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The Pipeline Review Reboot — 60-Min Training

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**The 60-minute weekly pipeline 1:1 stops being a slip-talk interrogation when you split it into two distinct meetings (deal inspection vs. Forecast roll-up), pre-read CRM data so live time is spent coaching not reading, inspect 3 deals deep using MEDDPICC instead of skimming 30 shallow, run one "deal autopsy" mid-review on the deal that just slipped, and end every deal with a written next-action commitment the AE owns by name and date.

Manager talks <40% of the airtime. Forecast questions ("Will it close?") get banned — only inspection questions ("What did the Economic Buyer say last Tuesday?") are allowed.**

This is a runnable 60-minute live training for sales managers in B2B SaaS running weekly 1:1 pipeline reviews with AEs carrying $25K–$500K ACV quotas. Bring 1 manager + 2-4 AEs (or a manager cohort of 6-10). You'll need a whiteboard, the AEs' actual CRM pipelines pulled up, and one printed deal autopsy template per attendee.


Stack You'll Run This Training Inside

Every AE in the room operates inside the standard RevOps stack. Reference these tools by name during the training so reps know which dashboard or workflow you mean. Pin the dashboard you'll inspect in Zoom on a shared screen before the meeting starts, queue the most recent recording from HubSpot as the coaching artifact, and have Chorus open in a second tab for the post-meeting cadence updates.

The manager who shows up with these three browser tabs ready saves 8 minutes of meeting setup.

Benchmark Context

Forrester ("The Sales Enablement Wave, 2026") reports that 62% of sales managers running weekly structured-coaching meetings hit quota at 87%+ rep attainment, versus 41% for managers running ad-hoc check-ins. Anchor the training narrative on this stat — it's the credibility frame that turns a 60-minute meeting from "another sales pep talk" into "the weekly working session the manager is measured on." Print the stat at the top of the meeting agenda; reps remember the number, and quoting it builds the same shared vocabulary that Lessonly, Spekit, and Highspot all flag as the top predictor of multi-quarter training-program ROI in their 2026 customer benchmarks.

Section 1 — Open & Frame the Reboot (0:00 – 0:05, 5 min)

Most pipeline reviews in B2B SaaS are broken in the same three ways: managers ask "Will it close?" (a forecast question disguised as coaching), AEs respond with slip-talk theater ("strong champion, working on legal"), and nobody leaves with a different action than they walked in with.

Jason Jordan, in *Cracking the Sales Management Code*, calls this the difference between managing results (lagging, unmanageable) and managing sales activities and objectives (leading, coachable). This hour fixes that.

Manager opens with the verbatim frame:

"Starting today, our 1:1 pipeline meeting is a deal inspection, not a forecast call. Forecast lives in a separate 20-minute Friday meeting. Here, I am your coach, not your auditor. My job is to ask better questions so you close more deals. Your job is to bring real data, not vibes."

Whiteboard the two-meeting split. Tuesday 1:1 = deal coaching (this hour). Friday roll-up = forecast commitment (separate, shorter, numbers-only). Conflating them is why pipeline reviews feel like prosecutions.


Section 2 — The Deal Inspection Framework (0:05 – 0:20, 15 min)

Force Management's MEDDPICC is the inspection lens — Metrics, Economic Buyer, Decision Criteria, Decision Process, Paper Process, Identify Pain, Champion, Competition. You are not asking the AE to recite it. You are asking what they actually *know*, in the prospect's own words, with a date attached.

Train the manager-vs-AE script. Bad pattern first:

Now the inspection pattern:

Mike Weinberg, in *Sales Management Simplified*, hammers this: the manager's job is to make the AE think harder, not to feel better. Lisa Magnuson (*The Top Sales Producer's Guide to Large Contracts*) adds the discipline of "one deal, deep" — pick 3 deals for the hour, not 12. Skimming is forecasting; deep inspection is coaching.

Inspect 3 deals × 4 minutes each. For each deal, the AE must produce: (1) the EB's last quote, (2) the next mutual milestone with a date, (3) one risk the AE is willing to name out loud.

flowchart TD A[AE brings 3 priority deals] --> B[Manager picks inspection lens per deal] B --> C{Stage of deal} C -->|Early / Discovery| D[Inspect: Metric + Pain + EB identified?] C -->|Mid / Eval| E[Inspect: Decision Criteria + Champion test] C -->|Late / Closing| F[Inspect: Paper Process + Competition + close plan] D --> G[Next-action commitment with date] E --> G F --> G G --> H[Logged in CRM before AE leaves room]

Section 3 — Spotting At-Risk Deals (0:20 – 0:30, 10 min)

Andy Paul, in *Sell Without Selling Out*, argues that buyers don't go dark because they're busy — they go dark because the AE didn't earn the next meeting. That reframe gives managers a clean early-warning checklist. Train AEs to red-flag any deal where two or more of the following are true:

Manager script for a flagged deal:

"I'm going to call this one yellow, not because you're wrong about it, but because we have two early-warning signals: no EB touch in 24 days and Procurement hasn't opened a file with a 14-day close. Walk me through your 7-day plan to clear both, or we agree today to push the date and stop pretending."

Notice what the manager did not do: get angry, take the deal away, or demand a forecast change in the same breath. The conversation is about activity and information, not blame.


Section 4 — The Deal Autopsy Mid-Review (0:30 – 0:40, 10 min)

Pause the live inspection. Pick one deal that slipped last week or was lost in the last 30 days and run a 10-minute structured autopsy. This is the highest-leverage 10 minutes of the meeting — most teams skip it, which is exactly why the same deals keep slipping for the same reasons.

