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What AI SDR Tools Actually Cost in 2026: We Analyzed Pricing Across 20+ Platforms

ยท 8 min read
MarketBetter Team
Content Team, marketbetter.ai

Every AI SDR vendor leads with a friendly number. "$49 a month." "Starts at $99." "Book a demo to see pricing." Then you get the contract and the math looks nothing like the pricing page.

We pulled the real numbers on 20+ AI SDR, sales engagement, and sales intelligence platforms โ€” the tiers, the credit systems, the minimum seats, the annual lock-ins, and the add-ons that don't show up until you're in the room with a sales rep. This is the consolidated view: what these tools actually cost a B2B sales team in 2026, and how to budget without getting surprised.

Every price below links to our full breakdown of that specific tool, so you can verify the details yourself.

AI SDR pricing comparison across 20+ platforms in 2026

The headline price is almost never the real priceโ€‹

Here is the single most important thing we found: across the entire category, the gap between the advertised entry price and what teams actually pay is enormous โ€” often 3x to 10x.

The reasons are consistent:

  • Credit systems. Apollo and Clay look cheap per seat, then meter you on enrichment credits. Clay teams routinely pay roughly 3x the headline once real prospecting volume kicks in.
  • Minimum seats and annual lock-in. Amplemarket starts around $600/mo but bills annually. Most "monthly" AI SDR tools are annual contracts wearing a monthly sticker.
  • Add-on modules. Outreach and Salesloft publish a per-seat number, then charge separately for conversation intelligence, dialer, and analytics.
  • Auto-renewal traps. Seamless.AI buyers repeatedly report auto-renewals and cancellation friction that lock in a full extra year.

If you budget off the pricing page, you will be wrong. Budget off the real cost below.

Three pricing models in the AI SDR marketโ€‹

Before comparing individual tools, understand which of three models a vendor uses. It tells you far more about your real cost than the entry price does.

Three AI SDR pricing models: per-seat SaaS, autonomous AI employee, and usage-based

1. Per-seat SaaS (cheap headline, scales with seats and credits)โ€‹

The classic model. You pay per user per month, plus data credits. Cheap to start, expensive at team scale because every rep is another seat and every list pull burns credits.

Examples: Apollo, Reply.io, Instantly, Lemlist, Smartlead.

2. Autonomous "AI employee" (priced like headcount)โ€‹

The newer autonomous AI SDR category โ€” tools that claim to research, write, and send on their own. These are priced like a person, not software: roughly $900 to $5,000+ per month, usually on an annual contract. You're buying an outcome, not seats.

Examples: 11x (Alice), Artisan (Ava), AiSDR, Regie.ai.

If you're weighing this category, read our AI SDR vs AI BDR breakdown first โ€” the labels are used loosely and the pricing follows the label.

3. Usage / credit-based (cost balloons with volume)โ€‹

You pay for what you consume โ€” enrichment, messages, or AI actions. Predictable at low volume, unpredictable at scale, and the vendor's incentive is for you to consume more.

Examples: Clay, Amplemarket, and the credit tiers inside Apollo.

The full pricing breakdownโ€‹

Here's the consolidated table. "Headline" is what the pricing page implies. "Real cost" is what teams actually pay once credits, seats, and add-ons are included, based on our per-tool research.

Autonomous AI SDR platformsโ€‹

PlatformHeadline / entryReal costBilling model
11x (Alice)Custom$60K/year ($5,000/mo)Annual contract
Artisan (Ava)Custom~$2,000 to $3,000/mo entryAnnual, per-lead math
AiSDR$900/mo floor~$10.8K/yearQuarterly billed
Regie.aiCustom~$5,000/mo and upEnterprise annual
AmplemarketFrom $600/mo~$7.2K/year plus creditsAnnual lock-in
NooksCustom~$4,000 to $5,000 per user/yearAnnual

Sales intelligence and dataโ€‹

PlatformHeadline / entryReal costNotes
Apollo.io$49 to $79/userHigher after credit caps and add-onsCredit-metered
ZoomInfoCustom~$15K/year floorAnnual, seat minimums
CognismCustom~$15K (Grow) to $25K+ (Elevate)Per-user tiers
Seamless.AI$147 to $299/userLocked by auto-renewalCancellation friction
ClayFrom $149/moMost pay ~3x headlineCredit-based

Sales engagement and dialersโ€‹

PlatformHeadline / entryReal costNotes
SalesloftCustom~$165/user/mo and upAdd-on modules
Outreach~$50/userEffectively enterprise annualModules priced separately
Reply.io$49/user~$139/user effectivePer-seat creep
Instantly$37/mo$97 to $199/mo typicalAdd-ons
Smartlead$39/mo$500 to $700/mo at scaleSending volume
Lemlist$63/user~$87/user realPer-seat
OrumCustom~$250/user (dialer)Parallel dialing

What a real AI SDR budget looks likeโ€‹

Stack the categories and the picture gets honest. A typical mid-market team that wants "an AI SDR setup" is rarely buying one tool. They're buying:

  • A data/intelligence layer (Apollo, ZoomInfo, or Cognism): roughly $15K/year and up at team scale.
  • A sequencing/engagement layer (Salesloft, Outreach, or a lighter tool like Smartlead): roughly $2K to $30K/year depending on seats.
  • Optionally an autonomous AI SDR (11x, Artisan, AiSDR): roughly $10K to $60K/year.

Add it up and the "$49/month" fantasy becomes a $30K to $100K+ annual GTM stack. That's before anyone measures whether the autonomous layer actually books meetings.

For a deeper look at assembling these pieces, see our complete SDR tech stack guide and our end-to-end AI sales platforms buyer's guide.

The question pricing pages don't answerโ€‹

Here's what none of these price tags tell you: what does your team actually do with the output?

A $15K/year intent-data tool gives you a dashboard of accounts showing signals. A $60K/year autonomous AI SDR sends emails you can't fully see or steer. In both cases the expensive part isn't the software โ€” it's the interpretation gap. Someone still has to decide who to contact, what to say, and when. Most tools hand you data and walk away.

This is where the buying decision should actually be made. Cheaper tools that dump raw signals cost less on the invoice and more in wasted rep hours. Autonomous tools that act on their own cost more and remove the human judgment that closes B2B deals.

That gap is exactly what MarketBetter is built to close. Instead of another dashboard to interpret or a black box you can't control, MarketBetter tells your reps who to contact and what to do next โ€” the specific action, on the specific account, at the specific moment the signal fires. You keep human oversight; you lose the busywork. Compare the approaches in our best AI SDR tools and best AI BDR tools roundups.

How to evaluate AI SDR pricing without getting burnedโ€‹

Five questions to ask every vendor before you sign:

  1. Is this monthly or annually billed? Almost every "monthly" AI SDR price is a 12-month commitment. Confirm the term.
  2. What's metered? Credits, messages, enrichments, seats โ€” find the meter and model your real volume against it.
  3. What's an add-on vs included? Dialer, conversation intelligence, and analytics are frequently separate line items.
  4. What's the renewal behavior? Ask directly about auto-renewal windows and cancellation notice periods.
  5. What does a rep do with the output? If the answer is "interpret a dashboard," factor in the rep hours. That's the hidden cost bigger than any add-on.

Bottom lineโ€‹

The AI SDR market's pricing is deliberately hard to compare, and the entry prices are the least useful number on the page. Budget off real cost: expect a serious team stack to land between $30K and $100K+ per year once data, engagement, and any autonomous layer are combined.

And before you pay for either a data dump or a black box, decide which problem you're actually solving. If it's "my reps have data but don't know what to do with it," more data won't fix it โ€” direction will.

See what direction-first looks like. Book a demo and we'll show you exactly how MarketBetter turns signals into the next action for your reps โ€” no dashboard interpretation required.

30 Best Codex Prompts for Sales & GTM Teams [2026]: The Complete Library

ยท 16 min read
MarketBetter Team
Content Team, marketbetter.ai

Most "AI prompt" lists are the same ten generic prompts rewritten a hundred times. This isn't that.

Below are 30 Codex prompts organized by the actual job you're trying to do โ€” research a prospect, write the email, prep the meeting, clean the pipeline, win the deal. Each one is copy-paste ready and built for GPT-5.3-Codex. At the end, you'll get the reusable prompt template that lets you write your own from scratch, so you're never dependent on someone else's list again.

If you want the shorter starter set first, our 10 Codex prompts that 10x SDR productivity is the fastest place to begin. This library goes deeper and covers the full GTM motion.

Codex prompt library for sales and GTM teams

Before You Start: 60-Second Setupโ€‹

Install the Codex CLI:

npm install -g @openai/codex

Or run Codex in the browser at codex.openai.com. New to the tool? Our OpenAI Codex CLI GTM guide walks through the full setup, and if you're deciding between models, read Codex vs Claude vs ChatGPT for GTM before you commit.

Three rules that make every prompt below work better:

  1. Fill in every [BRACKET]. The prompts are templates. Vague inputs get vague outputs.
  2. Steer mid-generation. When Codex drifts, interrupt and correct it โ€” don't restart. See mid-turn steering for GTM.
  3. Iterate in one session. Codex holds context. Follow up with "tighten this" or "add a data point" instead of starting over.

Category 1: Research & Prospectingโ€‹

The prep work that eats your morning. These four prompts turn an hour of tab-switching into a few minutes.

Prompt 1: Account Deep-Dive Briefโ€‹

Use case: A full account brief before you touch the phone.

Build a research brief on [COMPANY]. Structure it as:

1. One-line description of what they sell and to whom
2. Company stage (headcount, funding, growth signals)
3. Top 3 strategic priorities you can infer from recent news, job posts, and their site
4. The single team most likely to feel the pain [YOUR PRODUCT] solves
5. One specific, non-generic opener referencing something real from the last 90 days

Only include facts you can support. Mark anything speculative as "inferred."

Prompt 2: Buying-Committee Mapโ€‹

Use case: Know who to multithread before you send a single email.

For [COMPANY] evaluating [PRODUCT CATEGORY], map the likely buying committee:

- Economic buyer (title + why they care)
- Champion (title + the win that makes them look good)
- Technical evaluator (title + their top concern)
- Likely blocker (title + their objection)

For each, give me one message angle that resonates with that specific role.

Pair this with our multithreading stakeholder playbook to turn the map into a sequence.

Prompt 3: Trigger-Event Scannerโ€‹

Use case: Find a real reason to reach out today.

Given these recent signals about [COMPANY]:
[PASTE NEWS / JOB POSTS / FUNDING / PRODUCT LAUNCHES]

Rank the top 3 as outreach triggers. For each, tell me:
- Why it creates urgency for [YOUR PRODUCT]
- The exact first sentence of an email that references it
- What NOT to say so it doesn't feel like I'm just name-dropping the news

Prompt 4: ICP Look-Alike Builderโ€‹

Use case: Turn your best customer into a target list definition.

My best customer is [CUSTOMER + why they're ideal]. Reverse-engineer the
firmographic and technographic profile that made them a great fit:

- Industry, size band, and growth stage
- Tech stack signals that indicate readiness
- Org signals (roles hiring, team structure) that predict need
- 3 disqualifiers that mean "don't bother"

Output as a checklist I can score prospects against.

For scoring the list you build, see AI lead scoring with Codex.

Prompt 5: Rep-Ready Research Digestโ€‹

Use case: Compress five sources into one scannable card.

Turn the raw notes below into a 5-bullet pre-call card an SDR can read in
20 seconds. No fluff, no restating the company name. Lead with the most
useful fact for booking a meeting.

[PASTE RAW RESEARCH]

Category 2: Personalized Outreach & Emailโ€‹

Volume is easy. Relevance is hard. These prompts optimize for reply rate, not send count.

Codex outreach prompt workflow

Prompt 6: First-Touch Cold Emailโ€‹

Use case: One email, one idea, one ask.

Write a cold email to [TITLE] at [COMPANY] about [PROBLEM YOU SOLVE].

Constraints:
- Under 90 words
- Subject line under 40 characters, no clickbait
- One specific observation about their business (use: [TRIGGER])
- One clear, low-friction CTA (not "hop on a 30-min call")
- No "hope this finds you well," no "just reaching out," no "circling back"

Tone: peer-to-peer, direct, mildly curious. Not salesy.

Prompt 7: Reply-Rate Rewriteโ€‹

Use case: Fix an email that isn't landing.

Here's an email getting a [X]% reply rate:
[PASTE EMAIL]

Diagnose why it's underperforming, then rewrite it. Show:
1. The 3 biggest problems (be blunt)
2. A rewritten version
3. One A/B variation with a different angle

Keep it human. If it reads like AI wrote it, you failed.

Prompt 8: Multi-Touch Sequence with a Thesisโ€‹

Use case: A sequence where every email earns the next.

Build a 5-touch sequence for [ICP] selling [PRODUCT]. Each touch must
introduce a NEW idea, not repeat the last one:

- Touch 1: Provocative observation about their world
- Touch 2: Proof (customer story or stat)
- Touch 3: Reframe the problem they think they have
- Touch 4: Direct, specific ask
- Touch 5: Honest breakup

Under 90 words each. Mark personalization with [BRACKETS]. One CTA per email.

Prompt 9: LinkedIn-to-Email Bridgeโ€‹

Use case: Convert a LinkedIn interaction into a real conversation.

I [connected with / got a like from / commented alongside] [NAME], [TITLE]
at [COMPANY]. Context: [WHAT HAPPENED].

Write a short follow-up that references the interaction naturally, adds value,
and earns a reply โ€” without pitching in the first message.

Prompt 10: Objection-Preempting P.S.โ€‹

Use case: Neutralize the obvious objection before they raise it.

For an email to [TITLE] about [PRODUCT], the most likely brush-off is
"[OBJECTION]." Write 3 one-line P.S. options that quietly defuse it without
sounding defensive.

Category 3: Discovery & Meetingsโ€‹

Walk in prepared, run a tighter call, follow up faster.

Prompt 11: Discovery Question Setโ€‹

Use case: Questions that surface real pain, not surface-level nods.

Generate a discovery guide for a [MEETING TYPE] with [TITLE] at [COMPANY].

Give me:
- 3 situation questions (fast, build rapport)
- 4 problem questions (surface pain)
- 3 implication questions (make the cost of inaction real)
- 2 vision questions (paint the after-state)

For each, add a one-line note on what a good answer tells me.

Prompt 12: Live Meeting Prep One-Pagerโ€‹

Use case: Everything you need on a single screen.

Meeting with [NAME] at [COMPANY] about [TOPIC]. Build a one-pager:

- 3 key facts about them
- 2 likely objections + my response
- Top 3 discovery questions
- Who else they might be evaluating
- 3 next-step options if it goes well

Keep every section to bullets. Prioritize what helps me advance the deal.

