A sales playbook documents your proven process for selling
Best playbooks are based on how your best reps actually sell
Includes discovery questions, positioning, and objection handling
Should be specific to your business, not generic
Update quarterly based on what you learn
Must be simple enough that reps actually use it
A sales playbook is your documented sales process. It's a guide that shows your salespeople how to sell effectively.
It's not:
A product manual (that's different)
A script (too rigid)
A generic sales book (too broad)
It's your specific process, proven to work, documented so others can follow it.
Real-world example:
A playbook might say:
"When you get a lead from the website:
Research company and prospect on LinkedIn (5 min)
Send personalized first email within 2 hours
If no reply in 3 days, follow up with phone call
On first call, ask discovery questions (our template)
Share relevant case study based on their industry
Ask for a second meeting focused on ROI
If they say price is too high, use objection script #4
Send proposal within 24 hours of agreement"
This is a playbook. Clear, specific, repeatable.
Before you document it, understand it.
Interview your best reps.
Ask them:
How do you typically prospect?
What does a discovery call look like?
How do you handle objections?
When do you bring in management?
What content do you use when?
How do you close deals?
What common mistakes do you see new reps make?
Record these conversations. There will be patterns.
Map the stages:
Most sales processes have 4-6 stages:
Prospecting: Finding and contacting potential customers
Initial conversation: First call/meeting to determine fit
Qualification: Understanding their need and ability to buy
Evaluation: They're comparing your solution to alternatives
Negotiation: Working out terms and price
Close: Contract signed, deal won
Your process might be different. That's fine. Use your actual stages.
Define entry/exit criteria for each stage:
When does a prospect move from one stage to the next?
Example:
Prospect enters "Initial Conversation" stage when: You've had first contact and they've agreed to a call.
Prospect exits "Initial Conversation" and enters "Qualification" when: You've had the call and determined they're potentially a fit.
This prevents deals from getting stuck because reps don't know when to move them forward.
Who do you sell to best?
Document:
Company size (revenue, employees)
Industries you focus on
Job titles you target
Company characteristics (growth rate, challenges, etc.)
Budget range
Decision timeline
Geographic location (if relevant)
Reps use this to focus their prospecting. Don't waste time on unqualified leads.
How do reps find prospects?
Common approaches:
Inbound leads (website, marketing)
Cold email
Cold calling
Referrals
Account-based marketing
Document for each approach:
Cold email example:
"Target: Marketing directors at $10-50M companies in SaaS
Email subject line: Personalized reference to their recent blog post or news
Email body:
Personalized opening (reference something specific about them)
Problem statement (what they likely care about)
One relevant proof point (customer case study)
Clear ask (brief call, not a sale)
Signature
Follow-up sequence:
Initial email
If no reply in 3 days, call
If no answer, follow-up email
If no reply in 5 days, try LinkedIn
Success metric: 10-15% response rate"
Each approach should have clear steps.
What happens on the first real conversation?
Discovery call playbook:
Timing: 30 min
Objective: Understand their needs, qualify if they're a fit
Opening (2 min):
Thank them for time
Outline what you'll discuss
Ask permission to take notes
Discovery questions (20 min):
[Use your actual discovery questions. Examples:]
What's driving you to look at a solution right now?
What have you tried before?
What's not working with your current approach?
Who else is involved in the decision?
What's your budget range?
When do you want to make a decision?
What would success look like for you?
Listen more than you talk (aim for 30% you, 70% them)
Closing (8 min):
If fit: Schedule next meeting (demo/proposal)
If not fit: Thank them, offer future introduction if relevant
If mayb: 'Next steps' (what will you do, what will they do?)"
This is specific enough to be useful but flexible enough that reps can adapt.
How do you talk about your product?
Many companies skip this. Reps make it up. Messaging gets inconsistent.
Positioning playbook example:
"Your product solves X problem, delivering Y benefit, for Z type of customer.
