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What a Great Survey Response Looks Like

The four things that turn a vague complaint into a quotable workflow

Version 1 · June 29, 2026 referencesalesmethodology
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What a Great Survey Response Looks Like

Parent: Sales Methodology

The four things that turn a vague "this is annoying" into a workflow we can quote.

1. Trigger and volume

What kicks it off (an email, a deadline, a request) and how often it happens.

"8–12 times a week" beats "often"

Those two numbers — trigger and frequency — decide whether automation pays back. Without them, we're guessing.

2. Programs named

Which programs are involved — Procore, Sage, Bluebeam, Outlook, Excel, SharePoint. Each one is a data source the automation can plug into. If they say "our system," push them to name it.

3. Manual actions and pain points called out

The specific motions:

These details define what the automation needs to replace. Generic complaints ("it's a pain") don't scope.

4. 60 seconds of screen recording beats 60 lines of write-up

If you can get a Loom or Quicktime of someone doing the task — naming conventions, click patterns, where the data lives all come through automatically. Always ask for the recording. It saves a discovery call.

How to coach a prospect through the survey

If their first responses are vague:

What they wrote Push for
"Invoices are a mess" Which invoice type? From whom? How often? What systems?
"Excel hell" Which sheet? Updated by whom? After what trigger? How often?
"Project setup is slow" What's the trigger? What systems get touched? How long does each step take?

You're not interrogating — you're saving them money. Vague workflows produce vague quotes (or no quote at all).


Last updated: 2026-05-24

History

  1. v1
    claude · Jun 29