Selling the demo itself? Pair this with demo personalization with Codex.

Prompt 13: Real-Time Objection Handlerโ€‹

Use case: A comeback sheet you can glance at mid-call.

For [PRODUCT] sold to [ICP], generate a comeback sheet for the 6 most common
objections. For each: a 1-line acknowledgment, a reframe, a proof point, and
a question that moves the conversation forward. Conversational, not scripted.

Want a repeatable in-call diagnostic? See our discovery call diagnostic: 8 signals that predict close.

Prompt 14: Post-Call Follow-Up in 60 Secondsโ€‹

Use case: Send the recap while the call is still warm.

Turn these call notes into a follow-up email:
[PASTE NOTES]

Include: a one-line recap of their goal, the 2-3 points that mattered most
to them, the agreed next step with a date, and nothing they didn't actually
say. Under 120 words. Founder-to-buyer tone.

Prompt 15: Deal Recap for the Championโ€‹

Use case: Arm your champion to sell internally without you.

My champion [NAME] needs to pitch [PRODUCT] to their [BOSS/COMMITTEE].
Write a short internal-forward doc they can paste into Slack or email:

- The problem in their words
- The 3 outcomes that matter to leadership
- The cost of doing nothing
- The simple next step

Make my champion look smart. Zero jargon.

Category 4: Pipeline, CRM & Opsโ€‹

The unglamorous work that quietly kills quota. Automate it.

Codex CRM and pipeline automation

Prompt 16: Pipeline Hygiene Auditโ€‹

Use case: Find the deals lying to your forecast.

Given this pipeline export:
[PASTE DEALS: name, stage, amount, last activity, close date]

Flag every deal that is: stalled (no activity in 14+ days), slipping (close
date pushed twice), or mis-staged (stage doesn't match activity). For each,
give me the one action that unsticks it. Output as a prioritized list.

More on this in Codex CRM pipeline cleanup and CRM hygiene automation with Codex.

Prompt 17: CRM Field Standardizerโ€‹

Use case: Fix messy data without hand-editing rows.

Write a Node.js script that reads a CRM contact export (CSV) and:
- Standardizes phone numbers to E.164
- Title-cases names and job titles
- Flags (does not auto-change) email domains that don't match company domain
- Outputs a change-preview report before writing anything

Include error handling and a dry-run flag.

Prompt 18: Weekly Forecast Summaryโ€‹

Use case: Turn a spreadsheet into a narrative your manager reads.

From this deal list [PASTE], write a 6-line forecast summary:
- Committed vs best-case number
- The 2 deals most likely to close this period and why
- The 2 biggest risks
- The one thing I need help with

No hedging. If the number is soft, say so.

For accuracy tuning, see AI sales forecasting accuracy with Codex.

Prompt 19: Lead Routerโ€‹

Use case: Route inbound to the right rep instantly.

Design routing logic for inbound leads. Inputs available: [LIST FIELDS].
Rules I care about: [e.g., enterprise by headcount to AE tier 1, SMB to SDR
pod, existing customers to CSM]. Output a decision tree plus edge-case
handling for missing data.

Deeper build in AI lead routing system with Codex.

Prompt 20: Activity-to-Insight Rollupโ€‹

Use case: Turn raw activity logs into coaching signal.

Here are my last 2 weeks of activity [PASTE: calls, emails, meetings].
Tell me: where I'm spending time vs where deals actually move, my highest
and lowest ROI activity, and the one habit to change next week. Be direct.

Category 5: Competitive & Deal Strategyโ€‹

Win the deals that are genuinely up for grabs.

Prompt 21: Battle Card Generatorโ€‹

Use case: A tactical card for a competitor you hit weekly.

Build a battle card for competing against [COMPETITOR] when selling [PRODUCT]:

1. How they position vs how we should
2. Their real strengths (be honest)
3. Their weaknesses with specific examples
4. 4 discovery questions that expose the gaps
5. 3 traps to set early that hurt them later
6. Quick comebacks to their 5 most common claims

Tactical and specific. This is for reps, not marketing.

Automate the whole thing with AI sales battle card automation.

Prompt 22: Deal Risk Diagnosisโ€‹

Use case: Get an honest second opinion on a stuck deal.

Here's a deal: [CONTEXT โ€” stage, stakeholders, timeline, what's happened].
Play skeptical sales manager. Tell me: the 3 biggest risks, the question I'm
avoiding, whether this is real or happy ears, and the single next move with
the highest leverage.

Prompt 23: Mutual Action Planโ€‹

Use case: A shared close plan that keeps the deal on rails.

Create a mutual action plan to get [COMPANY] from [CURRENT STAGE] to signed
by [DATE]. List every step, owner (us or them), and date working backward
from close. Flag the 2 steps most likely to slip.

Prompt 24: Pricing & Packaging Framerโ€‹

Use case: Present price as value, not sticker shock.

For [PRODUCT] priced at [PRICE MODEL], and a prospect who cares most about
[THEIR PRIORITY], write 3 ways to frame the investment around ROI and cost
of inaction. Include the exact language for the "why this is worth it" moment.
No discounting.

Prompt 25: Loss Post-Mortemโ€‹

Use case: Extract a lesson from every closed-lost.

We lost [DEAL] to [COMPETITOR / no-decision] because [WHAT HAPPENED].
Diagnose the real root cause (not the stated one), the earliest point I could
have changed the outcome, and the one process change that prevents a repeat.

Category 6: Manager & Team Enablementโ€‹

For the people who carry a number and a team.

Prompt 26: 1:1 Coaching Prepโ€‹

Use case: Walk into every 1:1 with a plan.

My rep [NAME] has this pipeline and activity [PASTE]. Prep my 1:1:
- 2 genuine wins to open with
- The single metric holding them back
- 3 coaching questions (not lectures)
- One deal to inspect together and why

Coach, don't manage.

Prompt 27: Playbook Builderโ€‹

Use case: Codify what your best rep does.

Turn these notes on our top performer's process [PASTE] into a repeatable
playbook: the motion stage by stage, the "if this, then that" plays, and the
3 habits that separate them from the median rep. Written so a new hire can run it.

Full walkthrough in AI sales playbook generator with Codex.

Prompt 28: Onboarding Ramp Planโ€‹

Use case: Get new reps productive faster.

Design a 30-60-90 ramp for a new [ROLE] selling [PRODUCT] to [ICP]. For each
phase: the outcome, the skills to build, the certifications to pass, and the
leading indicator that predicts they'll hit quota.

Prompt 29: Team Performance Benchmarkโ€‹

Use case: See where the team really stands.

Given this team's metrics [PASTE], benchmark each rep on activity, conversion,
and deal velocity. Identify the top pattern among winners, the common failure
mode among laggards, and the one team-wide change with the biggest upside.

See SDR performance benchmarking with Codex for the full method.

Prompt 30: Cold Call Script Optimizerโ€‹

Use case: A talk track that doesn't sound like a robot.

Write a cold call framework for calling [TITLE] at [COMPANY TYPE]:
opening (5 sec), permission ask, 15-second hook on [PAIN], 2 qualifying
questions, bridge to meeting, top 3 objection handlers, graceful exit.
Give exact language, not concepts. Make it sound like a human, not a script.

More at AI cold call script optimizer with Codex.


The Anatomy of a Great Codex Prompt (Steal This Template)โ€‹

The prompts above work because they share a structure. Once you internalize it, you'll stop hunting for lists and start writing better prompts than any list gives you.

Here's the reusable template:

[ROLE / CONTEXT]      -> Who you are and the situation
[TASK] -> The one job, stated plainly
[INPUTS] -> The real data, marked with [BRACKETS]
[CONSTRAINTS] -> Length, tone, format, and what to avoid
[OUTPUT FORMAT] -> Exactly how you want it back
[EXCLUSIONS] -> What NOT to do (the secret weapon)

Filled in, it looks like this:

You're an SDR selling [PRODUCT] to [ICP].
Task: write a first-touch cold email.
Inputs: prospect is [TITLE] at [COMPANY]; trigger is [EVENT].
Constraints: under 90 words, one CTA, peer tone.
Output: subject line + body.
Don't: use "hope this finds you well," buzzwords, or a hard ask.

Five rules that separate good prompts from great ones:

  1. State the exclusions. Telling Codex what to avoid improves output more than piling on requirements. "No buzzwords, no generic openers" does more than three extra instructions.
  2. Give real inputs, not placeholders. The prompt is a template; your data makes it useful. Paste the actual trigger, the real notes, the true numbers.
  3. Specify the output format. "Return a 5-bullet card" beats "summarize this" every time.
  4. Constrain length up front. Unbounded prompts produce unbounded fluff. Set the word count.
  5. Iterate, don't restart. Codex keeps context in a session. "Tighten this" and "make it more specific" refine faster than a fresh prompt.

For choosing the right tool for these prompts, compare Codex vs Claude Code for sales automation. If you lean Claude, our Claude SDR daily routine and how to use Claude for lead generation cover the same motion.


From Prompts to Autopilotโ€‹

Prompts save you minutes. Automation saves you the job entirely.

Each prompt above can become a trigger:

  • New lead lands in the CRM โ†’ run the Account Deep-Dive Brief (Prompt 1) automatically
  • Meeting booked โ†’ generate the Live Meeting Prep One-Pager (Prompt 12)
  • Every Friday โ†’ run the Pipeline Hygiene Audit (Prompt 16)

Chain them and the prompts stop being things you run and start being work that runs itself.

Free Tool

Try our AI Lead Generator โ€” find verified LinkedIn leads for any company instantly. No signup required.

The Real Unlockโ€‹

Even the best prompt is only as good as the input you feed it. "Research this company" gets you public info anyone can find. The reps who win know who's actually on their site right now and what those buyers care about โ€” then feed that into prompts like the ones above.

That's the gap MarketBetter closes. We tell you who's showing intent and what to do next, so your Codex prompts run on real buying signals instead of guesses.

Want to feed your prompts real buyer intent? Book a demo โ†’

How to Use Claude for Lead Generation: A Step-by-Step Playbook [2026]

ยท 10 min read
MarketBetter Team
Content Team, marketbetter.ai

How to use Claude for lead generation - the sourcing-to-scored-list workflow

Let's start with the honest answer, because most articles on this topic won't give it to you: Claude cannot generate leads by itself. It has no built-in contact database, it can't scrape LinkedIn at scale, and if you ask it for "50 CMOs at Series B fintechs," it will happily hallucinate 50 names, half of which don't exist.

So why is "how to use Claude for lead generation" one of the fastest-growing searches in B2B sales? Because the people asking it have figured out something real: Claude isn't the source of leads โ€” it's the reasoning layer that turns raw, messy, low-quality lists into a prioritized worklist of accounts actually worth your time. That's where 80% of a lead-gen team's hours disappear, and it's exactly the part Claude is world-class at.

This is the step-by-step playbook for doing it right. Five stages, the exact prompts, and a clear line on what Claude can and can't do โ€” so you don't waste a week discovering the limits the hard way.

If you want the broader role-level picture, the complete Claude-for-SDRs pillar guide covers the full SDR job. This post is narrower and deeper: it's specifically about generating and qualifying net-new leads.


Can Claude generate leads? What it actually can and can't doโ€‹

Set expectations first. This one table saves you the most common mistake.

TaskCan Claude do it alone?What you need
Invent a list of companies/contactsNo โ€” it hallucinatesA real data source
Define and encode your ICP as a filterYesA clear ICP
Qualify 500 raw companies against that ICPYes, extremely wellThe raw list
Score and rank leads by fit and intentYesFit + signal data
Find the right contact and title at a companyPartlyAn enrichment tool or source
Write the first-touch messageYesResearch + positioning
Pull verified emails at scaleNoAn enrichment provider

The pattern: Claude is the judgment and synthesis engine. You still need a source of raw leads and, usually, an enrichment step for verified contact data. Get those two things feeding Claude and the middle of the funnel โ€” the qualification grind that eats your reps' mornings โ€” collapses from hours to minutes.

For a head-to-head on which model handles this best, see Claude vs ChatGPT for sales teams. Short version: Claude's long context and consistent reasoning across a 2,000-row list is the deciding factor for lead gen specifically.


The 5-stage Claude lead generation workflowโ€‹

Here's the full pipeline. Each stage feeds the next.

  1. Encode your ICP โ€” turn "our best customers" into a machine-readable rubric
  2. Source raw leads โ€” get companies and contacts from a real source
  3. Qualify at scale โ€” score the raw list against the rubric
  4. Enrich the winners โ€” find the right person and their context
  5. Prioritize into a worklist โ€” a ranked queue your reps actually work

Skip stage 1 and everything downstream is garbage. Let's build it.


Stage 1 โ€” Encode your ICP as a machine-readable filterโ€‹

Most teams "know" their ICP but have never written it down in a way a machine can apply consistently. That's the highest-leverage 20 minutes in this entire process.

Prompt:

You are helping me build a lead qualification rubric.

Here are 8 of our best current customers and why they're great fits:
[paste 8 accounts + one line each on why they closed and stuck]

Here are 4 accounts that looked good but churned or never closed:
[paste 4 + why they failed]

Produce a scoring rubric with:
- 5-7 firmographic criteria (industry, size, tech, funding stage, etc.)
- 2-3 disqualifiers (auto-reject signals)
- A 0-100 scoring formula weighting each criterion
Output it as something I can reuse to score new companies.

The output is a reusable rubric grounded in your real wins and losses โ€” not a generic "50-500 employees, B2B SaaS" guess. Save it. You'll paste it into every qualification run from now on.

For a deeper treatment of turning fit into a repeatable score, see Claude Code SDR Part 6: Lead Scoring.


Stage 2 โ€” Source your raw leads (this is the part Claude can't fake)โ€‹

Claude needs raw material. You have three honest options for where it comes from:

Option A โ€” LinkedIn Sales Navigator. Build a search that roughly matches your ICP, export or copy the results, and hand them to Claude to qualify. The Sales Navigator + Claude workflow walks through this end to end. Sales Nav gives you breadth; Claude gives you the filtering Sales Nav can't.

Option B โ€” Website visitor identification. This is the highest-intent source that most teams ignore. The companies already researching you are worth ten cold ICP matches. Tools that de-anonymize your traffic turn "someone from a mid-market logistics firm read your pricing page twice" into a named account you can act on today. That's the source we care most about โ€” more on it below.

Option C โ€” Free and low-cost tools. If you're bootstrapping, there's a real stack of free options. We break them down in the best free AI lead generation tools for B2B and the best B2B lead generation tools.

