A discovery call is the first substantive conversation between an AE and a buyer where the goal is not to pitch but to qualify: surface the prospect’s problem, the cost of inaction, the buying process, and whether your solution is a real fit. A great discovery call ends with a mutual decision to continue or to disqualify, and a clear next step on the calendar.
What discovery is actually for
Most discovery calls fail because reps confuse “telling the story” with “running discovery.” Discovery is a diagnostic. You are trying to answer four questions, in order:
- Is there a real problem? What is broken today and how is it measured?
- Is it worth solving now? What happens if they do nothing for 6 months?
- Who decides? Economic buyer, champion, blockers, procurement.
- Can we win? Fit, competitive landscape, technical constraints, budget reality.
If you cannot answer all four after the call, you ran a demo, not discovery.
A repeatable structure
A 30-minute discovery call should roughly look like:
| Minute | Phase | Goal |
|---|---|---|
| 0-3 | Frame | Set agenda, ask permission, declare you might disqualify |
| 3-20 | Diagnose | Open questions on current state, pain, impact, process |
| 20-25 | Bridge | One or two specific examples of how peers solved this |
| 25-30 | Next step | Confirm fit, schedule a working session, name attendees |
The hardest move is the framing line: “If after this call I don’t think we’re a fit, I’ll tell you. Is that okay?” It earns permission to ask harder questions.
Question patterns that work
- Current state. “Walk me through how your team handles X today, end to end.”
- Impact. “What does that cost you in a quarter, in dollars or hours?”
- Trigger. “Why is this on your plate now and not 6 months ago?”
- Decision process. “If we agreed today this was a fit, what are the next five steps inside your company?”
Avoid leading questions (“Wouldn’t it be great if…”). Avoid stacking questions. Pause for at least 2 seconds after they finish answering.
Common pitfalls
- Pitching too early. A demo before you understand the problem is a guess. Hold features for the second call.
- No disqualification. If every discovery call advances, your pipeline is full of ghosts. A healthy team disqualifies 30 to 50 percent of first calls.
- No next step on the calendar. “I’ll send you some materials” is a soft close. Book the next meeting before you hang up, with named attendees.
- Skipping the economic buyer. If you cannot name who signs the contract by the end of the call, you do not have an opportunity yet.
Related
- BANT vs MEDIC — qualification frameworks that structure discovery
- MEDDDPICC — enterprise qualification deep dive
- Champion builder — how to identify the champion you uncover here
- Gong — call recording and discovery analytics