each rep gives the single best question they heard their partner ask. Write the winners on the whiteboard; these become the team's reusable discovery bank.

Then run the manager's three debrief prompts aloud:

"One — where did you skip a rung and jump to a solution too fast? Two — what did you learn about the *job* that you'd never have gotten if you quoted in ninety seconds? Three — who was the decision-maker you uncovered that you'd have missed?"

Lock it in: every rep commits to one real open opportunity they'll re-run discovery on this week, and reports back at the next huddle.

How to Adapt This Drill

flowchart TD A[Choose your adaptation] --> B{Team size?} B -->|2-3 reps| C[Manager plays contractor, one live demo + coaching] B -->|4-12 reps| D[Pair up, rotate seats] B -->|12 plus| E[Triads: rep, contractor, silent scorer with ladder] A --> F{Skill level?} F -->|New reps| G[Give scripted questions, focus on Situation/Problem only] F -->|Veterans| H[Remove ladder handout, require Need-payoff tier] A --> I{Time available?} I -->|5 min| J[One Situation-to-Implication rep, no debrief] I -->|30 min| K[Standard four rounds] I -->|60 min| L[Add real account, recorded reps, full margin review]

Scaling It: 5-Minute, 30-Minute, and 60-Minute Versions

5-minute version (the pre-shift drill): Skip prep and debrief. Manager reads one scenario card, picks one rep, and runs a single live discovery in front of the room. Stop the instant the rep quotes a price or skips to Implication too early. One coaching cue, done. Perfect for a Monday sales huddle.

30-minute version (the standard): Rounds 1, 2, and 4 as written. Drop the Pressure Test. This is the default running order for a weekly team meeting.

60-minute version (the deep rep): Run all four rounds, then add a fifth block where reps bring a *real* open opportunity, run discovery against the manager playing the actual contractor, and the team scores it against MEDDIC — did we confirm the economic buyer, the decision criteria (the spec), and a champion?

Close with a margin conversation: what would better discovery have been worth on last quarter's three biggest deals?

Common Mistakes & Coaching Cues

FAQ

How often should we run this drill? Weekly in the 30-minute version, with the 5-minute pre-shift version on the other days. Discovery is a muscle — it atrophies fast. Most teams see quote-to-close ratios move within a month of consistent reps.

My reps say they don't have time for discovery on a busy counter. That's exactly when discovery pays. The Friday-emergency scenario (Card B) is built for this — 60 seconds of "where are you in the job and who else is involved" protects margin on the order you were about to give away.

Discovery isn't a long conversation; it's the *right* three questions.

What if the contractor genuinely just wants a price? They always say that. The drill teaches reps to answer a price request with a question: "Happy to — so I quote the right thing, what's the job and when do you need it on site?" Ninety percent of contractors answer, and now you're in discovery.

Should new reps and veterans run this together? Yes — pair a veteran as the contractor for a new rep's first reps so the stonewalling is realistic but coachable. Then flip it: nothing humbles a veteran like a sharp new rep asking why they skipped Implication.

How do I keep it from feeling like role-play theater? Use real, named jobs and real products from your yard — actual SKUs, actual local contractors' situations. The closer the scenario cards are to last week's counter, the faster reps buy in.

What's the one metric that tells me it's working? Listen on real calls for the Implication question — "what happens to your schedule if that slips?" When you hear reps asking it unprompted, the drill has landed. You can also track average order margin and the rate at which reps name a second decision-maker in CRM notes.

Bottom Line

After this drill your team can run a real building-materials discovery — climbing from the facts of the job to the cost of the problem, uncovering the spec author and the economic buyer, and earning the right to quote instead of racing to a number. Run the 30-minute version weekly and the 5-minute version daily; re-run the full four rounds with fresh scenario cards whenever you onboard a new rep or notice the team drifting back to order-taking.

Sources

*discovery questions skill drill — a runnable team training exercise for building materials sales, with verbatim scripts, timing, and coaching cues.*

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