Whatever the source, the output of this stage is a raw list โ€” messy, unqualified, full of noise. That's fine. Stage 3 is where Claude earns its keep.


Stage 3 โ€” Qualify the raw list at scaleโ€‹

This is the magic step. You have 300 raw companies and a rubric from Stage 1. Feed both to Claude.

Prompt:

Here is my ICP scoring rubric:
[paste rubric from Stage 1]

Here is a raw list of 300 companies with the fields I have
(name, industry, employee count, website, any notes):
[paste CSV/list]

For each company:
1. Score it 0-100 against the rubric.
2. Give a one-line reason for the score.
3. Flag any auto-disqualifiers.
Return the top 40 by score as a table, sorted high to low.
Be conservative โ€” if you lack evidence a company fits, score it lower,
don't guess.

That last line matters. Telling Claude to penalize missing evidence instead of inventing it is the single most important instruction for keeping lead-gen output trustworthy. A rep who can trust the top-40 list works it; a rep who's been burned by hallucinated fits ignores the whole thing.

Two minutes of Claude replaces an afternoon of a rep eyeballing a spreadsheet โ€” and it's more consistent, because Claude applies the same rubric to row 300 as it did to row 1. For the underlying research mechanics, see automate lead research with Claude Code and Claude Code SDR Part 2: Prospect Research.


Stage 4 โ€” Enrich the winnersโ€‹

Now you have 40 qualified companies. You need the right person at each and enough context to open a real conversation. Claude can't pull verified emails on its own, but once you feed it enrichment data (from your provider) plus public signals, it synthesizes a briefing no rep has time to write by hand.

Prompt:

For each of these 40 companies, I've pasted the LinkedIn profile of the
most likely buyer plus their company's recent news:
[paste enrichment data]

For each, produce:
- Confirmed best-fit contact + title + why them
- A one-paragraph "why now" briefing (trigger event, pain, angle)
- One specific, non-generic opening line I could actually send
Keep each under 80 words. No filler, no "I hope this finds you well."

You now have 40 fully-briefed, ready-to-work leads. The full breakdown of turning research into first-touch lives in AI for sales prospecting and, for the outreach itself, LinkedIn outreach automation with Claude Code.


Stage 5 โ€” Prioritize into a daily worklistโ€‹

Forty leads is still too many to work well at once. The last step is ranking them into the order a rep should actually attack โ€” fit plus intent, not fit alone.

Prompt:

Here are my 40 enriched leads with fit scores.
I'm also pasting intent signals where I have them
(site visits, content downloads, job changes, funding):
[paste]

Re-rank all 40 into a single prioritized worklist. Weight recent,
high-intent signals heavily โ€” a medium-fit account that just visited
our pricing page outranks a perfect-fit account that's gone quiet.
Group into: Call today / Sequence this week / Nurture.

That's a lead-generation pipeline that runs in an afternoon and outputs a worklist your reps trust. To wire this into a daily cadence, the Claude SDR daily routine shows the exact 90-minute block. And if deliverability is a concern as you scale outreach, read how to build a prospecting engine without burning your domain first.


The honest limits (and how to work around them)โ€‹

Because no one else will say it plainly:

  • Claude will confidently invent contacts. Never let it be the source. Always give it a real list to work on, never ask it to produce one from nothing.
  • It doesn't have live data. "Recent funding" or "current headcount" needs to come from your source or enrichment tool. Claude reasons over data; it doesn't fetch it.
  • Verified emails require a real provider. Claude can guess an email pattern; it can't confirm one is deliverable.
  • Scoring is only as good as your rubric. Garbage ICP in, garbage worklist out. Stage 1 is not optional.

Work within those lines and Claude is the best qualification-and-synthesis engine your team has ever had. Ignore them and you'll generate a list of ghosts.


Where the leads should really come fromโ€‹

Here's the strategic point most "Claude for lead gen" advice misses. The best raw source isn't a bigger cold list โ€” it's the people already showing intent. Companies visiting your site are further down the buying journey than any cold ICP match, and they've told you what they care about by which pages they read.

That's the gap MarketBetter fills. We de-anonymize your website traffic into named accounts, layer on the buying signals, and โ€” this is the part that matters โ€” tell your reps what to do next, not just who visited. Claude is brilliant at reasoning over a list. MarketBetter makes sure the list is made of real, high-intent companies instead of cold guesses.

Claude tells your SDRs what to do. MarketBetter tells them who to do it for โ€” with the intent data that makes every message land.

Pair the two and the five stages above stop being a manual afternoon and become a system: high-intent leads in, prioritized worklist out, every day.


Start generating better leadsโ€‹

Claude is a force multiplier, not a lead database. Give it a real source, a sharp ICP rubric, and clear instructions, and it will do the qualification work of a small team โ€” consistently, in minutes.

The one thing it can't manufacture is a good source of leads. That's worth solving first.

Want to see high-intent leads flow straight into a Claude-ready worklist? Book a demo โ†’

The Discovery Call Diagnostic: 8 In-Call Signals That Predict If a Deal Will Close [2026]

ยท 12 min read
MarketBetter Team
Content Team, marketbetter.ai

Discovery call diagnostic - 8 in-call signals that predict deal close

Most AEs walk out of a discovery call and write the same recap in CRM: "Good convo. Strong interest. Sending follow-up." Two weeks later half of those deals are in slow-fade limbo, and nobody can explain what changed. Nothing changed. The deal was already dead at minute eight โ€” the AE just didn't notice.

The hard truth: discovery call outcome is mostly decided by what the buyer brings to the table, not what the AE asks. Budget, authority, timing โ€” the classic BANT โ€” are answers buyers give you because you forced the question. Real intent is something you have to listen for, and it shows up fast. If you know what to listen for, you can call the deal in the first 10-15 minutes with surprising accuracy.

This is the diagnostic. Eight signals. Where they show up. What they actually mean. And what to do when you don't see them.

If you want the wider context, this fits between the 15-minute pre-demo prep playbook and the 14-day post-demo AE daily playbook โ€” discovery is the inflection point between the two.

Why "discovery questions" frameworks miss the pointโ€‹

Every sales methodology โ€” MEDDPICC, SPIN, Sandler, GAP โ€” gives you a list of questions to ask. They're fine. The problem is that the AE who's reading off a question list is, by definition, leading the conversation. Leading a discovery call is the opposite of discovery. You're shaping their answers instead of letting them reveal themselves.

The diagnostic flips the model. Instead of asking better questions, you create the conditions for the buyer to talk for 60-70% of the call, and then you score what you hear. The questions matter less. The patterns inside their answers matter enormously.

Eight patterns. If a deal shows 5 or more, it's real. If it shows 2 or fewer, your follow-up is mostly nurture โ€” don't burn AE cycles. The middle is where coaching and multi-threading make the difference.

Signal 1 โ€” They name the trigger before you askโ€‹

The strongest qualifier in any discovery call is a compelling event volunteered without prompting. When a buyer opens with "we just lost our biggest rep and need to ramp two new ones in 60 days" or "our contract with the current vendor is up in November and renewal pricing went up 40%," they are telling you the deal already has a forcing function.

What to listen for: a specific event, a date attached to it, and a cost of doing nothing. Generic statements like "we're always looking to improve" or "we want to grow faster" are not triggers. Triggers have edges. They hurt.

If you don't hear one in the first 10 minutes, ask once: "What made now the right time to take this call?" If the answer is hand-wavy, mark this signal as absent. Don't pretend it's there.

Signal 2 โ€” They say "we" not "I"โ€‹

Pay attention to pronouns. Buyers who frame the problem in first-person singular ("I'm trying to figure outโ€ฆ", "I want to see ifโ€ฆ", "I've been thinking aboutโ€ฆ") are usually exploring on their own. Deals with one-person curiosity at the top of funnel close at a fraction of the rate of deals where the buyer has already framed the project as a team need.

"We" language signals that the conversation has already happened internally. They've talked about this with their VP. The pain has been named in a leadership meeting. The exploration call is one step of a process, not a personal hobby.

Listen for: "we're evaluating," "our team decided," "my CRO asked me to look at," "we agreed we'd shortlist." Each one is a deal-team artifact you didn't have to build yourself. Compare to multi-threading from the discovery stage โ€” if they're already using "we," the deal team is partially formed before you ever pitched.

Signal 3 โ€” They cite specific numbers unpromptedโ€‹

When buyers volunteer numbers without you fishing for them, the deal is already real in their head. "We have 47 SDRs and roughly 8,000 target accounts" is different from "we have a pretty big sales team." The first one means they've measured the problem. The second one means they're guessing.

Numbers to listen for: team headcount, current tool spend, conversion rates, quota attainment, deal sizes, pipeline coverage, churn rate. The specific metric matters less than the act of volunteering it. Buyers who have measured their problem have, almost by definition, already decided it's a problem worth solving.

The inverse signal is just as useful: if a buyer can't (or won't) give you a number for anything quantitative, they haven't done the internal work. The deal is at "interesting topic," not "active project."

Signal 4 โ€” They reference a deadline that isn't yoursโ€‹

Self-imposed deadlines are different from sales-imposed deadlines. "We need to make a decision by end of quarter" said in response to your "what's your timeline?" is a polite answer. "Board meeting in August, I need to have a recommendation by July 15" is a deadline that exists whether or not you're in the picture.

The best deadline signals are tied to events you can verify: a board meeting, a fiscal year cutover, a hiring plan that needs tooling, a vendor contract expiration, a product launch that needs sales infrastructure, a fundraise that requires GTM hardening. Each one creates signal decay on a known curve โ€” the deal has gravity pulling it toward a date.

If you don't hear a deadline, ask: "What happens if this isn't solved in the next 90 days?" If the honest answer is "not much," the deal will drift. Note it.

Signal 5 โ€” They ask about implementationโ€‹

This is the single most underrated signal in B2B sales. Buyers who ask "what does onboarding look like?" or "how long does it take to get a team trained?" or "who would we work with after the contract signs?" are not asking out of curiosity. They are mentally rehearsing what life is like after they buy.

The brain only does that rehearsal when the buying decision has tipped past 50%. You can almost feel it happen on a call โ€” the conversation shifts from "tell me what you do" to "tell me what we'd do." That pivot is everything.

When you hear an implementation question, your job is to answer it precisely and then ask "is the implementation timeline a factor in your decision?" Their answer tells you whether they're sequencing toward a real go-live or just collecting reassurance for a hypothetical purchase. Either way, lean in. This is the highest-leverage signal on this list.

Signal 6 โ€” They name competitors they're also evaluatingโ€‹

It feels counterintuitive โ€” competitors should be a threat, right? In discovery, the opposite is true. A buyer who names two or three competitors they're also looking at is a buyer who has built a shortlist, which means they have budget, authority, and intent. They are buying. The only question is from whom.

A buyer who insists they're "just exploring" and "not really comparing anyone right now" is in a much weaker position. They haven't done the work to scope the market. They're educational. Education calls close at maybe 5-10%. Shortlist calls close at 30-50%.

When you hear competitor names, do three things: (1) ask what they liked about each one โ€” this tells you their evaluation criteria, (2) ask where they are in each conversation โ€” this tells you the order of decision, (3) note the names, because your follow-up content needs to address those specific comparisons. This is where feature-to-feature competitor knowledge earns its keep.

Signal 7 โ€” They mention internal work they've already doneโ€‹

Strong deals have history. By the time they reach you, the buyer has usually built some artifact โ€” a one-pager for their VP, a spreadsheet comparing two or three vendors, a doc summarizing the current tool's gaps, a Slack thread with their team about the project. When they reference these in passing ("I put together a deck for our CRO last week" or "I have a spreadsheet I've been filling out"), they are showing you that the buying process is already running inside their org.

The artifact itself isn't the signal. The fact that they made one is. Internal work means an internal champion is forming, which is the single biggest predictor of whether the deal will survive the champion-goes-quiet moment later in the cycle.

Ask, gently: "Would it help if I sent you a one-pager you can share internally?" or "Want me to put together a version of the comparison for your team?" If they say yes enthusiastically, you have a champion in the making. If they deflect ("oh, I'll handle that myself"), the deal is more single-threaded than it looked.

Signal 8 โ€” They self-propose the next call participantsโ€‹

The cleanest tell of all: at some point in the back half of discovery, the buyer says some version of "I think it would make sense to get our [VP / RevOps lead / IT person / finance partner] on the next call." Not because you asked. Because they're already imagining the next step.

A buyer who is sequencing toward a multi-stakeholder conversation has decided this is a real evaluation. They're showing you who they need to align internally. You should help them. Offer a specific agenda for the next call ("I can prepare a 20-minute demo focused on what your VP will care about, plus 10 minutes for Q&A"). Get the calendar invite while you're still on Zoom.

If the buyer doesn't self-propose, you do it โ€” but treat it as a softer signal. "Who else internally would want to be on the next conversation?" is a fine question. Their willingness to name people is the signal. A vague "let me think about who else should weigh in" is a deferred answer, which means weak coalition. Mark it as half-credit.

Scoring the callโ€‹

After the call, score 0-8. Don't fudge.

ScoreReadAction
6-8 signals presentReal dealMove to multi-threaded demo, prep next call within 5 business days
4-5 signals presentReal but needs workChampion-building plays โ€” share a custom one-pager, line up a peer customer reference
2-3 signals presentEducational / nurtureLong-cycle drip, re-engage on trigger events, do not invest AE hours
0-1 signals presentWrong-fit or wrong-timeMove on. Politely. Open the AE calendar for a real deal

The mistake most AEs make is treating the 2-3 signal calls like the 6-8 signal calls โ€” same follow-up energy, same calendar time, same hope. That's how pipeline math breaks. Most reps don't have a fit problem; they have a discipline problem about where to spend hours.

What to do when you don't see the signalsโ€‹

Two paths. The first is honest disqualification โ€” most AEs are too generous with their own time, and a clean "this isn't the right moment for us, here's what we'd recommend instead" preserves both your hours and your reputation.

The second is to flip the call. If you're at minute 12 and you haven't heard any of the eight, change the conversation: "I want to make sure I'm being useful โ€” can I share what we typically see at companies that look like yours, and you tell me if any of it resonates?" This forces the buyer to either react (which is itself diagnostic) or stay flat (which confirms the call was a research call, not a buying call).

Either way, write the right CRM note. "No compelling event, no deadline, single-threaded, no internal work done โ€” nurture only" is more valuable than "good convo, sending follow-up" โ€” both to you, and to your manager forecasting the quarter.

