Coaching & Analysis

Playbooks

Playbooks codify your GTM motions so Bigmind can guide reps stage-by-stage (and coaching plugs into every step).

Playbooks are one of the most important concepts in Bigmind because they encode your GTM strategy as an executable process.

A playbook answers a simple question:

“Given this kind of deal (or lead) and this stage, what should happen next?”

#How playbooks connect to coaching


In practice, playbooks are the “operating system” for execution. Coaching concepts then plug into that system:

  • Talking points help a rep run a specific meeting inside a stage (what to ask, what to capture).
  • Scorecards evaluate meeting execution quality after the call (and can be gated by stage).
  • Frameworks track what we’ve learned on the deal over time (e.g. a living MEDDICC), across multiple meetings and emails.

See how these concepts differ: Concepts.

#What a playbook is (and what it isn’t)


  • A playbook is a stage-based GTM motion with checklists and touchpoints (e.g. “Enterprise new logo”, “Mid-market expansion”, “Renewal save motion”, “Outbound SDR qualification”).
  • A playbook is not a single meeting script (that’s Talking points).
  • A playbook is not a post-call grading rubric (that’s Scorecards).
  • A playbook is not a deal qualification model (that’s Frameworks).

#Why playbooks matter


  • Consistency: every rep runs the same motion with the same standards.
  • Speed: reps don’t have to guess what “good” looks like at each stage.
  • Better AI guidance: Bigmind can tailor next steps, warnings, and recommendations to the motion instead of being generic.
  • Scalable enablement: leaders can update the motion once and the whole org benefits.

#What’s inside a playbook


A playbook typically contains:

  • Objective: what winning looks like for this motion.
  • Guidance: expected sales cycle, budget bands, average deal size, etc.
  • Stages: the stages you want to guide across (for deals/opportunities, and optionally for leads).
  • Checklists (touchpoints): what the rep should do in each stage (emails, calls, LinkedIn, preparation, follow-ups).
  • Frameworks (optional): structured deal-level tracking (e.g. MEDDICC) attached to the playbook.
  • Linked resources (optional): ICP docs, product docs, and case studies that support the motion.

#How playbooks show up for reps


1) In Bigmind

Reps can browse playbooks to understand the motion and its stages.

2) On a deal

Deals can have a playbook assigned (or no playbook). When a deal has a playbook:

  • The playbook becomes the reference for “what should happen next”.
  • Any frameworks attached to the playbook show up as deal tabs, so the team can fill in a living qualification view over time.

#How to create and manage playbooks


  1. Go to Settings → Library → Playbooks.
  2. Create a playbook and set a clear Objective.
  3. Add stages for the motion (e.g. Prospecting → Discovery → Demo → Proposal → Negotiation).
  4. For each stage, add checklists (touchpoints) with:
    • Touchpoint type (e.g. discovery call, follow-up email, stakeholder meeting)
    • Channel (email / call / LinkedIn)
    • Optional timing (wait time) and preparation notes
    • Optional templates for emails/calls/LinkedIn
  5. (Optional) Add frameworks to the playbook (e.g. MEDDICC).
  6. Publish/activate the playbook so it’s available to the team.

#Best practices


  • Make playbooks role-specific: SDR/BDR, AE, and CSM motions are different. Encode them separately.
  • Don’t overload stages: keep each stage’s checklist short and high signal.
  • Attach frameworks intentionally: use frameworks to track what you need to know, and use stage checklists to drive what you need to do.
  • Start with one motion: roll out one playbook (e.g. new logo) and iterate before expanding.
Updated 2/23/2026