Skill Drill: Discovery Questions for Logistics and Freight
Skill Drill: Discovery Questions for Logistics and Freight
Direct Answer
This drill builds the ability to run a structured discovery conversation that uncovers a shipper's real freight pain — lane volatility, detention costs, on-time-in-full (OTIF) penalties, and capacity risk — before a rep ever quotes a rate. A sales manager or branch lead runs it with a team of 3–10 brokers, account executives, or carrier sales reps in 30–45 minutes.
The team walks away able to replace "What lanes do you ship?" with layered, consequence-driven questions that surface budget, urgency, and the cost of the status quo.
Why This Drill Matters in Logistics and Freight
In freight brokerage and 3PL sales, the fastest way to lose a deal is to lead with price. Shippers are flooded with cold calls quoting a rate per mile, and a rate is trivially easy to beat by the next broker who calls. Reps who win lasting accounts are the ones who diagnose the operational pain underneath the freight: a manufacturer eating $300/load in detention because their docks are slow, a retailer facing OTIF chargebacks from a big-box buyer, a shipper whose primary carrier just gave back 40% of their capacity.
The bottleneck is that most logistics reps never get past surface logistics data — lanes, weights, equipment type, frequency. Those are *qualifying* facts, not *discovery*. Real discovery applies a proven framework.
SPIN Selling (Neil Rackham, Huthwaite) maps cleanly onto freight: Situation questions (current lanes, carriers, volume), Problem questions (where capacity falls through, where claims happen), Implication questions (what a missed delivery costs in chargebacks or stockouts), and Need-payoff questions (what reliable capacity would be worth).
Sandler's "pain funnel" pushes reps to go three layers deep instead of accepting the first surface answer. The Challenger Sale (CEB/Gartner, Dixon & Adamson) adds the reframe — teaching a shipper something they didn't know about their own detention or accessorial spend.
The named buyer types matter here too. You are not selling to one person. You are selling to a VP of Supply Chain who cares about service and risk, a Transportation Manager who lives in daily firefighting, and a Procurement / Sourcing lead who is graded on cost per load.
Each one answers discovery questions differently, and a rep who asks a procurement-flavored question to a supply-chain VP sounds tone-deaf. This drill forces reps to practice all three.
What You'll Need (5 min prep)
- Group size: 3–10 reps. Best run in pairs, so an even number is ideal; with odd numbers the leader pairs with the extra rep.
- Materials: Printed handout of the SPIN four-question types with two freight examples each; a one-page "shipper profile" card per scenario (industry, lanes, equipment, known pain); a timer; a whiteboard or flip chart.
- Room setup: Tables for pairs to sit face-to-face. One open wall for the whiteboard. If remote, use breakout rooms of two and a shared doc for capturing questions.
- Handouts: Three shipper profile cards — (1) a frozen-food manufacturer with reefer lanes and OTIF penalties from a grocery buyer, (2) a building-materials distributor with flatbed lanes and chronic detention, (3) a mid-market e-commerce brand outgrowing their parcel mix and exploring LTL.
Round 1 — Set the Scene (5 min)
The leader frames the skill and reads the standard aloud so everyone hears the bar.
"Today we're drilling discovery, not pitching. The win condition is simple: by the end of a call, you should know the dollar cost of the shipper's current problem and what they'd pay to make it go away. If you only know their lanes and weights, you failed. We're going to practice layering questions until the shipper says the consequence out loud."
Write the four SPIN buckets on the board: Situation, Problem, Implication, Need-payoff. Under each, ask the team to call out one freight example and capture it. This primes the vocabulary before reps go live.
What good looks like: the team can name the difference between a Situation question ("How many reefer loads a week?") and an Implication question ("When a reefer load arrives late to that grocery DC, what's the chargeback?").
Round 2 — Run the Reps (15 min)
Pair up. One rep is the seller, one is the shipper playing a profile card. The seller has one job: get from surface facts to a quantified pain in under five minutes, using at least one Implication and one Need-payoff question.
The leader reads the kickoff aloud:
"Sellers, you may NOT ask for a rate or quote anything. Shippers, answer honestly but don't volunteer the pain — make them dig for it. You have five minutes. Go."
Run a five-minute rep, then swap roles and run a second five-minute rep with a different profile card. Use the last five minutes for the leader to circulate and note specific questions worth replaying.
Role-play prompt (frozen-food card): "We run about 25 reefer loads a week out of our Modesto plant to grocery DCs in the Southwest. Our current carrier's fine, mostly." The seller must surface the OTIF penalty: a strong rep asks, "When a load misses the delivery window, does that grocer hit you with a chargeback — and roughly what does one cost?" That question turns "mostly fine" into a number.
What good looks like: the seller reaches a dollar figure (a per-load detention cost, a chargeback amount, a stockout estimate) and a stated consequence the shipper feels.