How signal-driven selling changes discoveryโ€‹

This whole diagnostic gets easier when the AE walks into the call already knowing the buyer's trigger events and signal stack. When you've seen the company hire two new sales leaders, fundraise, and visit your pricing page three times in a week, you don't need to ask "what made now the right time?" โ€” you already know. You can spend the discovery call confirming and deepening instead of starting from zero.

That's the entire premise of signal-based selling: by the time the meeting happens, the AE has a sharpened hypothesis, and the discovery call is about confirming the diagnosis, not running blood tests. Discovery without signals is forensic work. Discovery with signals is consultative work. The outcomes are wildly different.

The bigger arcโ€‹

Discovery is one stage in the signal-to-closed-won sales cycle. The signals you score on the discovery call become the inputs for the 14-day post-demo plan, the SDR-to-AE handoff quality check, and ultimately the forecast call your VP runs every Friday. Sharpening the discovery diagnostic improves every downstream stage. There is no other single hour in the sales process where small changes in skill produce larger changes in outcome.

The teams that win the next two years won't be the ones with the most discovery calls. They'll be the ones who can call the deal at minute 12 and act accordingly โ€” invest where signals are loud, disqualify where they're absent, and stop pretending the middle 40% of pipeline is real.


Want to see what an AE pipeline looks like when discovery is signal-driven from day one? Book a demo โ†’

The Claude SDR Daily Routine: A 90-Minute Morning Block That Replaces 4 Tools [2026]

ยท 10 min read
MarketBetter Team
Content Team, marketbetter.ai

Claude SDR Daily Routine - 90-minute morning block

Most SDRs we talk to use Claude the same way they use ChatGPT โ€” open a tab, paste a question, copy the answer, repeat. That works, but it leaves most of Claude's value on the floor.

The SDRs who get a real multiplier out of Claude don't treat it as a faster Google. They treat it as a morning copilot โ€” a fixed 90-minute block, the same five sub-tasks every day, with prompts they've sharpened over months. The output isn't "AI content." It's a stack of ready-to-send messages, a triaged signal queue, a clean account plan, and an inbox at zero.

This post is the exact routine. Five blocks. The prompts. What they're actually replacing.

If you want the broader strategic case, the complete Claude-for-SDRs pillar guide walks through why Claude wins for SDR work. This post is the operating manual.

The 4 tools this routine replacesโ€‹

Before the breakdown, what the 90 minutes is actually compressing:

Replaced workflowOld timeNew time inside Claude
Prospect research (LinkedIn + company site + news)20-30 min per account4-6 min per account
Sales Navigator list triage30-45 min daily10-15 min
Account plan write-up45-60 min per account8-10 min
Inbox triage + reply drafting45-60 min daily15-20 min

Total replaced: roughly 3 hours of common SDR busywork compressed into a 90-minute block, before your first dial.

The catch: every minute saved comes from prompt structure, not from Claude being magic. The prompts below assume you've fed Claude your ICP, your product positioning, and three or four "good email" examples in a saved project. If you haven't, start here on prospect research and here on cold email personalization.

Block 1 โ€” Signal triage (15 minutes)โ€‹

What you're doing: sorting overnight signals โ€” visitor ID hits, intent topic spikes, job change alerts, replies โ€” into three buckets: call-now, sequence-today, snooze.

Why Claude is good at this: it's pattern recognition over noisy fields, exactly the kind of thing a human gets bored doing by 9:05 AM.

Prompt:

You are my SDR signal triage copilot. I will paste a CSV/list of overnight signals.
For each row, classify into one of: CALL_NOW, SEQUENCE_TODAY, SNOOZE_7D.

Rules:
- CALL_NOW: returning visitor on /pricing or /book-demo, OR open champion at a target account who just changed roles, OR an intent spike on a top-3 use case at an account already in pipeline.
- SEQUENCE_TODAY: first-touch ICP fit signals โ€” new visitor on a product page, fresh intent spike, persona-fit job change at a fit account.
- SNOOZE_7D: weak signals โ€” single page view on /blog, off-ICP firmographics, signals at accounts already in late-stage with another seller.

Return a table with: account, contact, signal, classification, 1-line "why this bucket".
At the bottom, list the CALL_NOW accounts with the strongest "first 90 seconds" opener I should use, referencing the specific signal.

What replaces this otherwise: a 30-minute scroll through Sales Navigator + your visitor ID tool + your intent platform, trying to remember which accounts are already in flight. If you're doing this manually every morning, you're paying the same cost twice โ€” the platform fee and the SDR's morning.

For the deeper case on why signal-first SDRs out-book signal-blind ones, see From Buying Signal to Booked Meeting in 24 Hours.

Block 2 โ€” Targeted prospect research (20 minutes)โ€‹

What you're doing: taking your 3-5 CALL_NOW or top-priority accounts from Block 1 and turning each into a one-screen account brief.

Why batch: a single research session with context loaded once is faster than five context switches.

Prompt (one per account):

Research brief for [ACCOUNT NAME]. I'm an SDR selling [your product, 1 line].
Contact I'm reaching is [NAME, TITLE].

Pull from the company site, recent press, their LinkedIn page posts, and the contact's
LinkedIn activity in the last 90 days. Return:

1. Company snapshot โ€” 2 lines max. What they actually do, not their tagline.
2. Recent "why now" โ€” top 3 events in the last 90 days that justify outreach today.
3. Strategic priorities โ€” what leadership is publicly talking about.
4. Personal hook for [NAME] โ€” something they personally posted, said, or shipped that
I can reference without being weird about it.
5. Three opener angles, ranked by likely reply rate, with the explicit pitch each implies.

If a section has nothing solid, say "no clean signal" โ€” do not invent.

That last instruction matters. Hallucinations are 90% prompt-permission errors. If you give Claude an explicit out, it takes it. If you don't, it fills the gap. (More on that pattern in our writeup on Claude vs ChatGPT for sales teams.)

Block 3 โ€” Account plan drafting (15 minutes)โ€‹

What you're doing: for the 2-3 hottest accounts, converting the research brief into a one-page plan you can drop in your CRM or hand to an AE.

Prompt:

Convert the research brief above into a one-page account plan in this structure:

- Account: name, segment, size, deal-trigger event
- Buying committee โ€” likely roles, who I have, who I'm missing
- Use-case fit โ€” which 1-2 of our use cases match their stated priorities
- Risks โ€” what kills this deal at each stage (no demo, no champion, no budget cycle)
- 14-day plan โ€” day-by-day, what I do, what I expect back, when to escalate to AE
- Discovery questions โ€” 5 I would actually ask on a first call, ranked by signal value

Be specific. No platitudes. If a section is weak, write "needs more research" โ€” do not pad.

This is the step that makes the AE conversation different. Most SDRs hand over a contact and a paragraph. The AEs who book repeat business get a 14-day plan with a discovery agenda. For more on what that handoff actually looks like, see the SDR-to-AE handoff playbook and the 15-minute pre-demo prep playbook.

Block 4 โ€” Inbox at zero (20 minutes)โ€‹

What you're doing: processing replies, scheduling pings, and "soft no" responses. Every reply gets one of four actions: book, nurture, re-engage, archive.

Prompt:

I will paste replies from overnight. For each reply, return:

- Intent classification: HOT, WARM, COLD, NEGATIVE, OUT_OF_OFFICE, REFERRAL
- Suggested action: book meeting / send Loom / soft re-engage in 30d / mark closed-lost / forward to AE
- A 3-sentence draft reply in my voice (matching the examples I gave you in the project), ready to paste.
- A "do not send if" line โ€” the 1-2 conditions that should make me NOT send the draft.

Group output by intent. Put HOT and REFERRAL at the top.

The "do not send if" line is the only reason this block stays at 20 minutes instead of 45. It tells you which drafts to skim past versus which to actually review. Without it, every Claude-drafted reply gets the same level of scrutiny โ€” and you end up reading 30 drafts to decide on 8.

For replies where the prospect went quiet mid-cycle, the Champion Goes Quiet playbook has the specific re-engagement sequences worth pasting in as Claude context.

Block 5 โ€” Personalized first-touch drafts (20 minutes)โ€‹

What you're doing: drafting first-touch sequences for the 8-12 accounts you'll add to your active list today. Three-touch sequence per account: cold email, LinkedIn note, follow-up email.

Prompt:

For each account in the list below, draft a 3-touch personalized outbound sequence:

Touch 1: Cold email, max 90 words. Open with the specific "why now" from the research
brief โ€” not a flattery line. CTA is a soft ask (book 15 min OR a specific question).
Touch 2: LinkedIn note, max 280 chars. Reference touch 1 obliquely, not directly.
Touch 3: 4 days later, plain-text follow-up. New angle, not "just bumping this up."
Reference a different "why now" if one exists.

Voice: match the examples in the project. No "I hope this finds you well." No "saw you
guys are doing great things." Concrete or skip the line.

For each account, also output the 1-line subject line you'd actually open with.

Two non-obvious things matter here:

  1. Voice examples in the project beat any prompt instruction. Telling Claude "write in my voice" without 3-5 saved examples produces marketing copy. With examples, it produces something you'd actually send. We dig into this in the Claude 200K context for sales workflows post.
  2. The "new angle on touch 3" rule is what stops the sequence from feeling like a follow-up. Most AI-generated sequences fail at touch 3 because they reuse the touch-1 hook. Force a different angle and reply rates climb.

What this routine doesn't doโ€‹

It doesn't replace dials. It doesn't replace your call recording review. It doesn't replace 1:1 coaching from your manager. And it doesn't make a bad ICP fit into a good account.

It compresses the administrative and research overhead that's traditionally eaten 60% of an SDR's day, so you can spend more of the remaining day on the things only a human does well: phone, video, and judgment.

The teams getting outsized returns from Claude pair this routine with a platform that surfaces the right signals into the morning queue in the first place. That's the gap MarketBetter fills โ€” every account in your CALL_NOW bucket came from visitor ID, intent, or champion-tracking signals the platform pushed to you, not a list you remembered to check. Claude turns those signals into ready-to-send work in 90 minutes. The rest of your day is selling.

Where to go nextโ€‹

If you want to keep going deeper into Claude-for-SDR specifically:


Want a signal queue that actually fills your CALL_NOW bucket every morning? That's what MarketBetter does for the SDRs running this routine. Book a demo and we'll show you what your morning queue would look like with real visitor ID, intent, and champion-tracking signals running into it.

From Signal to Closed-Won: The Complete B2B Sales Cycle Playbook [2026]

ยท 21 min read
sunder
Founder, marketbetter.ai

Most B2B sales teams in 2026 are running a sales process that was designed for 2018. SDRs cold-call lists, AEs run generic demos, deals stall in pipeline for weeks, and nobody can articulate why a closed-won deal closed. The reps who win do it through hustle, not process. The reps who do not win, do not win for the same reason โ€” there is no process, so there is nothing to coach.

The teams that are pulling ahead this year have done one thing differently. They stopped thinking about sales as a list of activities (calls, emails, demos, follow-ups) and started thinking about it as a sequence of handoffs. Signal to SDR. SDR to AE. AE to demo. Demo to multi-thread. Multi-thread to close. Every handoff is a place where deals die. Every handoff is also a place where operational discipline can save them.

This is the pillar guide to that sequence. It is not a generic "B2B sales tips" article. It is the map of the modern sales cycle โ€” every handoff, the workflow that runs it, and the playbook posts that go deep on each stage. If you run an SDR or AE team, read this end-to-end once, then send it to your reps as the spine of your team's playbook. If you are an individual contributor, this is the framework your top performers are already running, whether or not they have written it down.

A horizontal flow diagram showing the modern B2B sales cycle in nine stages: signal detection, triage and routing, SDR outreach, qualification, SDR-to-AE handoff, pre-demo prep, discovery and demo, 14-day post-demo window, and closed-won. Each stage is a labeled box connected by arrows, with handoff points highlighted, clean minimalist style on a white background

The shift: from activity-based to signal-based sellingโ€‹

Before getting into the cycle, it is worth being honest about what has changed in B2B sales in the last two years. If you do not believe the shift is real, the rest of this guide will feel like overkill.

For most of B2B sales history, the constraint was identifying who to sell to. You bought a list, dialed it, and hoped 1 percent of the people on the list had a need. The role of the SDR was largely to manufacture interest where none existed.

That model is collapsing for two reasons. First, buyers will not answer cold calls or read cold emails at the rates they used to. Connect rates on cold dials have dropped to roughly 1 in 200. Reply rates on cold email have dropped below 1 percent in most categories. Second, the data to identify buyers who are already in-market has become cheap and abundant. Website visitor identification, third-party intent data, job change signals, technographic shifts, and content engagement are all available in real time. The new constraint is not finding buyers. It is acting on the signals fast enough to matter.

This is what "signal-based selling" actually means. Not buying an intent data tool. The full operational reorientation of the sales team around the idea that buyers reveal themselves through behavior, and the team's job is to convert that behavior into pipeline before the signal decays. If you want the deeper case for why this matters, we wrote it up here, and the meta-analysis of what is actually working in B2B sales in 2026 sits here.

The rest of this guide is the playbook for running that model.

Stage 1: Signal detectionโ€‹

The cycle starts with a signal. Without it, you are dialing lists.

A signal is any observable behavior that suggests a buyer is in-market. The strongest signals are first-party: a visitor identification hit on your pricing page, a champion who left a competitor and just started at a target account, a returning visitor with three sessions in seven days. Weaker but still useful signals include third-party intent data, content engagement, social comments on competitor posts, and technographic changes.

Not all signals are equal. A pricing page visit from a known account is worth ten newsletter signups. A buying committee with three people on your site this week is worth a hundred random clicks on a LinkedIn ad. Top sales teams understand the relative weight of each signal type and route their SDR time accordingly.

The mechanics of signal detection itself are increasingly commoditized โ€” visitor ID tools, intent data providers, and social listening platforms all exist. The differentiation is in how you stack the signals. Read the three-layer signal stack for the framework on what signals to layer together, and the buying signal hierarchy for which signals actually predict closed-won outcomes versus which ones are just noise.

If you are building this layer from scratch, start with website visitor identification. Our guide to B2B visitor ID walks through the categories, the trade-offs, and how to integrate it. You can pile on intent data and other layers later. Most teams that try to start with everything at once never get anything working.

Stage 2: Triage and routingโ€‹

Detection is the easy part. Triage is where most teams fail.

The problem: signals come in faster than SDRs can act on them. A mid-sized B2B team can easily generate 200 to 500 signals per week across visitor ID, intent data, content engagement, and inbound demos. If every signal hits every SDR with equal weight, the team drowns. They work the loudest signal of the day, ignore the rest, and the signal half-life problem (covered below) kicks in.