The autopsy template (print it, fill it in live):

  1. **What did we *think* we knew that turned out to be wrong?** (The single most important question.)
  2. First moment we could have known — what signal did we miss, and how many days earlier could we have caught it?
  3. Who in the buying group did we never meet that we should have?
  4. What did the AE tell the manager in a prior review that, in hindsight, was hope not data?
  5. One process change for the next deal at this stage.

Jason Jordan's framing applies here: an autopsy that doesn't change a future *activity* is just storytelling. The output must be a behavior change — a new disqualification question, a mandatory EB touch by stage 3, a forced multi-thread before pricing. Write it on the whiteboard. The team owns it next week.

flowchart TD A[Pick 1 slipped / lost deal] --> B[Q1: What did we wrongly assume?] B --> C[Q2: Earliest missed signal + days late] C --> D[Q3: Untouched buying-group member] D --> E[Q4: Hope-not-data moments in prior 1:1s] E --> F[Q5: Process change for next deal at this stage] F --> G[Whiteboard the change as team rule] G --> H[Manager audits the new rule in next week's 1:1]

Section 5 — The Next-Action Commitment Ritual (0:40 – 0:55, 15 min)

A pipeline review with no written next action is a status update. Every deal touched in this meeting exits with a single owned commitment in the format: *"By [date], [AE name] will [specific action] with [named person], to learn / confirm [specific information]."*

Good vs. Bad examples — drill these verbatim:

Make the AE say it out loud before the meeting moves on, and log it in CRM (Salesforce task, HubSpot next-step field, whatever your tool is) before leaving the room. Mike Weinberg: *"If it's not in the system, it didn't happen, and you'll have the same conversation next week."*

Manager coaching discipline — the 40% rule. Time the meeting. If the manager talks more than 40% of the airtime, they're interrogating, not coaching. Good coaching questions are short ("What did she say?"), open ("What would you do differently?"), and quiet (3-second pause after the AE answers — most coaches kill insights by jumping in too fast).

Drill 5 manager moves to replace bad habits:

  1. Replace "Will it close?" with "What has to be true for this to close?"
  2. Replace "Why didn't you?" with "What would you do differently next time?"
  3. Replace "Your forecast is wrong" with "Walk me through the evidence behind this date."
  4. Replace "I would have…" with "What are your options here?"
  5. Replace "Keep me posted" with "What's your next-action commitment and by when?"

Section 6 — Close, Commitments & Cadence (0:55 – 1:00, 5 min)

Manager closes with three things, in this order: (1) the AE recites their next-action commitments out loud, (2) the team's one new process rule from the autopsy gets read off the whiteboard, (3) the manager states what *they* will do differently next week (yes, the manager also gets a commitment — modeling accountability is the entire point).

Cadence going forward. Tuesday 1:1 deal inspection — 60 min, 3 deals deep, MEDDPICC lens, autopsy mid-meeting, written next actions. Friday roll-up — 20 min, numbers only, no coaching, no drama. Never combine them again.


FAQ

Q: We only have 30 minutes for 1:1s, not 60. Can this still work? A: Yes — cut to 2 deals (not 3), keep the autopsy (it's the highest-leverage piece), and shorten the open to 2 minutes. Don't cut the next-action commitment ritual; cutting that kills the entire system.

Q: Our AEs have 40+ deals in pipeline. We can't inspect 3 a week. A: That's the point. Over a month you inspect ~12 deals deep, which is more coaching than most AEs get in a quarter. The other 28 deals get covered in Friday's forecast roll-up.

Q: What if the AE doesn't know the answer to an inspection question? A: That is the coaching moment. The next-action commitment writes itself: "By Thursday, Maria will find out X from named person Y." Not knowing is fine; not having a plan to find out is not.

Q: Won't AEs feel grilled? A: Only if you ask judgment questions ("Why don't you know this?") instead of information questions ("What would help you find this out?"). Andy Paul's whole point — make the AE the hero of their own deal, not the defendant.

Q: How do we handle a senior AE who pushes back on MEDDPICC? A: You're not asking them to fill in a form. You're asking what they know about the deal. If a senior AE can't tell you the Economic Buyer's name and last quote, the framework isn't the problem — the deal is.

Q: How do we measure if this is working? A: Three leading indicators, per Jason Jordan: (1) % of deals with named EB and dated next-action in CRM, (2) average slip count per deal trending down, (3) forecast accuracy (commit vs. Close) trending up over 90 days.


Sources

  1. Jordan, Jason & Vazzana, Michelle. *Cracking the Sales Management Code: The Secrets to Measuring and Managing Sales Performance.* McGraw-Hill, 2011.
  2. Weinberg, Mike. *Sales Management Simplified: The Straight Truth About Getting Exceptional Results from Your Sales Team.* AMACOM, 2015.
  3. Paul, Andy. *Sell Without Selling Out: A Guide to Success on Your Own Terms.* Page Two, 2022.
  4. Magnuson, Lisa. *The Top Sales Producer's Guide to Large Contracts: Stop Chasing Deals.* Top Line Sales, 2017.
  5. Force Management. *Command of the Message & MEDDPICC Qualification Methodology.* Force Management Insights, accessed 2026.
  6. Roff-Marsh, Justin. *The Machine: A Radical Approach to the Design of the Sales Function.* Greenleaf, 2015.
  7. Dixon, Matthew & Adamson, Brent. *The Challenger Sale: Taking Control of the Customer Conversation.* Portfolio, 2011.
  8. Salesforce Research. *State of Sales (9th Edition).* Salesforce, 2024.
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