Round 3 — Pressure Test (10 min)
Now raise the difficulty. The leader plays a guarded Procurement lead who answers every question with "We just need the cheapest rate." Reps take turns — one question each, round-robin — trying to crack the cost-only posture using a Challenger-style reframe.
"I play the procurement buyer. My only line is some version of 'send me your best rate.' Your job is to make me care about something other than price in one question. If you ask a Situation question, I win. If you make me say a hidden cost out loud, you win."
A winning reframe sounds like: "Happy to send a rate. Quick question first — last quarter, how many of your loads rolled or got tendered late by your cheapest carrier, and what did that cost you in expedites?" That reframes price toward total landed cost.
What good looks like: at least half the team lands a question that makes the "procurement buyer" acknowledge a hidden cost (rolled loads, expedite fees, claims) instead of repeating "cheapest rate."
Round 4 — Debrief & Lock It In (10 min)
Each rep writes their single best discovery question from the session on the whiteboard. The team votes on the top three. The leader closes by assigning each rep to use two of these questions on a live call before the next meeting and report the answer back.
"Pick the two questions on this board you've never asked before. Use them this week. Next meeting, you owe me the shipper's actual answer — the number, not a summary."
What good looks like: a shared, written bank of 8–10 field-tested freight discovery questions and a commitment to deploy them on real calls.
Scaling It: 5-Minute, 30-Minute, and 60-Minute Versions
- 5-minute version: Skip pairs. The leader plays a shipper and one volunteer rep runs discovery live in front of the room. The team calls out which SPIN bucket each question hit. Fast, high-energy, good as a daily standup warm-up.
- 30-minute version: Run prep, Round 1, Round 2 (one rep each instead of a swap), and a short debrief. Drops the pressure test. Best for a regular weekly cadence.
- 60-minute version: Run all four rounds, then add a fifth block where reps role-play the *same* profile across all three buyer personas (Supply Chain VP, Transportation Manager, Procurement) back-to-back to feel how the questions must shift by role.
Common Mistakes & Coaching Cues
- Letting reps quote a rate. The instant a number gets quoted, discovery is over. Cue: "No prices in this room. Diagnose first."
- Accepting the first surface answer. "Mostly fine" is not an answer. Cue: "Go one layer deeper — ask what 'mostly' is costing them."
- Asking only Situation questions. Reps default to lanes-and-weights interrogation. Cue: "You just qualified them. Now make them feel the problem."
- Talking more than the shipper. If the rep is explaining their company, they've stopped discovering. Cue: "Whoever's talking isn't learning."
- Skipping the dollar figure. A pain with no number can't be sold against. Cue: "Get the cost. Detention per hour, chargeback per load, expedite per save."
- Same questions for every buyer. A procurement question lands flat on a supply-chain VP. Cue: "Read the badge before you ask the question."
FAQ
How is this different from a normal sales role-play? Most role-plays let reps pitch and handle objections. This drill bans pitching entirely. The only goal is to extract a quantified pain, which forces the discovery muscle that freight reps usually skip.
My reps say shippers won't share detention or chargeback numbers. Is that realistic? Shippers share when the question is specific and credible. A vague "what are your challenges?" gets nothing; "what does an hour of detention cost you at that DC?" gets a real number because it signals you already understand their world.
We sell spot freight, not contract. Does discovery still matter? Yes. Even on spot, knowing whether a load is a one-off or part of a recurring lane, and whether the shipper was just burned by a rolled load, changes how you price and whether you earn the next call. Discovery turns a spot win into a relationship.
Should new hires run the pressure test in Round 3? Let them watch the first time, then participate the second. The Challenger reframe is an advanced move; new reps should master Problem and Implication questions before trying to reframe a procurement buyer.
How often should we run this? Run the full version monthly and the 5-minute version weekly as a warm-up. Discovery decays fast under quota pressure — reps drift back to leading with price within a few weeks if you don't reinforce it.
What if a rep just can't get to the dollar figure? Pair them with your strongest discovery rep for a live shadow, then have them debrief which exact question their partner used. Most reps fix this fast once they hear a peer land an Implication question that works.
Bottom Line
After this drill, your reps can walk into a freight conversation, get past lanes-and-weights, and surface the dollar cost of a shipper's current problem before anyone talks price. That is the difference between a broker who gets beaten by the next rate and one who earns a recurring lane.
Re-run the full drill monthly, and use the 5-minute version as a weekly warm-up to keep the discovery habit from decaying under quota pressure.
Sources
- SPIN Selling — Neil Rackham / Huthwaite International
- The Challenger Sale — Gartner / CEB (Dixon & Adamson)
- Sandler Training — The Pain Funnel
- Miller Heiman / Korn Ferry — Strategic Selling
- RAIN Group — Sales Discovery Questions
- Gong — Discovery Call Research
- Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP)
- Harvard Business Review — The Right Way to Ask Questions
*Discovery questions skill drill — a runnable team training exercise for logistics and freight sales, with verbatim scripts, timing, and coaching cues.*