Most deals don’t fall apart at the end—they were already lost in the very first conversation.
In this episode, we break down why weak discovery is one of the biggest hidden reasons deals stall, ghost, or quietly die. If your conversations stay surface-level, prospects feel no urgency, no real connection to the problem, and no clear reason to choose you over anyone else.
You’ll learn how to spot weak discovery (and avoid it), why it leads to selling the wrong solution, and how it makes you sound like every other salesperson in the market.
We then walk through a simple but powerful framework for running high-impact discovery conversations:
You’ll also get practical, high-quality questions you can use immediately to deepen your conversations and build real urgency—without sounding pushy or scripted.
If you’ve ever had a deal that “should have closed” but didn’t, this episode will show you exactly where things went wrong—and how to fix it going forward.
Key takeaway: Discovery isn’t just a stage in the sales process. It’s the foundation of the entire deal.
🎧 Next episode: How to Run a Perfect Discovery Call (Step-by-Step Playbook) — where we turn these principles into a clear, repeatable structure you can use in every call.
Welcome to the podcast!
Join my free online webinars from the 2nd June to learn why your communication style is losing you sales!
Register for the sessions here.
All sessions are recorded (and less than 30 minutes long), and everyone who registers will be able to listen to the recordings.
If you have a sales problem you'd like to hear covered in a podcast, please contact me directly. Or, my sales training programme might help!
If you'd like help to improve your sales confidence, please jump onto my free (45 minute) on-demand webinar. I'll teach you three things you can apply immediately, including handling objections and closing a sale.
Graham Elliott
You can contact me at graham@salescraft.training
My website is www.salescraft.training
Please join my mailing list.You'll get all the news and latest offers.
Or... if you've found this helpful, please buy me a coffee!