When positioning:
Start with their problem (show you understand)
Explain your approach (why it's different)
Show results (customer success)
Handle objections (address concerns)
For a marketing director at a SaaS company:
Problem: Too much time on manual lead nurturing, not enough lead quality
Our approach: Automate nurture while improving quality through better segmentation
Results: Customers see 40% improvement in lead quality, 20% reduction in nurture time
Differentiation: Unlike [competitor], we focus on quality not just volume
Use this framework in every demo"
What objections do you hear repeatedly?
Document the most common 5-10.
Objection playbook example:
"Objection 1: 'Price is too high'
Root cause: They don't understand value, or they're comparing to a cheaper alternative
Response framework:
Acknowledge (not defensive): 'I understand price matters, most companies we work with say the same thing'
Understand: 'Help me understand—is price the main concern, or is it something else?'
Reframe value: 'If you could save your team 10 hours per week, what's that worth annually? For you, that's $[calculate]. Our cost is $[cost]. So you're actually ahead.'
Offer options: 'What if we started with [lower-cost option] and expanded as you see value?'
Get feedback: 'Does that help address the price concern?'
Don't discount. Reframe value instead."
Similar scripts for other objections (not a fit, need to think about it, competitor comparison, etc.).
How do you close deals?
"When prospect is ready to buy:
Confirm understanding
'If I understand, you want [X solution] for [Y use case], starting [Z date], at [price]. Is that right?'
Ask for the deal
'Great. Shall we move forward?'
Confirm next steps
'Perfect. Here's what happens next: [outline onboarding]'
Send contract same day
'I'll send the contract today. Please sign and send back. We can get you started Monday.'
Confirm start date
'See you Monday. Excited to get started.'"
Simple. Clear. Repeatable.
How do you know if your process is working?
Define metrics for each stage:
Prospecting: Meetings set per rep per month
Discovery: % that move to evaluation
Evaluation: % that move to negotiation
Negotiation: % that close
Overall: Sales cycle length, close rate, average deal size
Track these. If discovery-to-evaluation conversion is low, you have a discovery problem. Fix it.
What should reps do at each deal stage?
Deal stage playbook example:
"New Lead stage:
Action: Research prospect, personalized outreach
CRM entry: Lead created
Timeline: Contact within 2 hours if inbound, 1 day if outbound
Success: Discovery meeting scheduled
Initial Meeting stage:
Action: Run discovery meeting
CRM entry: Move to Initial Meeting
Timeline: Within 1 week of contact
Success: Qualify as SQL (sales-qualified lead)
Evaluation stage:
Action: Demo/proposal, answer questions
CRM entry: Move to Evaluation
Timeline: Demo within 3 days
Success: Proposal agreed, price confirmed
Negotiation stage:
Action: Contract review, address concerns
CRM entry: Move to Negotiation
Timeline: Contract sent within 24 hours
Success: Signed contract
Close stage:
Action: Final signature, handoff to onboarding
CRM entry: Mark as Won
Timeline: Signature immediately
Success: Customer onboarded"
How to structure it:
Option 1: Google Doc or PDF
Organized by section
Easy to share
Hard to update
Option 2: Wiki or internal knowledge base
Easy to update
Can embed videos
Centralized location
Option 3: Video library
Each section as a short video
Reps watch how it's done
Better for visual learners
Option 4: Combination
Document for reference
Videos for training
Templates for execution
Most companies combine formats. Text for reference, videos for training.
Documents don't implement themselves. Make it real:
1. Train on it: Don't just share it. Teach it. Role-play scenarios.
2. Reference it constantly: "This is what the playbook says. Let's follow it."
3. Hold reps accountable: Are they following the playbook? If not, why?
4. Update it: Every quarter, review what's working and what isn't. Update the playbook.
5. Celebrate wins: When a deal uses the playbook and closes, celebrate it. "This is what following the playbook gets you."
6. Make it searchable: Playbooks are only useful if people can find what they need.
Define your sales stages
Document ideal customer profile
Document prospecting approach for each channel
Document discovery process and questions
Document demo/positioning approach
Document 5-10 common objections and responses
Document closing process
Define success metrics for each stage
Format and distribute
Train your team on it
Review and update quarterly
A good playbook reduces variation. New reps ramp faster. All reps sell consistently. More deals close.
It doesn't have to be perfect. Start simple. Use what works. Update regularly.