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To get past surface-level problems and understand the real story, ask a "magic moment" question like, "When was the moment you realized you needed to solve this?" This prompts the prospect to share a narrative, revealing deeper context, emotion, and urgency.
Prospects often describe wants (e.g., "a more efficient system"), which are not true problems. Asking about the motivation behind their desire forces them to articulate the underlying pain that actually drives a purchase decision.
Instead of asking direct questions like 'what's important?', prompt customers to recount specific, recent experiences. This storytelling method bypasses generic answers, reveals the 'why' behind their actions, and provides powerful narratives for persuading internal stakeholders.
Salespeople often rush to present a solution after hearing a surface-level problem, which leads to ghosting. Asking simple, open-ended follow-ups like "Interesting, tell me more" or "Is there anything else?" forces the prospect to reveal the true impact and urgency of their issue, building a stronger case for your solution.
During customer discovery, don't just ask about current problems. Frame the question as, 'If you had a magic wand, what would the perfect solution be?' This helps users articulate their ultimate desired outcome, revealing profound insights beyond tactical feature requests.
Transactional questions get transactional answers. A "story-worthy" question, like "Tell me about the moment you first sensed trouble with your supplier?", prompts a narrative. This approach extracts the emotion, context, and deeper story behind an issue, leading to more authentic connection and insight.
True urgency comes from implicating pain, not just identifying it. By asking the customer "who suffers and what suffers if you do nothing?", you tie the problem to their personal job measures and company revenue, giving you leverage to re-engage them.
To move beyond metrics and access the emotional resonance of a problem, ask prospects about the specific moment they realized something had to change. This question prompts them to tell a story, often involving senior leadership, which reveals the true business impact and urgency.
After diagnosing a technical issue (e.g., a hot room), pivot questioning to understand its impact on the people involved ("Who lives in that room? How does that make you feel?"). This second layer of discovery uncovers the emotional driver for the purchase, creating urgency where logic alone cannot.
Move beyond just identifying a problem by asking for the specific story or "magic moment" the prospect realized it needed to be fixed. This uncovers the emotional context and visceral details of their pain, which is far more powerful for building a business case.
The bridge between a five-figure operational problem and a six-figure executive problem is often an emotional, painful story. Ask a "magic moment" question like, "When did you actually realize this was a problem?" to elicit the specific event or narrative that created the business impact and urgency.