Meeting Prep That Doesn't Suck: Auto-Research Every Prospect Before a Call
🔴 Series Difficulty: ADVANCED (Part 8 of 10) — Combines research, behavioral data, and multi-step workflows into an automated system.
You booked the meeting. Nice work. Now the real anxiety begins.
Who is this person? What does their company do? What did they look at on your website? What have they been talking about on LinkedIn? Do you share any mutual connections? Are they evaluating competitors? What should you lead with?
Most SDRs handle meeting prep one of two ways:
Option A: The 30-second glance. Quick peek at their LinkedIn profile, maybe a Google search. Walk into the meeting knowing their title and company name. Hope for the best.
Option B: The 45-minute deep dive. Open 15 tabs. Read every LinkedIn post. Stalk their company's news page. Check Crunchbase. Look at their tech stack. Write notes. Realize you've spent your entire morning prepping for one meeting.
Neither is great. Option A means you're underprepared and it shows. Option B means you prepared brilliantly for one meeting but didn't have time for anything else.
There's an Option C. In Part 8 of our Claude Code + MarketBetter series, we'll show you how to generate a comprehensive one-page prospect brief in under 3 minutes — for every single meeting on your calendar.
Why this is an Advanced post: In Part 2, you learned to research a single prospect. That was a one-step process: give Claude Code a name, get a dossier back. Meeting prep is different — it's a multi-step system that combines Claude Code research with MarketBetter's behavioral data, processes multiple meetings in a batch, and generates structured outputs for different meeting types (discovery vs. follow-up vs. executive). You're also layering in techniques from Part 5's competitive intel and Part 6's lead scoring to create briefs that are more strategic, not just informational.
The One-Page Brief: What You Actually Need to Know
Before we get into the workflow, let's define what a great meeting prep brief contains. You don't need everything — you need the right things:
The Essential Six
- Person profile — Career history, role tenure, what they've done before this job, key LinkedIn activity
- Company snapshot — What they do, size, growth stage, recent news (last 90 days)
- Website behavior — What pages they visited, how many times, how recently (from MarketBetter)
- Likely pain points — Based on their role, company size, and industry, what are they probably struggling with?
- Talking points — 3 specific things you can reference that show you did your homework
- Mutual connections — Anyone in your network who knows them or works at their company
That's it. Six categories, one page. You can review it in 2-3 minutes before the call and walk in prepared.
The Auto-Research Workflow
Step 1: The Morning Brief Batch
Every morning, check your calendar for the day's meetings. Then batch-process your prep:
"I have 4 meetings today. Research each prospect and generate a one-page brief for each:
- Sarah Chen, VP of Sales at Acme Corp — Meeting at 10:00 AM
- James Miller, CRO at Beta Labs — Meeting at 1:00 PM
- David Park, Head of Growth at Gamma Solutions — Meeting at 2:30 PM
- Lisa Wang, Director of Revenue Operations at Delta Tech — Meeting at 4:00 PM
For each person, I need:
Person Profile:
- Current role and how long they've been in it
- Previous roles (last 2-3 positions)
- Recent LinkedIn activity (topics they post about, articles they share)
- Education or notable affiliations
Company Snapshot:
- What the company does (one sentence)
- Employee count and growth trend
- Recent news (funding, product launches, leadership changes, last 90 days)
- Key competitors in their space
Likely Pain Points:
- Based on their role and company stage, what are they probably dealing with?
- What challenges are common for someone with their title at a company of their size?
Talking Points:
- 3 specific things I can reference to show I've done my homework
- Include at least 1 reference to their recent LinkedIn activity or public statements
Conversation Starters:
- 2-3 open-ended questions that will get them talking about their challenges
Format each brief to be scannable in under 3 minutes. No fluff."
Claude Code processes all 4 in 3-5 minutes. You now have meeting prep for your entire day — done before your first coffee is cold.
