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Master April Dunford's 8-step sales narrative from "Sales Pitch" (2023). Transform your positioning into a compelling story that wins enterprise deals. Use when: Structuring B2B sales presentations and demos; Creating pitch decks for complex products; Training sales teams on narrative-driven selling; Converting positioning strategy into sales conversations; Winning against entrenched competitors
npx skill4agent add guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills sales-narrativeMaster April Dunford's 8-step sales narrative from "Sales Pitch" (2023). Transform your positioning into a compelling story that wins enterprise deals.
| Claude Does | You Decide |
|---|---|
| Structures production workflow | Final creative direction |
| Suggests technical approaches | Equipment and tool choices |
| Creates templates and checklists | Quality standards |
| Identifies best practices | Brand/voice decisions |
| Generates script outlines | Final script approval |
Create a Dunford-style sales pitch for:
Product: [description]
Category: [market category]
Unique value: [differentiation]
Target buyer: [persona]
Key competitors: [alternatives they'd consider]I have this positioning:
[paste positioning canvas or statement]
Create an 8-step sales narrative from this positioning.Review this pitch against Dunford's 8-step framework:
[paste deck outline or key slides]
Identify what's missing or out of order.┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ THE DUNFORD SALES NARRATIVE │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ │
│ PHASE 1: THE SETUP (Establishing Context) │
│ ├── Step 1: The Insight │
│ ├── Step 2: The Alternatives │
│ └── Step 3: The Perfect World │
│ │
│ PHASE 2: THE FOLLOW-THROUGH (The Solution) │
│ ├── Step 4: The Introduction │
│ ├── Step 5: Differentiated Value │
│ ├── Step 6: Proof │
│ ├── Step 7: Objections │
│ └── Step 8: The Ask │
│ │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘## Step 1: The Insight
**Purpose:** Start with a statement about the customer's world that creates tension.
**Format:**
"We've noticed that [trend or market shift]..."
"There's been a fundamental change in [customer's domain]..."
"[Industry] is facing a new reality: [insight]..."
**What Makes a Good Insight:**
- Based on market research or data
- Hints at a problem or opportunity
- Creates tension or curiosity
- Customer nods in recognition
**Examples:**
B2B SaaS:
"We've noticed that data volumes in healthcare are doubling every 18 months,
but IT budgets are staying flat."
Cybersecurity:
"The average enterprise now has 76 different security tools—yet breach
rates have never been higher."
HR Tech:
"Remote work has fundamentally changed how employees experience culture.
The old playbook doesn't work anymore."
**Warning:** Don't introduce your product here. Build tension first.## Step 2: The Alternatives
**Purpose:** Discuss current ways of coping. Validate the customer's pain
and set up the "villain."
**Format:**
"Most teams try to handle this by [alternative 1], [alternative 2], or [alternative 3]..."
"The typical approaches are..."
"What we see companies doing today is..."
**Key Principle:**
The alternatives come directly from your Positioning Canvas (Component 1:
Competitive Alternatives). This is NOT about listing competitors—it's about
what customers do if your solution doesn't exist.
**Common Alternatives:**
- The Status Quo ("living with the pain")
- Manual Processes ("Excel," "the intern," "email")
- In-house Solutions ("some script the CTO wrote")
- Competitor Products (only if actually considered)
**Examples:**
Data Platform:
"Most teams try to manage this with spreadsheets and manual data entry.
Some hire consultants. Others build internal tools that become maintenance nightmares."
Security:
"Teams typically respond by adding more point solutions—another tool for
endpoints, another for cloud, another for email. Or they hire more analysts
and hope they can keep up."
**Then Show Why Alternatives Fail:**
"But here's the problem with these approaches..."
- Spreadsheets: "Errors creep in, versions conflict, no real-time view"
- More tools: "Creates more complexity, more alerts, more fatigue"
- Hiring: "Talent is scarce and expensive; doesn't scale"
**Purpose:** Customer thinks "Yes, that's exactly my situation. None of
those work well for me."## Step 3: The Perfect World
**Purpose:** Define the buying criteria BEFORE introducing your product.
This "rigs the game" in your favor.
**Format:**
"In a perfect world, you would be able to..."
"What if you could..."
"Ideally, a solution would..."
**Key Principle:**
The "Perfect World" describes capabilities that YOUR product delivers
uniquely well. You're setting up criteria that favor your differentiation.
**Structure:**
1. [Capability that solves pain point 1]
2. [Capability that solves pain point 2]
3. [Capability that solves pain point 3]
**Examples:**
Data Platform:
"In a perfect world, you could:
- Handle this volume automatically without adding headcount
- Get real-time visibility instead of monthly reports
- Trust the data without manual verification"
Security:
"Ideally, you'd have:
- A single view across all your tools
- AI that filters real threats from noise
- Response times in minutes, not days"
**Why This Matters:**
When you later present your product, the customer evaluates it against
the criteria YOU just established—not criteria from RFPs or competitors.## Step 4: The Introduction
**Purpose:** Now—and ONLY now—introduce your product.
**Format:**
"That's exactly why we built [Product Name]."