The fix is a tiered triage system. Tier the signals by predicted intent, route the highest tiers to your best SDRs with the tightest SLA, and let the lower tiers go to nurture. The inbound triage tier system walks through the tier definitions and the 5-minute response standard for top-tier inbound. Signal-based SDR routing covers how to route by signal type and territory. Together they are the operating system for everything downstream.

One nuance: triage is only as good as the rubric SDRs use to decide which tier a signal belongs in. If reps disagree about what a tier-1 signal is, you will get inconsistent routing and lose deals to randomness. The signal triage rubric is the artifact that fixes this โ€” a written rubric the SDR team adopts and managers enforce in deal review.

Stage 3: SDR outreach โ€” speed to leadโ€‹

Once a signal is triaged, the clock starts. This is the speed-to-lead stage, and it is where most teams quietly leak the majority of their pipeline.

Tier-1 signals โ€” pricing page visits, demo form fills, return visits to high-intent pages โ€” should be responded to in under five minutes. This is not a stretch goal. It is a hard requirement. Buyers who fill out a demo form and get a response within five minutes convert at roughly 4x the rate of buyers who get a response within an hour, and 21x the rate of buyers who get a response within a day. The math is brutal and well-documented.

Our complete speed-to-lead guide covers the data, the operational requirements, and the workflow for hitting 5-minute response without staffing a 24/7 team. The short version: route by tier, alert by channel, automate the first touch, and reserve human SDR time for the calls that actually move pipeline.

The other half of SDR outreach is what happens when the signal is hot but the buyer has not raised their hand yet. A buying committee that has visited your site three times this week is in-market, but they have not asked to talk. The SDR's job is to reach out in a way that maps to what they were doing on the site โ€” not generic cold outreach. The signal-to-meeting workflow is the 24-hour playbook for converting that kind of warm signal into a booked meeting before competitors get there.

This is also the stage where the visitor ID to first outreach setup playbook lives. If you cannot get a new visitor ID hit into an SDR's outbound queue in 30 minutes, your entire signal stack is just an expensive dashboard.

Stage 4: Qualification before the handoffโ€‹

Every signal-driven meeting goes through one more gate before the AE: qualification.

This is the step every team thinks they are doing well and almost no team actually does well. SDR managers know what good qualification looks like โ€” budget, timeline, authority, pain, current tooling, evaluation criteria. The issue is that under pressure to book meetings, SDRs skip qualification, book the meeting anyway, and dump a thin lead on the AE.

Two things prevent this. First, a written rubric that defines what qualified means at your company, used consistently across the SDR team. Second, manager review of the SDR's notes before the handoff fires. If the notes are thin, the handoff does not happen โ€” the SDR re-engages the buyer for clarifying questions first.

If your inbound is high-volume and your SDRs are being told to book everything that moves, the morning workflow that high-performing SDRs run is the discipline that prevents the dump-and-run pattern. The goal is not maximum meetings booked. It is maximum qualified meetings that convert to opportunities.

Stage 5: SDR-to-AE handoffโ€‹

This is the highest-variance handoff in the entire cycle, and it is the one most teams ignore.

A bad SDR-to-AE handoff looks like this: SDR sends a one-line Slack message ("good lead, on the calendar for Thursday") and a calendar invite. The AE shows up cold, runs generic discovery, and the buyer feels like they are starting over. Half the time the deal dies in discovery for no reason other than the buyer is tired of repeating themselves.

A good handoff looks like this: the SDR writes a structured handoff note in the CRM that includes the buyer's stated problem in their own words, what was already qualified, what is still unclear, the signal context that triggered the outreach, and the proposed demo flow. The AE reads it before the call. The buyer feels like the team is coordinated.

The SDR-to-AE handoff playbook is the 6-step workflow for getting this right. It includes the exact handoff note template, the AE-side checklist before accepting the meeting, and the manager review pattern for catching weak handoffs before they reach the AE's calendar.

If you fix one thing in your sales cycle this quarter, fix this. The leverage is enormous and almost no teams are doing it well.

Stage 6: Pre-demo prepโ€‹

The 15 minutes before a discovery call are the highest-leverage 15 minutes in the entire deal. Most AEs spend them in traffic.

The reps who consistently close 25 percent of their demos run a structured prep workflow before every call. The reps who close 8 percent of their demos do not. This variance shows up in pipeline math more than any other single factor.

The 15-minute pre-demo prep playbook is the framework: five three-minute blocks covering handoff review, signal context, buying committee mapping, demo customization, and the next-meeting ask. Run it before every discovery call. The discipline matters more than the framework โ€” pick any reasonable structure and use it consistently.

Two things this stage produces that the rest of the cycle depends on. First, a customized demo flow that maps to the specific buyer's stated problem, not the generic demo deck. Second, a written multi-thread plan โ€” who you will ask the buyer to introduce you to, when, and how. Without the second one, you walk out of every demo with a single point of failure.

Stage 7: Discovery and demoโ€‹

A good discovery call is a controlled diagnostic, not a presentation. The reps who win this stage spend two-thirds of the call asking questions and one-third demoing the three specific moments that map to the buyer's problem.

The mechanics of running discovery well are covered in too many places to re-cover here. The key shift in 2026 is that the bar for personalization has gone up sharply. Buyers expect you to know their stack, their team, their recent funding, and their stated initiatives before the call. Generic discovery questions ("what are your biggest challenges?") signal that you have not done the prep, and buyers check out.

The discovery call should also produce the inputs to multi-threading. By the end of the call you should know: who else is involved in the decision, what their evaluation process looks like, what their timeline is, what budget exists, and what the next step is. If you cannot articulate all five at the end of the call, the call was not discovery โ€” it was a generic demo dressed up as discovery.

Stage 8: The 14-day post-demo windowโ€‹

This is where pipeline goes to die. A buyer comes off a great discovery call, says "send me pricing and we will get back to you," and then disappears. Two weeks later the deal is in best-case purgatory. Six weeks later it is no-decision closed-lost.

The 14 days after a discovery call are the most predictive window in the entire deal. What the AE does in those 14 days determines whether the deal closes at all. Most AEs spend those 14 days on the deals that responded fastest to the previous demo and forget the new one. The buyer takes that as a signal that the AE was not serious, and quietly moves to the vendor who kept the energy up.

The 14-day post-demo AE playbook is the day-by-day workflow for the critical window. It covers what to send on day 1, day 3, day 7, and day 14, when to push for the next meeting, and how to read the buyer's silence as either disinterest or normal procurement-cycle latency.

Running this playbook is the single biggest pipeline conversion lever available to most AE teams. It is also operationally trivial โ€” it is a sequence of seven well-timed actions over two weeks. The reason most teams do not run it is that nobody has written it down.

Stage 9: Multi-threading the buying committeeโ€‹

If you walk out of every demo with one contact, you do not have a deal. You have a single point of failure who can disappear, change roles, or get overruled. Modern B2B deals have three to seven stakeholders involved in the decision. Cover them all or do not be surprised when the deal stalls.

The multi-threading deal team playbook is the 5-stakeholder framework: economic buyer, end user, technical evaluator, executive sponsor, and one or two influencers. It covers when to introduce each one, how to ask the champion to make the introduction without bypassing them, and the language to use in the request.

This is the AE skill that separates 30 percent close rates from 12 percent close rates. It is also the skill most AEs are weakest at, because it feels uncomfortable. The champion seems to be moving the deal forward, so why bother the other stakeholders? Because the champion is not authorized to sign. Because the champion is going to get pulled into another fire next week. Because the technical evaluator you have not met is the one who will quietly veto the deal in the procurement review.

Multi-threading is not a nice-to-have. It is the operational discipline that converts late-stage pipeline.

Stage 10: When the champion goes quietโ€‹

Even with great multi-threading, deals stall. The champion stops responding. The email thread goes cold. The AE pings twice and then gives up.

This is the stage at which most teams write off deals that were actually still alive. A champion going quiet rarely means "the deal is dead." It usually means: the champion got pulled into another fire, the company changed priorities, the champion is waiting on internal sign-off they cannot get, or the deal needs to be re-energized through a different stakeholder.

The champion-went-quiet re-engagement playbook is the 5-play workflow for stalled-deal recovery: how to read the silence, when to escalate to the executive sponsor, when to bring in your own exec, when to send the "are you still interested" email correctly, and when to genuinely close-lost and move on.

The teams that run this playbook close roughly 18 to 22 percent of deals they would otherwise have written off as no-decision. The math on that is too good to ignore.

Stage 11: Reopening closed-lostโ€‹

A no-decision deal from six months ago is one of the highest-quality pipeline sources in your CRM. You already qualified the buyer. You already understand their problem. You already built rapport. The only thing that changed is the buyer's circumstances.

Most teams treat closed-lost deals as dead. They are not. They are dormant. The signal-based selling motion makes them findable again โ€” when a champion job changes, when a competitor announces price increases, when a funding round closes, when a new initiative shows up in 10-K filings.

The reopen closed-lost AE playbook is the framework for systematically working these accounts back into active pipeline. It covers the signal triggers that justify re-engagement, the messaging that does not feel like rehashing, and the timing rules for how often to retry an account that was closed-lost.

If your team is struggling to hit pipeline coverage, this stage alone is usually worth 15 to 25 percent more pipeline within a quarter.

The pacing problem: signal decayโ€‹

One concept ties this entire cycle together: signal decay.

Buying intent has a half-life. A pricing page visit ten days ago is worth roughly a quarter of what it was worth the day it happened. A job change signal three months stale is barely a signal at all. The whole point of the operational discipline above โ€” 5-minute response, structured handoffs, day-3 follow-ups โ€” is that signals decay fast, and a sales motion that takes 12 days to convert a signal into a meeting is just slow enough to miss every deal.

The signal decay curve walks through the actual decay rates by signal type, and how to set your operational SLAs around them. If you take nothing else from this guide, take this: every step in the cycle above has a clock on it. The team that runs the clock wins. The team that does not, loses to whoever runs it faster.

How the playbook holds togetherโ€‹

Every stage above is a piece of a single motion. You cannot run great pre-demo prep on a thin SDR handoff. You cannot run a great 14-day post-demo window if the discovery call was generic. You cannot multi-thread if your champion already went quiet. The cycle is end-to-end or it is not real.

This is why teams who try to fix one stage in isolation rarely see results. SDR speed-to-lead without triage is just more noise. AE prep discipline without good SDR notes is the AE working in the dark. Multi-threading without an executive sponsor relationship is the AE cold-emailing strangers.

The teams that pull ahead are the ones that fix the cycle as a system. They write down each stage. They train the team on each stage. They review each stage in deal review. They coach the handoffs as carefully as they coach the calls. And they instrument the signal decay clock so they can see where deals are dying.

This is what good operational sales discipline looks like in 2026. It is not a single trick. It is the entire cycle, running consistently, every week.

The role of the platformโ€‹

A reasonable question after reading all this: who is supposed to run all of these workflows?

The honest answer is that without the right platform layer, nobody is. The math does not work. A 25-person SDR-AE team cannot manually run signal triage, 5-minute SLAs, structured handoffs, 15-minute pre-demo prep, day-by-day post-demo workflows, and multi-thread tracking across 200 active deals. The cognitive load is the problem, not the workflow.

This is the gap MarketBetter is built for. The platform watches the signals, runs the triage, surfaces the handoff context the AE needs before the call, prompts the day-3 and day-7 follow-ups in the post-demo window, tracks the buying committee, and flags champions who have gone quiet. The reps still run the calls and write the notes. The platform handles the operational discipline that makes the cycle work.

The shorthand we use: competitors tell you who. MarketBetter tells you who and what to do next. The playbook above is the "what to do next" part. The platform is the layer that makes it operationally feasible to run it.

If you are reading this and recognizing places where your cycle is leaking โ€” weak handoffs, slow speed-to-lead, no post-demo workflow, no multi-thread plan โ€” that gap is the value. Book a demo and we will run the playbook on one of your real accounts so you can see how much pipeline you are leaving on the floor.

Where to go from hereโ€‹

If you are a rep, the highest-leverage move is to run one stage of this cycle well for 30 days. Pick the stage where you know your discipline is weakest โ€” handoffs, prep, post-demo, multi-thread. Run it religiously for a month. The pipeline impact will be visible.

If you are a manager, the highest-leverage move is to build one stage into your weekly deal review. Pick the handoff that is leaking the most pipeline. Make every AE walk through it for every deal, every week. Coach the handoff like you coach calls.

If you are a leader, the highest-leverage move is to treat the cycle as a system. Audit every handoff. Write down the workflow at each one. Measure where deals die. Fix the handoffs, not the calls.

The reps who win in 2026 are not better closers. They are better operators. The cycle above is the operating manual.


Read deeper on each stage:

The 15-Minute Pre-Demo Prep Playbook: How AEs Turn Booked Demos Into Closed Deals [2026]

ยท 14 min read
sunder
Founder, marketbetter.ai

Ask ten AEs how they prep for a discovery call and you will get ten versions of the same answer: "I skim the calendar invite on the way in." Maybe a glance at LinkedIn. Maybe a check of the CRM if there is time. The actual decision making โ€” what to ask, what to demo, who else to pull in โ€” happens live, in the call, in front of the buyer.

This is why most discovery calls feel generic to buyers. The AE shows up cold, runs the same 12 questions they always run, and demos the same five screens. The buyer politely sits through it, says "send me pricing," and quietly moves you down the list. Two weeks later the deal is dead and nobody can say why.

The fix is not a longer call or a fancier script. It is fifteen minutes of structured prep before the meeting. Done right, this is the highest-leverage 15 minutes in the entire deal. It is what separates AEs who close 25 percent of demos from AEs who close 8 percent.

Below is the exact 15-minute pre-demo prep workflow. It assumes the SDR did real handoff work upstream โ€” if your handoffs are a Slack message that says "good lead, call them," fix that first using the SDR-to-AE handoff playbook, then come back here.

Why 15 minutes of prep is worth more than 60 minutes of follow-upโ€‹

Most sales coaching focuses on what AEs do during and after the demo. Both matter. But the highest variance in deal outcomes happens before the call even starts.

The buyer walks into a discovery call with a hypothesis: "this vendor probably does X, and X is what I need." If the first ten minutes of the call confirm that hypothesis, they lean in. If the first ten minutes contradict it, or even worse, force them to re-explain context they already shared, they check out. You have lost the call by minute eleven and you do not know it yet.

Prep is how you front-load context so that the first ten minutes confirm the buyer's hypothesis. Skip prep and you spend the first half of every discovery call re-qualifying. Do prep well and you spend that time showing the buyer that you already understand their problem better than they do.

This is what the AEs who win consistently get right. They do not have better discovery questions. They have better preparation.