Step 2: Layer in MarketBetter Signals
Now add the behavioral intelligence that only MarketBetter can provide. Check each prospect's website visit history:
- Pages visited: Did they look at pricing? Case studies? A specific product page? This tells you what they care about.
- Visit frequency: A prospect who visited 5 times in the past week is more serious than a one-time visitor.
- Visit timeline: Did they visit before or after agreeing to the meeting? Visiting after suggests they're actively evaluating.
- Multi-person visits: Is anyone else from their company browsing your site? This could indicate a buying committee forming.
Add these signals to your brief. Now you know not just WHO you're meeting, but WHAT they're already interested in.
Example:
"MarketBetter shows Sarah Chen visited our pricing page 3 times this week and our case studies page twice. Two other people from Acme Corp (titles unknown) visited our integrations page yesterday."
What this tells you: Sarah is past the "what does this product do?" phase. She's evaluating price and looking for social proof. Multiple visitors suggest she's not the only decision maker — there's likely a buying committee. Lead with ROI and case studies, not a product demo.
Step 3: The 5-Minute Pre-Call Review
Ten minutes before your meeting, pull up your brief and do a final review:
- Scan the key facts — Name pronunciation, title, company basics
- Check MarketBetter one more time — Any new website activity since this morning?
- Pick your opening — Which talking point or conversation starter feels most natural?
- Identify your ask — What's your goal for this meeting? Next steps, intro to another stakeholder, demo scheduling?
- Deep breath — You're prepared. You know more about this person than 95% of SDRs who take this meeting.
The Prospect Brief Template
Here's what Claude Code's output looks like in practice:
MEETING BRIEF: Sarah Chen, VP of Sales — Acme Corp
Meeting: Tuesday 10:00 AM | Duration: 30 min | Type: Discovery
👤 PERSON
- VP of Sales at Acme Corp since March 2025 (~11 months)
- Previously: Director of Sales at XYZ Co (3 years), Senior AE at BigCo (2 years)
- Background: Promoted internally from SDR → AE → Director → VP. Knows the trenches.
- Recent LinkedIn: Posted about "the myth of the 100-activity day" (2 weeks ago). Shared an article about AI in sales with comment "skeptical but curious" (last week). Commented on a post about SDR burnout.
- Education: UCLA, Business Economics
🏢 COMPANY
- Acme Corp: B2B SaaS, marketing automation platform
- ~350 employees, Series C ($45M, June 2025)
- HQ: Austin, TX
- Recent: Launched AI email features (Jan 2026), hiring 3 SDRs and a Demand Gen Manager
- Competitors: HubSpot Marketing, Mailchimp, ActiveCampaign
🌐 WEBSITE ACTIVITY (MarketBetter)
- Visited pricing page 3x this week (Mon, Tue, Wed)
- Visited case studies page 2x
- 2 other Acme Corp visitors on integrations page yesterday
- First visit was 2 weeks ago (shortly after her "AI in sales" LinkedIn post)
🎯 LIKELY PAIN POINTS
- Scaling SDR team (hiring 3 new reps) while maintaining quality outreach
- New SDR ramp time — she came from the trenches and knows how long it takes
- Pressure to show ROI on Series C investment — sales needs to grow fast
💬 TALKING POINTS
- Reference her LinkedIn post about the "100-activity day myth" — ask what she thinks the right metric is
- Mention the SDR hiring — "building a team from scratch is exciting but brutal. How are you thinking about ramp time?"
- Her "skeptical but curious" comment about AI — perfect opening to discuss practical AI applications without over-promising
❓ CONVERSATION STARTERS
- "I saw your post about rethinking activity metrics for SDRs — what does the ideal day look like for your team?"
- "With 3 new SDRs coming on, what's your biggest concern about getting them productive quickly?"
- "You mentioned being 'skeptical but curious' about AI in sales — what would change skeptical to convinced?"
That brief took Claude Code about 45 seconds to generate. You can review it in 3 minutes. And you'll walk into that meeting better prepared than Sarah's last 10 sales calls combined.