"[Product Name] is a [Market Category] that [one-line value prop]."
"We created [Product Name] specifically to [deliver Perfect World]."
**Key Elements:**
1. Product Name
2. Market Category (from Positioning Canvas Component 5)
3. One-line connection to the Perfect World
**Examples:**
"That's exactly why we built DataSync—a real-time data operations
platform that gives you complete visibility without adding headcount."
"Introducing SecurityHub—a unified threat intelligence platform that
turns 76 tools into one command center."
**Warning:**
Keep it brief. This is not the feature dump. Just enough to categorize
what you are and bridge to the differentiation.## Step 5: Differentiated Value
**Purpose:** Show how the product delivers the "Perfect World" using
your Unique Attributes.
**Structure:**
For each Perfect World criterion, show:
1. The capability (what it does)
2. The unique attribute (how it works)
3. The value (why it matters)
**Format:**
"We do this via our [Unique Attribute], which means [Value]."
"Unlike [alternative], we [differentiation], so you get [benefit]."
**Template:**
| Perfect World Criterion | Unique Attribute | Delivered Value |
|-------------------------|------------------|-----------------|
| [From Step 3] | [Technical differentiator] | [Business outcome] |
| [From Step 3] | [Process differentiator] | [Business outcome] |
| [From Step 3] | [Model differentiator] | [Business outcome] |
**Examples:**
DataSync:
"Remember we said you'd want to handle volume without headcount?
We do this via our AI-powered data matching engine, which runs
continuously and learns your data patterns. This means you can
process 10x the data with the same team."
**Key Principle:**
Every element of Differentiated Value comes from your Positioning Canvas:
- Unique Attributes → Component 2
- Value → Component 3
- This ensures Marketing (Canvas) and Sales (Pitch) tell the same story.## Step 6: Proof
**Purpose:** Provide evidence that your claims are real.
**Types of Proof:**
1. **Customer Stories**
"Here is [Company] that [achieved result]."
- Specific numbers preferred
- Named customers if possible
- Similar industry/size to prospect
2. **Third-Party Validation**
- Analyst reports (Gartner, Forrester)
- Industry awards
- Certifications
3. **Demos/Trials**
"Let me show you exactly how this works..."
- Self-evident proof is powerful
- Seeing is believing
4. **Data**
- Benchmarks
- Performance metrics
- Before/after comparisons
**Format:**
"Don't just take my word for it. Here's what happened when [Customer]
implemented this..."
"[Customer Name], a [similar company], saw [specific result] within
[timeframe]. Here's their quote: [testimonial]"
**Examples:**
"Memorial Hospital implemented DataSync last year. They reduced their
data processing time from 4 days to 4 hours—a 24x improvement. Their
VP of Operations said: 'We finally trust our numbers.'"
**Warning:**
- Proof must be relevant to THIS prospect
- Generic case studies don't convince
- Match proof to prospect's industry/size/situation## Step 7: Objections (Pre-Handling Resistance)
**Purpose:** Address concerns BEFORE they derail the conversation.
**Format:**
"You might be wondering about [common objection]..."
"A question we often get is..."
"I know what you're thinking: [objection]. Here's how we handle that..."
**Common Objection Categories:**
1. **Integration/Implementation**
"How long does this take to implement?"
"Will it work with our existing tools?"
2. **Security/Compliance**
"Is this SOC 2 compliant?"
"Where is data stored?"
3. **Cost/ROI**
"What's the total cost of ownership?"
"How do we measure success?"
4. **Change Management**
"How do we get the team to adopt this?"
"What about training?"
**Pre-Handling Template:**
"You might be worried about implementation time. Most of our customers
go live in [timeframe]. Here's why: [reason]. And we provide [support]."
**Examples:**
"You might be thinking: 'This sounds great, but we've tried platforms
before and they take forever to implement.' I get it. That's why we
built a 14-day rapid deployment program. We've done this 200 times.
Here's exactly what the first two weeks look like..."
**Key Principle:**
Address the top 2-3 objections. Don't try to cover everything.
Focus on objections that actually kill deals.## Step 8: The Ask
**Purpose:** Close for the next step. Clear, specific, easy to say yes.
**Format:**
"Based on what we've discussed, here's what I'd recommend as a next step..."
"The logical next step would be..."
"Shall we..."
