Question 1
Tell me about a time when you uncovered a customer need that wasn't obvious at the start of your discovery process. How did you identify it, and what did you do with that information?
Follow-up questions:
Situation:
- What was the initial reason the prospect reached out or engaged with you?
- Who were you working with on their side, and what was their role in the buying process?
- What made you realize there was something deeper going on beyond their stated needs?
Action:
- What specific questions did you ask to uncover this hidden need?
- How did you reframe the conversation once you identified the real problem?
- Walk me through how you adjusted your approach and value proposition based on this discovery.
- How did you get buy-in from the prospect that this was actually their core issue?
Result:
- How did this change the trajectory of the deal?
- What was the ultimate outcome, and how long did it take to close after this discovery?
- Looking back, what would you have missed if you hadn't dug deeper?
What to listen for: Specific discovery questions used, active listening skills, ability to connect surface-level symptoms to root causes, consultative approach vs. product-pushing, balance of "I" (personal insight) and "We" (collaboration with prospect), curiosity and business acumen, reframing capability
Red flags: Vague answers without specific questions asked, pushing product features without understanding needs, taking credit for team's discovery work without personal contribution, no evidence of active listening, experience trap (using same discovery script for every prospect without adaptation), inability to articulate the business impact of their discovery
Evaluation Rubric
| Criteria | Poor | Good | Strong |
|---|---|---|---|
| Discovery Depth | Provides vague or generic discovery example; cannot articulate specific questions asked; describes surface-level conversation without depth; relies on standard scripts without adaptation; unclear how hidden need was actually identified | Describes specific discovery questions that revealed deeper needs; demonstrates active listening and probing techniques; clearly connects symptoms to root causes; shows consultative approach with authentic curiosity; explains how they reframed value proposition based on discovery | Exceptional discovery narrative with sophisticated questioning framework; demonstrates pattern recognition across customer signals; shows advanced business acumen in connecting dots between stated and underlying needs; articulates how discovery transformed deal strategy; evidence of repeatable methodology |
| Ownership Clarity | Takes excessive credit without acknowledging prospect collaboration; uses passive language about team contributions; unclear personal role in the discovery; attributes success mainly to luck or timing | Clear 'I' statements about personal questions and insights; balanced acknowledgment of prospect partnership; demonstrates ownership of discovery process; shows collaboration without diluting personal contribution | Strong personal accountability evident throughout; articulates specific moments of insight they drove; enables prospect self-discovery effectively; demonstrates leadership in guiding conversation while remaining consultative |
| Business Impact | Cannot articulate business impact of discovery; focuses on features rather than outcomes; vague about how discovery changed deal trajectory; no evidence of strategic thinking about customer value | Clearly connects discovery to business outcomes; demonstrates understanding of customer's strategic priorities; explains quantifiable impact on deal progression; shows ability to reframe value proposition appropriately | Exceptional articulation of business impact with specific metrics; demonstrates deep understanding of customer's industry and competitive pressures; shows strategic thinking about long-term account potential; evidence of sophisticated value reframing |