How to Build and Use an AI Sales Coach That Closes Deals
Marketers are being asked to drive revenue. But most
marketers have never been trained to sell. Furthermore, many marketers have an
aversion to selling.
According to Gartner, salespeople—including marketers—who
use AI to help their sales initiatives are 3.7 times more likely to meet their
quotas.
Marketers have been largely focused on using AI to do more
with content. But the smartest marketers are applying it to sales and lead
generation efforts like customer journey mapping and ideal customer profile
(ICP) configuration.
AI can make a big difference as a revenue-driving partner.
It can help you with:
- Objection
handling: Marketing often hears objections before sales when getting
people into the funnel, and AI can help identify and overcome objections
- Discovery
prep: Marketing is responsible for handing marketing-qualified leads
(MQLs) off to sales, or sometimes even helping identify sales-qualified
leads (SQLs); you can use AI to understand who you're talking to during
the sales process
- Proposal
language: AI can help you clarify your product/solution packages,
terms and conditions, etc.
- Follow-up
sequences: AI can help you see both the minutia of each email need as
well as a 30,000 foot view of how the entire campaign should work
Building Your Sales Bot
Choose Your Platform
You can use any platform to build your sales bot. It may
depend on your comfort with the tool, what you have access to within your
company, or some other criteria. The only requirement to build a custom bot
will be to use the paid version of your platform, so there will be an
associated cost.
Using ChatGPT as an example, here's how to get started.
- Log
into ChatGPT and click on Explore GPTs. Custom GPTs are bots that have a
specific job, such as building your sales bot to help with sales.
- Click
Create. This gets you started; it's that easy.
- Now
you need to prepare your bot for its sales role. Go into the create
section, and here you can enter something along the lines of "Make a
creative" or "Make a sales bot."
- Click
into Configure. This is where you'll get into the nitty gritty of creating
your bot.
- Name
your bot and give it a description. Use a fun name that makes it feel like
you're talking with a friend.
- For
instructions, answer these five questions.
- Who
is your bot? Give it a name, give it a role, and make sure it has some
sort of personality.
- Who
does your bot serve? Who is your ICP? Who do you not love to work with?
The more specific you can get, the better your outputs will be.
- What
is your bot's job? Give specific sales tasks it should handle (especially
if it's tasks you hate—tell it that).
- How
should your bot sound? You want your bot to sound like you, especially in
a sales situation—your tone, your phrases, your energy.
- What
should your bot never do? Make sure you include your boundaries, your
guardrails, and things you never want it to do.
- The
tool will come up with conversation starters on its own.
- In the
knowledge section, upload any relevant files you have: sales playbooks,
past proposals, pricing or spec sheets, etc. You might want to create a
source of truth document that includes anything marketing and sales
related that helps your bot understand you that you can easily keep
updated.
- Recommended
model is subjective, so choose what works best for you—the latest model is
likely best if you're just getting started and don't have a specific model
preference.
You can come back to edit your bot at any time—including
your instructions and documentation to make sure those stay up-to-date.
Foundational Documents to Create a Custom Sales Bot
You don't need to have all of these documents before you
create your sales bot, but they are foundational to build a well-rounded custom
bot.
- Sales
playbook: your sales processes, strategies, best practices
- Product/service
offers and packages: the details of what you're selling
- ICP: who
you're selling to, and who you don't want to work with
- Sales
scripts or templates: how you engage with your prospects
- Financial
minimums: the minimum amount you're willing to work for
- Boundary
language: phrases you want to flag that you won't do (e.g., contract
terms that are too long for your schedule, using a discount to close a
deal)
- Motivation
anchor: why you do this work
If you don't already have these documents, you can use your
bot to help you build them. Use the following sample prompt to get started.
Sample prompt: I'm setting up a custom sales bot,
and I need your help building my foundation. I don't have a formal sales
playbook yet. Can you interview me, one question at a time, to help me define:
- My
ideal client profile
- My
offers and pricing
- My
financial minimums
- My
boundary language
- My
sales process
Start with the first question.
Setting Guardrails for Your Sales Bot
It is critical that your bot knows your guardrails—the
things you never want it to do. Things like:
- Never
recommend discounting to close a deal
- Never
assume a lead is ready to buy without qualifying first
- Never
use urgency language that feels manipulative or pushy
- Never
skip asking about budget, timeline, or decision-makers
You also want to tell your bot what to always do, such as:
- Always
bring the conversation back to the prospect's problem
- Always
suggest a clear next step at the end of every interaction
- Always
protect the user's pricing floor
- Always
reframe objections before responding to them
Generic AI practices will give you generic outputs or
answers. If you train your AI specifically, it will give you the answers you
need.
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If you need help with your email, web site, video, or other presentation to promote your company, product, or service, please give me a call at 330-815-1803 or email me at john@x2media.us
Until next month. . . .remember. "you don't get a 2nd chance to make a 1st impression." Always make it a good one!!