**Types of Asks (Progressive):**
| Deal Stage | The Ask |
|------------|---------|
| Discovery | "Can I schedule a technical deep-dive with your team?" |
| Demo | "Would you like to see this with your own data?" |
| Evaluation | "Can we set up a pilot with your team?" |
| Proposal | "Should I send over a formal proposal?" |
| Close | "Are you ready to move forward?" |
**Effective Ask Structure:**
1. Summarize mutual fit
2. Propose specific next step
3. Make it easy to say yes
**Examples:**
"Based on what you've shared about your data challenges and what you've
seen today, it sounds like there's a fit here. The next step would be
a 2-hour technical session with your data team where we can map this
to your specific use case. Do you have time next week?"
"You mentioned Q2 is your planning cycle. To make that timeline work,
I'd recommend we do a 30-day pilot starting January 15th. I can have
a proposal to you by Friday. Sound good?"
**Warning:**
- Always have a clear next step
- Make the ask specific (not "let me know")
- Match urgency to their timeline## How Canvas Maps to Pitch
Every pitch element comes from the Positioning Canvas:
| Positioning Component | Pitch Element |
|----------------------|---------------|
| Component 1: Competitive Alternatives | Step 2: The Alternatives |
| Component 2: Unique Attributes | Step 5: Differentiated Value |
| Component 3: Value | Step 5: Differentiated Value |
| Component 4: Target Market | Who you're pitching to |
| Component 5: Market Category | Step 4: The Introduction |
| Component 6: Trends | Step 1: The Insight |
**Result:** Marketing (Canvas) and Sales (Pitch) tell the exact same story.## Before the Pitch
### Positioning Foundation
- [ ] Positioning Canvas completed
- [ ] Competitive alternatives identified
- [ ] Unique attributes documented
- [ ] Value clusters defined
- [ ] Market category chosen
### Pitch Construction
- [ ] Insight relevant to THIS prospect
- [ ] Alternatives match their actual options
- [ ] Perfect World criteria favor our strengths
- [ ] Introduction is concise (30 seconds max)
- [ ] Differentiation tied to their specific pain
- [ ] Proof relevant to their industry/size
- [ ] Top 2-3 objections pre-handled
- [ ] Clear, specific ask prepared
### Prospect Research
- [ ] Their current solution/stack
- [ ] Recent news or changes
- [ ] Key decision criteria
- [ ] Timeline and budget cycle## [Product Name] Sales Narrative
### THE SETUP
**Step 1: The Insight**
"We've noticed that [market trend/shift]..."
**Step 2: The Alternatives**
"Most [target audience] try to solve this by:
- [Alternative 1]: But [why it fails]
- [Alternative 2]: But [why it fails]
- [Alternative 3]: But [why it fails]"
**Step 3: The Perfect World**
"In a perfect world, you could:
1. [Capability that solves pain 1]
2. [Capability that solves pain 2]
3. [Capability that solves pain 3]"
---
### THE FOLLOW-THROUGH
**Step 4: The Introduction**
"That's exactly why we built [Product]—a [Category] that [one-liner]."
**Step 5: Differentiated Value**
| Perfect World | How We Deliver | Unique Attribute |
|---------------|----------------|------------------|
| [Capability 1] | [Mechanism] | [Technical differentiator] |
| [Capability 2] | [Mechanism] | [Technical differentiator] |
| [Capability 3] | [Mechanism] | [Technical differentiator] |
**Step 6: Proof**
"[Customer Name], a [similar company], achieved [specific result].
Quote: '[testimonial]'"
**Step 7: Objections**
"You might be wondering about [objection]. Here's how we handle that:
[response]"
**Step 8: The Ask**
"Based on what we discussed, the next step would be [specific action].
Does [day/time] work?"## Red Flags to Avoid
### The Feature Dump
- [ ] Opening with product screenshots
- [ ] Listing features before establishing context
- [ ] Making the customer figure out why features matter
### Weak Setup
- [ ] Insight is generic ("digital transformation...")
- [ ] Alternatives don't match customer's reality
- [ ] Perfect World doesn't favor your strengths
### Poor Follow-Through
- [ ] Introduction too long (more than 30 seconds)
- [ ] Differentiation not tied to Perfect World
- [ ] Proof is generic (not relevant to prospect)
- [ ] No objection handling
- [ ] Vague ask ("let me know...")
### Wrong Order
- [ ] Introducing product before establishing context
- [ ] Jumping to proof before differentiation
- [ ] Handling objections only when raisedname: sales-narrative
category: sales
subcategory: pitching
version: 1.0
author: MKTG Skills
source_expert: April Dunford
source_work: Sales Pitch (2023)
difficulty: intermediate
estimated_value: $2,000 sales training workshop
tags: [sales, pitch, positioning, B2B, enterprise, narrative]
created: 2025-01-24
updated: 2025-01-24