A diagram showing the pre-demo prep workflow with five three-minute segments stacked vertically: handoff review, signal context, buying committee map, demo customization, next-meeting ask, set against a clean white background

The 15-minute frameworkโ€‹

Five three-minute blocks. Run them in order. Do not skip blocks because "the deal is small" or "I know this account." The AEs who think they are above prep are the AEs whose forecasts miss every quarter.

Minutes 0โ€“3: Re-read the SDR's handoff notesโ€‹

Open the CRM. Read every note the SDR wrote on this account, in order. Not just the most recent one. The full thread.

You are looking for three things:

  1. The buyer's stated problem in their own words. Highlight the exact phrasing they used. You will mirror this language back in the first three minutes of the call. If they said "our reps are drowning in leads they cannot triage," you will say "you mentioned your team is drowning in leads โ€” let's start there." This is the cheapest trust signal in sales.
  2. What the SDR already qualified. Budget, timeline, decision criteria, current tooling. Do not re-ask any of this in discovery. The fastest way to lose a buyer is to make them repeat information they already gave your SDR. Discovery is for going deeper, not starting over.
  3. What was left unclear. The gaps in the SDR's notes are what you need to clarify in the first 15 minutes of discovery. Write these down. Three to five gaps, max.

If the SDR's notes are thin, this is a handoff problem, not a prep problem. Flag it to the SDR manager after the call. Then run the signal triage rubric on your inbound to make sure future handoffs come in with real qualification.

Minutes 3โ€“6: Pull the buying signal contextโ€‹

What told you this account was ready to buy? Was it a visitor identification hit on the pricing page? An intent signal from a third-party data provider? A champion who pinged you back after a content download? Each signal type implies a different buyer state.

A pricing-page visitor is further down the funnel than a free-content downloader. A return visitor with three sessions in seven days is hotter than a first-time visitor. A buying committee with three people on your site this week is in active evaluation. Read the buying signal hierarchy if you need a refresher on which signals actually predict closed-won.

Pull two specific signals into your call notes. Reference them naturally in the first ten minutes. Not "I saw you visited our pricing page" โ€” that is creepy. But "it sounds like you are far enough along to be evaluating costs, is that right?" That is the same information, framed as conversation, not surveillance.

Signals also decay. A signal that was hot ten days ago may be cold today. If your handoff is more than seven days old, the buyer's urgency has dropped. Adjust your call energy accordingly. The signal decay curve shows how fast buying intent erodes if you sit on it.

Minutes 6โ€“9: Map the buying committeeโ€‹

Pull up LinkedIn. Identify every person at the company who could possibly be involved in this purchase. Not just the contact on the calendar invite. The full committee.

For a typical B2B SaaS deal in the under 50K range, you are looking at three to five people: an end user, a manager, a budget holder, and one or two influencers. For larger deals, double that. Write the names down. Note their titles. Spend 30 seconds on each LinkedIn profile to learn what they care about.

The buyer on your call is one of these people. The other four to nine are not, and they will decide whether this deal closes. Your job in discovery is not to sell the person on the call. It is to give them ammunition to sell internally to the other people. That is what good demos do.

Plan the multi-thread move now. Who will you ask the buyer to introduce you to? When? How will you frame the ask so it does not feel like you are bypassing them? Run the multi-threading deal team playbook on this account before the call so you know exactly which five stakeholders you need to cover.

If you skip this step, you will leave the demo with one contact and zero leverage. Two weeks later the champion will go quiet and the deal will stall. The mapping you do in these three minutes is what prevents that.

Minutes 9โ€“12: Customize the demo flowโ€‹

Most AEs run the same demo for every buyer. Same five screens. Same demo script. The buyer can tell. They have seen vendors do this before. It signals that you do not understand their specific problem.

Use what you learned in minutes 0โ€“6 to pick three demo moments โ€” not five, not seven, three โ€” that will land hardest for this specific buyer. If their stated problem is inbound triage, lead with the triage workflow. If it is signal aggregation, lead with the signal stack. If it is outbound personalization, lead with the workflow that generates personalized outreach from signals.

Cut the rest. A 25-minute demo that hits three things hard is twice as effective as a 45-minute demo that covers everything shallowly. Buyers do not remember everything. They remember the moments that mapped to their specific problem.

Write down the three demo moments. Write down the transition language between them: "now that you have seen how the triage works, the next question is what your reps do with the highest-tier leads โ€” that is where the playbook comes in." Pre-built transitions keep the demo tight even when the buyer takes you off-script with questions.

Minutes 12โ€“15: Plan the next-meeting askโ€‹

Before the call starts, decide exactly what next-step you will ask for at the end. Not "I will play it by ear." A specific ask, written down.

For a hot deal, the ask is a working session with the buying committee in the next week. For a warm deal, it is a 30-minute deep dive on the specific use case with two more stakeholders. For a cooler deal, it is a follow-up call in seven days with concrete material the buyer can share internally.

Whatever the ask is, prepare two things:

  1. The exact words you will use to make the ask. "Based on what we have talked through, the right next step is X. Can we get that on the calendar before you leave today?" Specificity is everything. "Let me follow up next week" is what bad AEs say at the end of bad calls.
  2. The artifact you will send within four hours of the call. A short recap email with the three things they cared about, the next step on the calendar, and one piece of content tailored to their use case. This is the first move of the 14-day post-demo workflow. Get it right.

If you cannot articulate the next-meeting ask in three minutes of prep, the deal is not as qualified as you think it is.

What to skip in prep (and what to skip in the demo)โ€‹

Three things AEs waste prep time on that do not move deals forward.

Do not read the entire company About page. The buyer is not going to test you on it. A 90-second scan of their homepage is enough. You need to know what they sell and to whom, not who founded the company in 2011.

Do not memorize a full discovery script. Discovery is a conversation, not a survey. The five to seven questions you need will come naturally if you have done the rest of the prep. A memorized script makes you sound like a vendor.

Do not over-prep slides. Discovery calls are not pitch decks. Open with no slides at all. Talk first, demo second, slides only if specifically asked. AEs who lead with slides telegraph that they have not done the prep โ€” they are hiding behind structure because they do not have substance.

The example walkthroughโ€‹

A real prep run, lightly fictionalized.

The account is a 200-person logistics SaaS company. The SDR booked the demo three days ago after the buyer downloaded a guide on outbound personalization. Two people from the company visited the pricing page in the last seven days. The contact on the call is a Director of Sales.

Minutes 0โ€“3: SDR notes say the buyer complained about "outbound that gets ignored even though our list quality is good." Budget was qualified at "under 30K for the first year." Timeline is "Q3 implementation, ideally." Gap: no detail on current tooling or who else is involved in the decision.

Minutes 3โ€“6: Pricing-page traffic from two people implies an active committee. The downloaded content was on personalization, not signal aggregation, so the entry point is workflow, not data. The buyer state is "we have leads, we are not converting them," which maps to outreach quality, not lead supply.

Minutes 6โ€“9: LinkedIn shows three relevant people at the company beyond the Director: a VP of Sales (her boss), a Sales Ops Manager (likely the tool evaluator), and a senior AE who has posted about cold outreach. These four are the buying committee. The ask: introduction to the Sales Ops Manager within the week.

Minutes 9โ€“12: Demo will lead with the workflow that turns a buying signal into a specific outreach action. Then the signal aggregation. Skip the visitor ID workflow entirely โ€” not what they came for. Skip the integrations slide.

Minutes 12โ€“15: Ask at end: "let's get a 30-minute working session next Tuesday with you and your Sales Ops lead โ€” I will walk through how this would plug into your current sequencing tool. Does that calendar work?" Recap email goes out within four hours with one paragraph on the personalization workflow and one link to the signal-to-meeting workflow guide.

That is the prep. Fifteen minutes. The discovery call is now a working session, not a pitch.

Why this matters for managers, not just repsโ€‹

If you manage AEs, the question is not whether your reps are doing this prep. The question is whether you can prove they are.

Ask your top performer how they prep. They will describe some version of this framework, possibly without naming it. Ask your bottom performer. They will say "I look at the calendar invite." The variance in prep is the variance in close rate.

Build prep into the deal review. Before any forecast call, ask the AE what their pre-demo prep was on the deals they are forecasting. If they cannot articulate it, the deal is not real. Move it back to best case.

This is the same discipline you should be running on inbound speed-to-lead and on the SDR-to-AE handoff. The wins in modern B2B sales are no longer in better closing skills. They are in better operational discipline at every handoff. Reps who run the prep win. Teams that enforce the prep scale.

Make the prep run itselfโ€‹

The 15 minutes are non-negotiable. But the data pulling โ€” pulling the signals, mapping the committee, surfacing the SDR notes โ€” should not take five of those minutes. It should take 30 seconds.

This is exactly what MarketBetter is built for. When a meeting is on your calendar, the platform surfaces the relevant signal history, buying committee map, and recommended demo flow before you open the CRM. Your AEs spend their 15 minutes thinking, not searching.

That is the difference between AEs who hit number and AEs who do not. The thinking is the work. Everything else is logistics that software should handle.

Want to see how this works in your sales motion? Book a demo and we will run the pre-demo prep workflow on one of your real accounts.


Related reading:

The SDR-to-AE Handoff Playbook: Stop Losing Deals Between the Booking and the Discovery Call [2026]

ยท 10 min read
sunder
Founder, marketbetter.ai

Look at any SDR team's funnel and you will find the same leak. The SDR books a meeting. The AE shows up to discovery. Somewhere in the 72 hours between those two events, a third of the deals quietly die.

Show rate dips. The buyer cools. The AE walks in cold and re-qualifies from scratch. The buyer thinks: "I just told the other person all of this." Trust drops. Discovery becomes a vendor pitch instead of a working session. Pipeline conversion sags by 20-40 percent and nobody can point to a single bad call.

This is the SDR-to-AE handoff gap. It is the most under-engineered handoff in B2B sales, and it is the single highest-leverage thing most teams can fix this quarter.

Below is the 6-step handoff playbook we run with customers. It assumes one thing: that the SDR did real qualification before booking. If you are booking on "interested in learning more," fix that first. Start with the inbound triage tier system and come back here when your bookings have substance.

Why the handoff window matters more than the meeting itselfโ€‹

Most sales orgs treat the handoff as a calendar event: SDR clicks "book," Salesforce updates the opportunity owner, AE gets a notification. Done.

That is not a handoff. That is a baton drop.

A real handoff transfers three things between two humans:

  1. Context โ€” what the buyer cares about, in their words, with their priorities ranked
  2. Continuity โ€” the buyer should feel like one team is talking to them, not two separate vendors
  3. Conviction โ€” the AE should walk in knowing why this is a real opportunity, not "another discovery"

When you nail those three, you stop losing 20-40 percent of booked meetings. Show rates climb. Discovery converts to second meetings at a higher clip. And buyers stop ghosting between the demo and the proposal because they trusted you from minute one.

The 6-step handoff playbookโ€‹

Step 1: Capture the qualification in the buyer's words, not your CRM fieldsโ€‹

The most common handoff failure happens in the SDR's notes. The SDR fills in seven Salesforce fields โ€” pain, timeline, budget, decision process, current solution, team size, urgency โ€” and calls it done.

The AE reads those fields ten minutes before discovery and walks in blind. Why? Because the CRM strips the language. The buyer said "our SDRs are spending three hours a day on garbage leads and we're hiring two more in Q3 to keep up." Salesforce stored "Pain: SDR efficiency. Timeline: Q3."

The AE then asks "so tell me about your pain" and the buyer thinks they are starting over.

The fix: SDRs capture three verbatim quotes from every qualification call:

  • The pain quote โ€” what the buyer said about why they are looking
  • The urgency quote โ€” what is forcing them to act now versus in six months
  • The skepticism quote โ€” what they pushed back on or seemed unsure about

These three quotes go in the meeting brief, untouched. The AE reads them five minutes before the call. They walk in with the buyer's exact words in their head and the buyer feels seen from the first sentence.

Step 2: Write a one-paragraph meeting brief, not a 12-field formโ€‹

CRM forms are for reporting. Briefs are for selling. They are different artifacts and they should look different.

A handoff brief is one paragraph, written by the SDR, that an AE can read in 60 seconds. Format:

"[Buyer name] at [company] runs [team / function]. They came in via [channel] after [trigger event]. Their pain: [verbatim quote]. Their urgency: [verbatim quote โ€” why now]. Their decision process: [who's involved, timeline, what they've already evaluated]. Their pushback: [verbatim skepticism]. The opening I'd take: [SDR's read on what to lead with]."

That last sentence โ€” "the opening I'd take" โ€” is the single most undervalued line in the brief. The SDR talked to this human for 15-30 minutes. They have a read. AEs who ignore that read consistently underperform AEs who use it as a starting hypothesis.

Step 3: Make the introduction a three-way email, not a calendar inviteโ€‹

The calendar invite is the laziest handoff in B2B sales. It tells the buyer: "we use a tool that auto-routes you to whoever has open availability."

The introduction email tells the buyer: "we organized this internally and prepared for you."

Within two hours of booking, the SDR sends a three-way email:

  • To: the buyer
  • CC: the AE
  • Subject: "Intro to [AE first name] for [day]'s call"
  • Body: "[Buyer first name], great talking earlier. Connecting you with [AE first name], who'll dig into [the specific topic the buyer cared about] with you on [day]. [AE first name] โ€” [buyer first name] is wrestling with [the one-sentence version of their pain]. I shared the full context but you two should compare notes. Talk [day]."

This email does four things at once. It transfers ownership cleanly. It primes the buyer to expect a real conversation, not a demo. It gives the AE air cover to reach out directly before the meeting. And it builds trust through visible organization.

Step 4: Have the AE send a pre-meeting confirmation 24 hours beforeโ€‹

Show rates on cold-booked meetings hover around 60-70 percent. Show rates on meetings where the AE personally sent a pre-meeting confirmation hover around 85-92 percent. The math is simple.

The pre-meeting note is not a calendar reminder. It is a sentence that says "I read your context, I'm prepared, here's what I'd like to cover, push back if I'm off."

"Hey [first name] โ€” [SDR first name] caught me up on [the specific thing they care about]. For tomorrow I'd planned to dig into [topic A] and [topic B], and I want to leave 10 minutes to talk through [the skepticism the buyer raised]. If there's anything you'd add or want to skip, just reply and let me know. Talk tomorrow."

That note does the work of three things: it confirms attendance, it shows preparation, and it gives the buyer a way to redirect the meeting before it starts. Buyers love it because it makes them feel like the meeting is for them, not for you.

