There is a sentence that kills more diagnostic-led deals than any objection ever will: "This is really useful — give us some time to think it over."
You hear it right after the debrief. The assessment landed. The client studied their 38 out of 100, asked sharp questions, even admitted a few of the gaps stung. Then they thanked you, took the report, and went quiet. The diagnostic did its job. The conversation that followed didn't.
If you run an expertise business that sells through assessments, the half hour immediately after the client sees their score is the highest-leverage window in your entire pipeline. Not the pitch. Not the proposal. Not the final negotiation. Those moments only exist because of what happens — or fails to happen — in the debrief.
The default move, and the fatal one, is to present the results, field questions, and close with "I'll write up a proposal." That hands the deal over to the client's internal deliberation process, which is exactly where deals go to stall. Weeks pass. Then comes the soft no: "We're going to hold off for now."
There is a better way to run those 30 minutes, and it isn't improvisation. It's a deliberate sequence with three distinct jobs, each borrowed from a different sales methodology — Neil Rackham's SPIN, Jim Keenan's Gap Selling, and the JOLT Effect research from Dixon and McKenna. Run them in order and the conversation ends somewhere very different from "we'll think about it."
Why the Debrief Is Where Deals Die
A diagnostic produces understanding. It does not, by itself, produce action. A client can fully accept that their score is low — agree with the data, nod at every chart — and still do nothing. Agreement is not commitment. The debrief exists to convert one into the other, and most practitioners never structure it that way. They treat it as a presentation with Q&A instead of the decisive sales conversation it actually is.
The fix is to give the half hour a deliberate architecture: three jobs, roughly ten minutes each. First, make the gaps personal. Second, attach a financial number to them. Third, prescribe exactly what to do next. Skip a job, or run them out of order, and the bridge collapses.
Job One: Get the Client to Say It Out Loud
Minutes 1-10 — SPIN Implication Questions
A client can see a gap in the data without feeling what that gap is doing to their business. Those are two different states of mind, and only the second one buys. So the opening ten minutes have one purpose: move the client from observing the gap to experiencing its consequences.
The tool for this is the Implication Question phase of Rackham's SPIN methodology. You don't explain what the gaps mean. You ask questions that force the client to draw the connections themselves:
- Connect the score to something they already care about. "This dimension came in well under the industry average. What does that do to the growth plan you described earlier?" An abstract number becomes a threat to a commitment they've already made — to the board, to the market, to themselves.
- Add the time dimension. "If nothing changes here for another 12 months, what does the compounding effect look like?" A gap that feels tolerable today gets uncomfortable fast when it's projected forward.
- Make it human. "Who on your team lives with this problem every day — and what is it doing to them?" Suddenly the chart is about frustrated people, missed targets, and tension in the leadership room.
- Raise the audience. "If your board were looking at this data right now, what would they want to know?" Now it's not a departmental annoyance. It's a governance question.
One discipline governs this entire phase: the client talks, you hold the mirror. When the CEO says, in their own words, that this gap is driving away their best people, that sentence carries far more weight than any version of it coming from you. Their own articulation of the pain is the persuasion. Yours is just commentary.
Which means the worst mistake in minutes one through ten is rushing to the remedy. Every minute the client spends describing consequences in their own language strengthens everything that comes after. A client who has just spent ten minutes narrating what their gaps are costing them no longer needs convincing that something must change. They need a route.
"In the first ten minutes you are not a consultant with answers. You are a mirror with good questions."
The exit condition for this phase: the client feels the weight of the gaps — not because you dramatized them, but because they connected the data to their own operation and didn't like the picture.
Job Two: Attach a Price to Standing Still
Minutes 11-20 — Gap Selling Quantification
Emotion opens the door; numbers get the budget approved. The middle ten minutes convert everything the client just articulated into financial language, using Keenan's Gap Selling structure: current state, future state, and the cost of the distance between them.
In practice it sounds like this: "You're at 38. Benchmarks for organizations at your scale put the target at 65. Companies sitting at 38 while their peers operate at 65 typically carry annual costs across lost productivity, missed opportunities, and talent attrition — and the combined figure for the gap is the number we should be talking about."
Three things make that number credible instead of theatrical:
- Build it from their own inputs. The strongest material is whatever the client already told you. "You said you lost three senior engineers last quarter. At a replacement cost of $180,000 each, that's $540,000 in one quarter — sitting directly on the culture dimension where you scored lowest."
- Anchor it to benchmarks. "Organizations in your revenue range that score above 60 on this dimension report 23% lower attrition. Run that against your headcount and the annual savings are real money."