Advanced Meeting Prep Techniques
The "Second Meeting" Prep
First meetings are about discovery. Second meetings are about depth. Adjust your Claude Code prompt:
"I had a first meeting with [Name] last week. Here's what I learned: [paste your notes]. We have a second meeting tomorrow.
Research what's changed since our last conversation (any new company news, LinkedIn activity, market developments). Also:
- Based on what they told me, what follow-up questions should I ask?
- What competitive alternatives might they be evaluating?
- Draft a brief agenda for the second meeting that builds on our first conversation
- What objections should I be prepared for?"
The "Executive Meeting" Prep
When you're meeting a C-suite executive, you need different preparation:
"I have a meeting with the CEO of [Company]. This is different from a typical SDR meeting. Research:
- Their public speaking history — keynotes, podcasts, interviews
- Their strategic vision for the company (based on public statements)
- Board members and investors (who's influencing their decisions?)
- Their management style and communication preferences (based on their public persona)
- Business-level talking points — not feature-level, but ROI and strategic value"
The "Multi-Stakeholder" Prep
When MarketBetter shows multiple people from the same company visiting your site, you might have a buying committee forming:
"I have a meeting with [Name] at [Company], but MarketBetter shows 3 other people from the company also browsing our site. Research:
- Who are the other likely stakeholders? (Based on typical buying committee for our product)
- What does each stakeholder care about? (VP Sales cares about pipeline, CFO cares about cost, etc.)
- How should I tailor my messaging to address all stakeholders even though I'm only meeting one?
- What questions should I ask to uncover the rest of the buying committee?"
Connecting Meeting Prep to Your Full Workflow
Meeting prep doesn't exist in isolation. It connects to everything else in this series:
- Part 2: Prospect Research gave you the initial dossier. Meeting prep goes deeper.
- Part 3: Cold Emails got you the meeting. Now you deliver on the promise of that personalized outreach.
- Part 6: Lead Scoring told you this prospect was worth pursuing. Meeting prep confirms and refines that assessment.
- Part 9: Follow-Up starts immediately after the meeting. Your prep notes become the foundation of your follow-up sequence.
After the Meeting: Closing the Loop
Great meeting prep doesn't end when the meeting starts. Here's how to maximize the value:
Immediate Post-Meeting (5 minutes)
"Here are my notes from the meeting with [Name] at [Company]: [paste raw notes]
Organize these into:
- Key pain points they mentioned
- Decision criteria and timeline
- Other stakeholders involved
- Competitive alternatives they're considering
- Specific next steps agreed upon
- Draft a follow-up email that recaps the conversation and confirms next steps"
Update Your CRM
Use the organized notes to update your CRM with structured information, not a wall of text. Your future self (and your AE, if you're handing off) will thank you.
Trigger the Right Sequence
Based on how the meeting went, set up the appropriate MarketBetter sequence:
- Meeting went well, next steps agreed → Nurture sequence with relevant content
- Meeting went well, need to loop in other stakeholders → Multi-threading sequence
- Meeting was lukewarm, needs more time → Soft-touch follow-up sequence
- Meeting didn't go well → Long-term nurture or remove from active sequence
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Try This Today
Here's your action item:
- Check your calendar for tomorrow's meetings
- Run the Meeting Brief Batch prompt from Step 1 above for every meeting tomorrow
- Add MarketBetter website visit data to each brief
- Review each brief for 3 minutes before the meeting
- After each meeting, note whether the prep helped and what you wish you'd known
Track your results for a week. Most SDRs report that AI-prepped meetings convert at a significantly higher rate than unprepared ones — because the prospect can tell you've done your homework, and they respect your time because you respect theirs.
This is Part 8 (🔴 Advanced) of our 10-part series. Next up: Part 9: Never Let a Lead Go Cold →
MarketBetter shows you exactly which pages your prospects visited before the meeting. Walk in knowing what they care about. Book a demo.