Step 5: Start the discovery call by saying what you already knowโ€‹

The single fastest way to lose a deal in the first five minutes is to ask "so tell me what brings you here today" to a buyer who already told the SDR exactly that.

The buyer will repeat themselves. Politely. But the trust you needed is gone. The buyer is now thinking: "do these people actually talk to each other?"

The fix is one of the simplest behavioral changes you can make and almost nobody does it:

"Before I ask anything, let me make sure I have this right. From the conversation with [SDR first name], my understanding is you're [pain in their words], and the thing that's making this urgent right now is [urgency in their words]. What you pushed back on was [skepticism]. Did I get that right, and what's changed since you two talked?"

You just did four things in 30 seconds. You proved your team communicates. You proved you prepared. You gave the buyer permission to correct you. And you opened the door to ask "what's changed since" โ€” which is the single best discovery question in B2B sales because it surfaces new information without making the buyer restart.

Step 6: Close the loop with a written recap the SDR can seeโ€‹

The handoff doesn't end when discovery ends. The SDR needs to know what happened, both to learn and to keep the buyer relationship warm for any future opportunities.

Within 24 hours of discovery, the AE sends a recap email to the buyer and CCs the SDR. The recap names the three things the buyer said they cared about, the proposed next step, and the date by which the AE will follow up. The SDR reading along learns two things: whether their qualification held up, and what the AE heard that they missed. Both make them better at the next handoff.

This is also where you catch handoff failures early. If the AE's recap says "the buyer is now exploring three vendors and wants to see ROI proof," and the SDR brief said "the buyer is committed to switching this quarter," somebody misread the qualification. You want to know that within 24 hours, not in a forecast review six weeks later.

What goes wrong when teams skip these stepsโ€‹

Pattern matching from teams who run a broken handoff:

  • Show rates below 70 percent. Buyers cool because nothing happens between the booking and the meeting. The fix is steps 3 and 4 โ€” an intro email and a pre-meeting confirmation.
  • AEs complaining that "SDR leads are unqualified." Usually the qualification was fine but the context didn't transfer. The fix is steps 1 and 2 โ€” verbatim quotes in a one-paragraph brief.
  • Buyers re-pitching themselves on discovery. Almost always step 5. The AE didn't open by reflecting back what they already knew.
  • Deals that stall in the 14 days after demo. Often the buyer never trusted the team. See the 14-day post-demo window playbook for what to do once the deal is already cooling.
  • Champions who go quiet two weeks in. Sometimes the handoff was fine but the multi-thread wasn't. See multi-threading the deal team and champion went quiet.

The handoff scorecardโ€‹

Once you adopt the playbook, score every handoff weekly. Five questions, one point each:

  1. Did the SDR capture three verbatim quotes in the brief?
  2. Did the SDR send the three-way intro email within two hours of booking?
  3. Did the AE send the 24-hour pre-meeting confirmation?
  4. Did the AE open discovery by reflecting back what they already knew?
  5. Did the AE send a 24-hour recap CCing the SDR?

A 5/5 handoff converts to second meeting at almost double the rate of a 1/5 handoff. The behaviors are tiny. The compounding effect on pipeline is not.

Where most teams should startโ€‹

Pick step 5 โ€” the discovery opener that reflects back what the SDR already qualified. It costs nothing, it changes behavior immediately, and it produces visible buyer reactions the AE can feel in the first 30 seconds of the call. Once the AEs feel that, they will pull the rest of the playbook in themselves.

The SDR-to-AE handoff is the cheapest, highest-ROI behavioral change in B2B sales. It does not require new software, new headcount, or a six-month process redesign. It requires three quotes, a paragraph, two emails, one sentence, and a recap. Five minutes of work per deal. Twenty to forty percent more pipeline conversion.

That is the trade.


Want to see how MarketBetter automates the signal-to-handoff workflow so your SDRs and AEs are always working from the same context? Book a demo โ†’

SDR-to-AE handoff playbook diagram showing the six-step process from qualification capture through discovery recap

The Multi-Threading Playbook: Build a 5-Stakeholder Deal Team Before the Champion Goes Quiet [2026]

ยท 14 min read
sunder
Founder, marketbetter.ai

Most AEs treat multi-threading like a fire extinguisher: you only reach for it when something is already burning. Your champion went dark. Procurement appeared out of nowhere. Legal kicked the contract back with redlines that read like a different deal.

By then, multi-threading is damage control. You are scrambling to find allies inside an account that has already decided you are not a priority.

The reps who consistently hit 110% of quota do something different. They build the deal team before they need it โ€” usually inside the first two meetings โ€” and treat stakeholder coverage as a leading indicator of pipeline health, not a Q4 panic move.

This playbook is the system. Five roles to identify, four weekly cadences to keep them warm, a CRM hygiene model that flags single-threaded deals before they stall, and the exact messages that get a CFO or VP Engineering to take a 15-minute call when they have never heard of you.

Five-stakeholder deal team diagram

Why single-threaded deals die quietlyโ€‹

Gartner's most-cited B2B buying research puts the average enterprise buying committee at 6 to 10 people. Forrester's data lands closer to 11. The deals that close involve the buyer talking to your team an average of 17 times across multiple stakeholders.

If your only relationship is with one champion, you are betting your forecast on three things going right at once:

  1. The champion never changes jobs, never gets reorged, never goes on parental leave
  2. The champion has the political capital and skill to sell internally without you in the room
  3. Every other stakeholder defers to the champion's recommendation without an independent opinion

Forrester says 86% of B2B deals are won or lost based on multi-thread coverage. If you have ever watched a deal you were "sure about" slip a quarter, the post-mortem almost always reveals the same thing: you had one relationship. The buyer had nine.

When the champion goes quiet โ€” which happens to roughly one in three enterprise deals โ€” your only signal is silence. We wrote a full re-engagement workflow for that case in our champion-quiet stalled deal playbook, but the better fix is upstream: never let a deal sit at one thread.

The 5 roles on every B2B deal teamโ€‹

Forget org charts. Buying committees don't show up on org charts. They form ad hoc around a project and dissolve when it closes. The roles below are functional โ€” one person can play two, two people can share one, but every winning deal has all five seats filled.

1. The Champion (the seller-internal-to-the-account)โ€‹

The person who wants you to win. They sell on your behalf in meetings you are not invited to. They know your roadmap, they can rattle off your pricing, they actively defend you against alternatives.

Most AEs stop here. That is the mistake.

A champion without backup is a single point of failure. If they go on PTO during the final week of the quarter, your deal slips. If they get poached by a competitor โ€” and B2B SaaS attrition averages 13% annually โ€” your deal restarts from zero.

Coverage signal: You have a champion. Good. That puts the deal at 20% stakeholder coverage. Not 100%.

2. The Economic Buyer (the budget owner)โ€‹

The person who signs the PO. In a 50-500 employee company, this is usually a VP or C-level. In enterprise, it could be a director with a discretionary budget below a threshold and an SVP above it.

The Economic Buyer's question is never "is this the best product?" It is "is this worth the opportunity cost of the budget?" They are weighing your line item against headcount, against another tool, against doing nothing.

You do not sell features to the Economic Buyer. You sell ROI math and risk reduction. And you sell it directly โ€” not through the champion. The champion's framing of your ROI is always weaker than yours, because they are not professionally trained to negotiate against a CFO's skepticism.

Coverage signal: If you have not had a 15+ minute conversation with the Economic Buyer by the second demo, the deal is not real yet.

3. The Technical Validator (the gatekeeper)โ€‹

VP of Engineering, Head of IT, Director of Security, Chief Architect. Whoever has the authority to say "we can't run this in our environment" and end the deal.

The Technical Validator is the most under-engaged stakeholder in B2B sales. Reps fear them, so they delay the introduction. Then in week 11 of a 13-week deal cycle, the security questionnaire arrives, the SOC 2 conversation happens, the integration concerns surface โ€” and the deal slips a quarter while you chase answers.

Bring them in early. Week two. Give them documentation before they ask for it. Make them feel respected as a peer reviewer, not an obstacle.

Coverage signal: A Technical Validator who has reviewed your docs and asked at least one clarifying question is a coverage point. A Technical Validator who has never been introduced is a hidden veto waiting to happen.

4. The User Champion (the end-user advocate)โ€‹

The person whose daily workflow your product changes. Usually different from the Champion. The Champion is often a manager or director โ€” the User Champion is the SDR, the marketer, the analyst who will actually log in every day.

Why they matter: in modern B2B sales, end-user adoption is a procurement criterion. CFOs ask, "will the team actually use this?" If the User Champion can answer yes in their own voice โ€” not through your champion โ€” the deal accelerates.

End-users also surface real objections faster than directors do. They will tell you in 60 seconds that your UI is confusing or that your CSV export is missing a column the team needs. That intel saves you from a 6-week stall later.

Coverage signal: Did the User Champion attend the demo? Did they ask questions? Have they tried the trial themselves? If no to all three, you are selling a director on a tool their team has not validated.

5. The Skeptic (the loyal opposition)โ€‹

Every deal has one. The person who is paid, structurally, to push back. CFO. Procurement. Legal. Sometimes a competing department head who wanted to build instead of buy.

You cannot avoid the Skeptic. You can only get to them first.

The mistake reps make is treating the Skeptic as the enemy. They are not. They are doing their job โ€” protecting the company from a bad procurement decision. Your job is to give them the answers they need before they have to dig for them.

Ask the champion: "Who is going to push back on this internally? Walk me through their concerns before the meeting." Then prep direct answers โ€” not deflections, not "let me get back to you," but the answer.

Coverage signal: Have you been told who the Skeptic is? Have you addressed their objection in writing? If no, the deal has a landmine you cannot see.

How to recruit each stakeholder (with what to say)โ€‹

Identification is the easy half. Getting on calendars is where most reps fail. Below is the exact ask for each role, tested in real outbound. Adjust the names and product specifics, but keep the structure.

Recruiting the Economic Buyerโ€‹

After demo 2 with the champion, ask:

"[Champion], based on where we are, I think this is the right time to bring [VP/CFO name] into the next conversation. I want to make sure they hear the ROI math directly from me, not summarized through you โ€” that protects you from any 'why didn't you push back on X' questions later. Can you make the intro this week? I will own the agenda and keep it to 15 minutes."

The framing matters. You are protecting the champion, not bypassing them. Champions accept this because it is true.

If the champion stalls on the intro for more than 7 days, that is itself a coverage signal: they either lack the political capital to make the intro, or the deal is less real than they have implied. Both are diagnostic. See our signal-decay framework for what to do when intent signals stop refreshing.

Recruiting the Technical Validatorโ€‹

Cold-introduce yourself directly. Do not wait for the champion. A 3-sentence message:

"Hi [Name] โ€” I am working with [Champion] at [Company] on evaluating [product category]. Wanted to introduce myself ahead of any security or integration conversations so we are not strangers when those come up. Happy to share our SOC 2 report and architecture overview now if useful. 15-minute intro call this week or next?"

Half will not respond. The other half will, because you have signaled three things: you know they exist, you respect their role, and you are not going to waste their time later.

Recruiting the User Championโ€‹

Get them into the demo. If the champion will not invite them, ask:

"We see a real difference in adoption when the daily users see the tool before procurement, not after. Can we do a 30-minute working session with 2-3 people from the [SDR/marketing/ops] team? It also gives me real product feedback before we get to pricing."

Buyers know this is true. Most will say yes.

Recruiting the Skepticโ€‹

You do not "recruit" the Skeptic โ€” you preempt them. As soon as you know who they are, send the champion a one-page document titled "[Skeptic role] FAQ" with the three objections they are most likely to raise and your written answers.

Then ask: "Can you forward this to [Skeptic] before our next meeting and ask them if there's anything else they'd want addressed?" This converts the Skeptic from an ambush into a structured conversation.

The weekly cadence: keeping the deal team warmโ€‹

Identifying stakeholders does not multi-thread the deal. Recurring contact does. Below is the cadence that separates AEs who hold 80% close rates from AEs who lose 40% of late-stage deals to "no decision."

StakeholderTouch FrequencyChannelMessage Type
ChampionWeeklySlack or textUpdate + question
Economic BuyerBi-weeklyEmailForwarded relevant insight
Technical ValidatorBi-weeklyEmailDocumentation + status
User ChampionWeekly during evalEmail or async videoProduct tip + feedback ask
SkepticAs-neededThrough championPre-emptive FAQ updates

The "forwarded relevant insight" pattern for the Economic Buyer is the highest-ROI touch in this entire playbook. You are not pitching. You are sending them a single article, benchmark, or customer story that addresses their specific concern. Three sentences. No CTA. Their reply rate to this pattern, in our internal data, is 4x higher than any "checking in" email.

For the User Champion, the highest-converting touch is asking for feedback on a specific feature โ€” not generic "how is the trial going." Specific feedback requests get specific replies. Specific replies build relationship.

CRM hygiene: how to flag single-threaded deals automaticallyโ€‹

You cannot multi-thread what you cannot see. Most CRMs let you log contacts but do not surface coverage gaps as a forecasting signal. Build the view yourself.

In your opportunity record, add three fields:

  1. Stakeholders Identified (number): How many of the 5 roles have a named person?
  2. Stakeholders Engaged (number): How many of those 5 have had a 1:1 conversation with you in the last 21 days?
  3. Coverage Risk (calculated): Red if Engaged is less than 3, yellow if 3-4, green if 5.

Run a weekly report filtering all opportunities forecasted to close this quarter where Coverage Risk is red. That list is your priority for next week's stakeholder outreach. It is also the list you bring to your manager's deal review.

This is the same operating principle behind our 14-day post-demo window playbook: make coverage visible, then make it accountable.

Multi-threading from inbound vs outbound dealsโ€‹

The playbook works for both, but the entry point differs.

Inbound deals start with a single contact who filled out a form. You do not yet know if they are the Champion, the User, or just someone doing research. Your first job is diagnosis. Use the first call to map: who else is involved in this evaluation? Who would sign the contract? Who needs to approve from a technical side?

Our inbound triage tier system flags hot inbound for 5-minute response โ€” multi-threading takes over from there in the post-demo phase.

Outbound deals start with you picking the entry point. Pick wrong and you spend two months selling to someone who has no authority to buy. We covered first-touch strategy in our signal-to-meeting 24-hour workflow and our visitor ID to outreach playbook โ€” multi-threading starts the moment the first meeting is booked, not after the demo.

What multi-threading does not solveโ€‹

This playbook is not magic. It does not:

  • Compensate for product-market fit gaps. If the prospect's pain is not real or your product is not the right shape for it, no stakeholder coverage will close the deal.
  • Replace strong discovery. You can multi-thread perfectly and still lose because the champion sold you on a vision the Economic Buyer never agreed was a priority.
  • Save deals from competitive switching costs. If the prospect is on a 3-year contract with your competitor and the cost of breaking it exceeds your annual price, more stakeholders does not change the math.

