Challenger Sales Mindset ======================== Slide 1: Challenger Sales Mindset Narration Anna: Many IT deals die because reps chase people who can’t say yes. With long procurement cycles and security reviews, smart qualification keeps you from camping in inboxes that never reply. Greg: Exactly. A Challenger mindset means starting with a data‑backed insight that proves you understand their business. That opens the door to ask sharper questions about budget, authority, and technical fit. Anna: And it shows non‑IT folks you can translate tech into outcomes that matter in any industry. Greg: When insight and qualification work together, you save everyone time and move opportunities forward. On-screen text Challenger Sales Mindset Qualifying leads through insight Slide 2: Challenger approach Narration Anna: Picture an IT director drowning in help‑desk tickets. Instead of pitching faster hardware, you show how a self‑service portal could cut requests by 30%. Greg: That's the Challenger approach—teach a new perspective tied to their KPI, then steer toward a pilot so momentum doesn't stall. It's like being a consultant who actually knows what they're talking about. Anna: By taking control of the conversation, you prevent deals from lingering in "maybe" land. Greg: And you build credibility because you're leading with insight and value, not desperation or discounts. On-screen text Challenger approach - Teach customers a new perspective - Tailor the message to their priorities - Take control of the conversation and next steps - Reframe with data (self-service portal cuts tickets by 30%) - It's like being a consultant who actually knows what they're talking about Slide 3: BANT qualification basics Narration Anna: I once chased a "hot" lead from a marketing manager who swore they had $50K. After five demos, spending froze until next fiscal year. Greg: A BANT question like "Who signs the PO and when is budget released?" would have saved those calls. BANT covers Budget, Authority, Need, and Timeline. Anna: Red flags appear when answers stay vague or your contact dodges finance. New reps often mistake enthusiasm for authority. Greg: Ask, "What happens if this waits a quarter?" If they shrug, move on before your forecast becomes a ghost story. On-screen text BANT qualification basics - Budget available and defined ("We have $50K" but funds arrive next year) - Authority to approve the purchase — talking to someone's nephew who 'handles the computers' won't close deals - Need clearly articulated — ask what happens if it waits a quarter - Timeline for decision and rollout Slide 4: MEDDIC framework Narration Anna: MEDDIC sounds like a prescription drug, but skip a step and the deal still hurts. In IT, a security tool may need sign‑off from risk, legal, and finance before a check is cut. Greg: So map Metrics, Economic buyer, Decision criteria, Decision process, Identify pain, and find a Champion. Ask, "What metrics matter to leadership?" and "Who loses sleep if this fails?" Anna: If your contact can't introduce the economic buyer, they're an influencer, not the decision maker. Greg: And without a named pain and champion pushing internally, procurement becomes a black hole. On-screen text MEDDIC framework - Metrics that define success - Economic buyer who holds the funds (engineer ≠ CIO) - Decision criteria and process - Identify pain points and a champion - MEDDIC sounds like a prescription drug, but it won't cure your sales hangover Slide 5: Using frameworks together Narration Anna: The magic happens when Challenger insight sets the stage and BANT or MEDDIC confirms the show should go on. You might reframe a hospital’s slow admissions as a data issue, then verify the COO has budget this quarter. Greg: In IT or retail, the pattern is the same—teach, tailor, take control, then qualify. Red flags like "we’re just exploring" signal the pain isn’t urgent. Anna: These frameworks also help non‑sales roles prioritize projects or vendors. Greg: They’re universal filters for where to invest energy, whether you’re closing software deals or choosing a cybersecurity internship. On-screen text Using frameworks together - Start with insight to reframe the problem - Qualify opportunities with BANT or MEDDIC - Map findings to your value proposition - Works in IT and beyond to focus energy on real deals Slide 6: Key takeaway Narration Anna: Whether you're selling software or pitching an internal project, smart qualification protects your time and credibility. Chasing unvetted leads burns trust and budgets across every industry. Greg: This week, review your pipeline or class assignments. List Budget, Authority, Need, and Timeline for each, then map any missing MEDDIC pieces. Anna: If gaps remain, schedule discovery calls, escalate to a champion, or move prospects to nurture instead of clogging forecasts. Greg: Mastering this discipline shows hiring managers you think like a strategist, not a spray‑and‑pray rep, and it keeps colleagues from muttering about wasted meetings. On-screen text Key takeaway Leading with insight and structured qualification drives consistent deal success. Next step: map one current lead using BANT and MEDDIC.