- Compound it over time. "This gap doesn't hold still. Carry it for two more years on your current trajectory and the cumulative cost dwarfs anything we'd quote you. The real question isn't whether to act — it's whether you can afford the alternative."
Quantification isn't there to frighten anyone. It exists to install a rational frame around every pricing conversation you will ever have with this client. Once the gap is established at $2 million a year, a $200,000 engagement to close it is a 10:1 return — not an expense, but a fraction of the price of inaction.
By minute twenty, the conversation has moved from "we have some weak areas" to "this is costing us a specific amount every year." And because the client supplied the inputs, that figure is a joint calculation — not your estimate pushed onto them. Numbers people help build are numbers people defend internally.
Job Three: Prescribe One Path
Minutes 21-30 — The JOLT Move
Here is what the JOLT Effect research from Dixon and McKenna established about complex B2B deals: the thing that stalls them is rarely disagreement. It's indecision. Buyers accept the diagnosis and still freeze, because choosing wrong feels riskier than choosing nothing.
Knowing that, the worst possible closing move is the menu. "Here's everything we could do for you — what appeals to you?" feels consultative and respectful. Functionally, it dumps the decision burden onto a client who is already overloaded by their own gap data. Faced with too many options and no guidance, most buyers default to the one choice that can't be wrong tomorrow: doing nothing.
The data from Dixon and McKenna is blunt about the alternative. Proactively recommending a specific course of action lifts win rates from 18% to 44% — a 2.4x difference, produced by nothing more than the seller having the conviction to say what they would do.
So say it: "Given your results, here's my recommendation. Start with this engagement, aimed at this gap, because it produces the fastest return for organizations at your maturity level. We've watched companies move from where you are to the target within a defined timeline using exactly this approach."
Structure still matters. Offer three tiers — but never as a neutral menu:
- Foundation: attacks the single most critical gap, fastest payback. "If budget is tight, start here."
- Standard: covers the top three gaps with a full roadmap. "For your situation, this is the one I recommend."
- Premium: the complete transformation with ongoing advisory. "This is the accelerated route to your target score."
Walk through them top-down, premium first, so the highest number sets the anchor — then state your recommendation and the reasoning behind it out loud.
JOLT also names the three flavors of indecision you'll meet in this final stretch, each with its own antidote:
- "What if it doesn't work?" — fear of failure. De-risk it: "We check the metrics at 90 days. If they aren't moving, we adjust the plan."
- "Is this really the right option?" — fear of choosing wrong. Narrow the field: "Based on your data, one path makes sense. This is it."
- "How do I defend this upstairs?" — fear of looking bad. Arm them: "Here's a business case you can put in front of the board — the gap cost, the projected return, and outcomes from comparable organizations."
"A catalog asks the client to be the expert. A prescription reminds them why they hired one."
When minute thirty arrives, the client has felt the gaps, priced them, and heard a specific recommendation with tiers and a rationale. The question on the table is no longer whether to act. It's which level of action to choose. That shift is the whole point.
Train It Like a Skill, Not a Script
Where the Money Hides in a Partner Network
If you license your methodology through partners, notice what is and isn't standardized in this picture. The diagnostic is standardized — any trained practitioner delivers it consistently from the playbook. The methodology is documented. But the half hour between "here are your results" and "here's what I recommend" runs on skill, preparation, and nerve. That makes it the single highest-value training module in your entire certification program.
The stakes are not subtle. A partner who has mastered this conversation converts assessments into engagements at two to three times the rate of one who presents results and waits politely for the client to ask about next steps. Multiply that conversion gap across a network of 25 partners and you're looking at millions in ecosystem revenue riding on 30 minutes of conversational craft.
And craft is the right word — this is learned through repetition, not reading:
- Rehearse it in certification. No partner goes live until they've run the full 30-minute sequence at least three times against different scenarios.
- Review real recordings. With client permission, capture actual debrief sessions and dissect them in peer groups. Which questions landed? Where did the room go flat? What made the client lean in?
- Stock a question library. Pre-built Implication Questions and quantification frames, organized by specialty. The most important half hour of the sales process is no place for improvisation.
- Make it a standing agenda item. Every monthly partner call reserves time for debrief stories — what worked, what stalled, which objections surfaced and how they were answered.
Don't file this under sales tactics. This conversation is the joint between your diagnostic's intellectual value and the client's economic reality. The assessment surfaces the truth; the debrief makes that truth impossible to shelve.
Three jobs, ten minutes each: make them feel it, make them price it, tell them what to do. Drill it until it runs on instinct — because no half hour in your business pays better.