Multi-threading is the second-most-important variable in B2B win rate, behind discovery. Treat it accordingly.

The 60-second pipeline review questionโ€‹

Once you have built the playbook above, your pipeline reviews change shape. Stop asking "what is the status of this deal?" Start asking:

"Walk me through the deal team. Who has been engaged in the last 14 days? Who has not? What is the plan to engage them?"

Reps who can answer this in 30 seconds have real pipeline. Reps who cannot โ€” even on deals they are calling "committed" โ€” are running on optimism and a single contact. That is the deal you will lose in week 11, the one that becomes a champion-quiet re-engagement project, the one that turns into a closed-lost reopen attempt six months later (we wrote that workflow up in our closed-lost reopen playbook, but it is much cheaper to never get there).

How MarketBetter helps you multi-thread without burning hoursโ€‹

Manually maintaining a 5-stakeholder map across 30 active opportunities is a part-time job. The reason most reps do not multi-thread is not philosophical โ€” it is bandwidth.

MarketBetter pulls intent signals across your active accounts, tracks champion movements (job changes are a leading indicator of deal risk and a re-engagement opportunity โ€” we covered this in our buying committee post and our blind committee post), and surfaces which stakeholders in each account have engaged recently versus gone cold.

Instead of telling you who exists at the account, MarketBetter tells you which stakeholder to contact next, what to say based on their recent activity, and which deals have coverage gaps that are about to slip. The signal becomes the action โ€” not just data on a dashboard.

If you have ever lost a deal because the champion went on PTO during the final week, or because procurement showed up in week 10 with objections you could have addressed in week 2, the gap was not strategy. It was visibility.


Want to see how MarketBetter surfaces coverage gaps across your pipeline before they cost you a deal? Book a 20-minute demo โ†’

The 14-Day Post-Demo Window: A Daily AE Playbook to Close Active Deals Before They Stall [2026]

ยท 15 min read
sunder
Founder, marketbetter.ai

14-day post-demo window โ€” daily AE workflow that keeps deals moving from demo to next-step before they go quiet

Most deals don't die at the demo. They die in the 14 days after it.

The demo went well. The champion was nodding. They asked smart questions. They said something like "let me sync with the team and circle back next week." The AE marked the opp as committed for the quarter and moved on to the next demo. Two weeks later, the champion has stopped replying, the deal slipped to next quarter, and the AE is staring at a forecast call wondering what changed.

Nothing changed at the demo. What changed is what the AE did โ€” or didn't do โ€” between Day 1 and Day 14.

This is the most under-instrumented stretch of the B2B sales cycle. There are entire books about discovery. There are templates for closed-lost reactivation. There are playbooks for stalled deal re-engagement once the silence has set in. But the two weeks immediately after a strong demo โ€” when momentum is highest and the deal is most steerable โ€” usually run on autopilot. A thank-you note on Day 0, a "any thoughts?" email on Day 5, a "still alive?" on Day 12, then radio silence on Day 21.

This post is a day-by-day AE playbook for those 14 days. It's a workflow, not a cadence. The difference: a cadence is a list of touches you fire regardless of what the prospect does. A workflow is a sequence of actions that branch based on what they do โ€” and what they don't.

Why 14 Days Is the Window That Mattersโ€‹

If you've read the signal decay curve, the framing here will be familiar. Buying intent is not a constant โ€” it decays. A buyer who just saw a demo is, by definition, at peak intent for your product. Every day after that demo, intent erodes. Other priorities surface. Competing initiatives win attention. Memory of your differentiation fades. A demo that scored an 8/10 on Day 0 is a 4/10 by Day 14 unless you actively reinforce it.

Gartner's research on B2B buying shows that 77% of B2B buyers describe their latest purchase as very complex or difficult. The complexity isn't in the demo. It's in the negotiation between buyer-side stakeholders that happens after the demo. Your champion has to sell internally โ€” to peers, to procurement, to finance, to their boss. Every day you're absent from that internal conversation, your competitor (which is usually "do nothing") wins ground.

14 days is also when most buyer-side decision processes resolve into either active momentum or active de-prioritization. Research from Forrester on B2B buyers consistently shows that committed buyers move to a next-step within two weeks of a key meeting, and buyers who haven't moved in 14 days are statistically much more likely to slip into no-decision. The window isn't arbitrary โ€” it's where the deal physics actually bend.

The job of the playbook below is to keep your deal in front of your champion every working day in that window, without spamming them, while surfacing the objections that will kill the deal if they go unsurfaced.

The Three Buyer States You're Steering Betweenโ€‹

Before the day-by-day, you need a model. After a demo, every buyer sits in one of three states, and the play you run depends on which state they're actually in:

Buyer stateWhat's happening internallyWhat you'll see externally
Active momentumChampion is socializing internally, building business case, scheduling stakeholder meetingsQuick email replies, new contacts pulled in, asks for collateral, scheduling activity
Quiet evaluationChampion is interested but blocked or distracted โ€” comparing alternatives, waiting on input, no urgency yetPolite delays, "give me a few days," no new contacts surfacing, light website re-visits
Drift to no-decisionChampion has effectively de-prioritized; deal is competing with "do nothing"Slow or no replies, generic "still interested" answers, no internal motion, no return visits

Most AEs treat all three the same: send the same templated follow-up, then mark commit and pray. This is the original sin of post-demo follow-up.

The playbook below pivots based on what you're seeing. By Day 3, you should know which state you're in. By Day 7, you should be acting on that knowledge. By Day 14, you either have a next step or you've made the call to actively reposition the deal.

Day-by-Day: The 14-Day Post-Demo Playbookโ€‹

The dates below assume Day 0 is the demo. Skip weekends โ€” this is 14 business days, not 14 calendar days. Adjust if your prospect is in a different country or operating cadence.

Day 0 (demo day): Capture While It's Freshโ€‹

The single biggest leverage point in the entire 14 days is the hour right after the call ends. Do not move to your next meeting until you finish this:

  1. Send the recap email within 90 minutes. Specific, not templated. Reference one thing they said by exact phrasing โ€” "you mentioned your team is spending 4 hours per rep per week on manual list-building" โ€” and the implication you discussed. This proves you listened.
  2. Confirm one next step in writing. Even if it's soft. "Sounds like the next step is for you to share this with [name] โ€” does Wednesday work for me to follow up?" A vague next step is still a next step.
  3. Log the meeting brief into CRM the same day. What was said, who attended, what was the energy, what objections came up. If you wait until tomorrow, half of this is gone. The brief is the source of truth for the next 14 days of plays.
  4. Identify the silent attendees. Anyone on the call who didn't speak. They're either rubber-stampers or the people whose objection will kill the deal. Find them on LinkedIn. Add to the account list in your CRM.

If the demo had multiple stakeholders, this recap goes to all of them, with one or two lines personalized to what each person specifically asked about.

Day 1: Asynchronous Reinforcementโ€‹

Champion just got a 30-minute pitch. Their boss didn't. Their procurement team didn't. Today is when you make it stupidly easy for them to socialize the deal.

  • Send a 2-minute Loom or Vidyard summary they can forward. Not the full demo recording โ€” a 90-second highlight reel of the three slides that resonated. AEs hate doing this. The buyers who get it almost always forward it.
  • Send the one-pager, but a custom one with their company's metrics in the ROI section. Templated one-pagers go in the trash. Customized ones get screenshot into Slack.
  • Connect on LinkedIn. If you weren't connected before. Personal note referencing the call.

Day 2: Multi-Thread Without Asking Permissionโ€‹

This is the day most AEs lose deals they don't realize they're losing. They wait for the champion to introduce them to the rest of the buying group. The champion almost never does โ€” because making internal introductions is awkward and the champion is busy.

Don't wait. Multi-thread directly, today, with the help of a champion tracking workflow that surfaces who else at the account is engaging:

  • The silent attendees from the demo get a tailored note: "Saw you on yesterday's call โ€” wanted to share the slide on [the thing relevant to their function]."
  • The people who weren't on the call but who logically own the decision (CFO for budget, IT for security, Head of RevOps for integration). Soft outreach, not a pitch โ€” share something useful and signal you're available.
  • This is also where website visitor identification earns its keep. If new contacts from the account are quietly visiting your pricing page today, you want them on your radar before they form an opinion without you.

Day 3: The First Decision Pointโ€‹

By end of day 3, you should be able to bucket the deal into one of the three states above.

Signals you're in active momentum:

  • Champion replied to the recap within 24 hours
  • One or more silent attendees have engaged with your LinkedIn or replied to outreach
  • New contacts from the account visited your site in the last 48 hours

Signals you're in quiet evaluation:

  • Champion replied politely but with "give me a few days"
  • No internal motion visible
  • Light re-engagement (one or two website visits, no new contacts)

Signals you're drifting:

  • No reply to recap
  • No internal motion
  • No website activity

The play for Day 4โ€“7 splits based on what you're seeing. Do not run the same sequence for all three.

Day 4โ€“7: The Branchโ€‹

If active momentum: Push for a next concrete step. A scoping call with their RevOps team. A security review with their IT. A pricing discussion with their CFO. Each of these is a meeting, not an email exchange. The objective is to convert demo interest into a calendar-blocked decision process.

If quiet evaluation: Send value, not pressure. The temptation here is to fire off a "checking in" โ€” resist it. Instead: a relevant case study from their industry, a benchmark report, a one-line note referencing news about their company ("saw the funding round โ€” congrats โ€” this might be relevant to your scale-up plans"). You're staying present without forcing a decision.

If drifting: Run a silent diagnostic. What changed at the account in the last 7 days? Is the champion still in role? Is the company in a layoff cycle? Did a competitor announce something? Are they on a hiring freeze? You're not sending an email today โ€” you're gathering intelligence so the Day 8 email lands with something the champion can't ignore.

Day 8: The Re-Engagement Pivotโ€‹

If you're still in active momentum, Day 8 is a scheduled stakeholder meeting day. Skip ahead.

If you're in quiet evaluation, Day 8 is the pattern-interrupt. Not a follow-up. A new angle:

  • A pointed question grounded in something specific they said on the demo
  • A short clip of a customer with their exact use case talking about ROI
  • A direct ask for the one objection holding things up: "Most teams at your stage that don't move forward after a demo have one of three reasons โ€” which one is yours?"

That last one is uncomfortable. It's also the highest-converting follow-up email AEs run. Buyers respect the directness. The worst outcome is the truth, which is more useful than another week of polite silence.

If you're drifting, Day 8 is the re-engagement push, informed by the intelligence you gathered Day 4โ€“7. Reference what you learned: "Saw [news event] โ€” wanted to check if that shifts priority for what we discussed." You're earning a reply by demonstrating you're paying attention.

Day 9โ€“11: Tighten the Loopโ€‹

By now, you've either:

  • Booked a follow-on meeting (the deal is in motion โ€” focus on prep)
  • Surfaced a real objection (now you're selling, not following up)
  • Confirmed the deal is sleeping (Day 12 onward is for active re-priorization, not nurture)

For the deals with surfaced objections: build the materials that answer the objection. ROI model. Security questionnaire response. Reference call. Whatever it is, the material lands by Day 11, not Day 21.

For deals that booked follow-ons: prep harder than the prospect expects. Bring a custom one-pager for each new stakeholder. Don't rerun the demo โ€” assume they watched the Loom from Day 1.

Day 12: The Last Real Touch in the Windowโ€‹

Day 12 is your last touch where the demo is still warm enough to anchor on. The standard play here is whatever brings the deal to a yes-or-defer decision:

  • A proposal, even if rough
  • A trial offer with a defined evaluation period
  • A side-by-side comparison with the next-best alternative they mentioned

If you can't put one of these in front of them on Day 12, you're going to spend Day 15โ€“30 chasing instead of selling.

Day 13โ€“14: Set the Dispositionโ€‹

You're making a call now: this deal is either a Q-this-quarter close, a confirmed next-quarter timeline, or a stall that needs the champion-went-quiet workflow starting next week.

The disposition isn't about your forecast โ€” it's about how you allocate the next 14 days of your time. Deals that aren't moving by Day 14 don't deserve the same effort as deals that are. AEs who run this discipline close more revenue per hour than AEs who treat every deal as equally promising forever.

The Three Mistakes That Kill the 14-Day Windowโ€‹

If you take only one thing from this post, take this: most AEs lose deals in the 14-day window for the same three reasons.

  1. Treating the recap as optional. The same-day recap with a written next step is the highest-leverage email an AE sends in the entire deal cycle. AEs who skip it because they have back-to-back demos lose deals their peers close. If you only do one thing differently, do this.

  2. Waiting for the champion to multi-thread. They won't. They want to but they're busy and the introductions are awkward. Multi-thread directly, with the air-cover of a soft, value-add outreach. The deal that's single-threaded on Day 7 is a deal at risk by Day 14.

  3. Running the same cadence regardless of buyer state. Active momentum, quiet evaluation, and drifting all need different plays. Treating them the same is how you lose deals you could have saved. Use the Day 3 decision point to branch.

Where This Fits in the Larger Workflowโ€‹

This playbook is the bridge between two other workflows in this blog. Upstream, you're running the signal-to-meeting workflow โ€” turning a buying signal into a booked demo in 24 hours. Downstream, when a deal does stall past Day 14, you're running the champion-went-quiet re-engagement workflow to reopen the conversation.

The 14-day post-demo window is where most of those signal-to-meeting wins are won or lost. A great SDR motion that hands over a great demo is wasted if the AE goes quiet for two weeks afterward. The handoff doesn't end at the demo โ€” it ends when the deal has either closed or been actively repositioned.

It also pairs with the buying signal hierarchy: the signals you're looking for in Day 3 โ€” internal motion, new contacts, pricing-page returns โ€” are exactly the high-tier signals that predict closed-won. The 14-day window is the highest-signal window in the entire deal cycle. Instrument it.

The Daily Discipline That Compoundsโ€‹

The point of the workflow isn't the calendar. It's the daily discipline: every demo gets the same-day recap, every demo gets multi-threaded on Day 2, every deal gets bucketed by Day 3, and every deal has a defined disposition by Day 14.

AEs who run this consistently report two things:

  • Their post-demo-to-next-step conversion rate climbs from ~30% to ~55%
  • Their no-decision losses drop materially because they're forcing the question earlier

Neither is magic. It's just refusing to let the highest-leverage stretch of the sales cycle run on autopilot.

The demo isn't the close. The demo is the start of the close. The next 14 days are the close. Plan accordingly.


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