--- title: "Sales Training: The Content a Good Training Needs" description: "From needs analysis to closing: which content belongs in a sales training and why company-specific scenarios make the difference." type: "wissen" product: "train" slug: "sales-training-content" source_language: "de" target_languages: ["de", "en", "es", "pl", "tr"] published: "2026-06-10" status: "publish" faq_json: [{"q":"What content belongs in a sales training?","a":"The core building blocks are conversation opening, needs analysis, benefit argumentation, objection handling, price negotiation and closing – supplemented by complaint and win-back conversations."}, {"q":"What is the single most important piece of content?","a":"For most teams, objection handling: more conversations fail on objections like too expensive or no need than on a lack of product knowledge."}, {"q":"Is generic content enough?","a":"As a starting point yes, in the long run no. Training becomes effective with the company's real situations: your own products, your own customer types, the objections that really come up."}, {"q":"How is content best conveyed?","a":"Through active practice in conversation rather than through slides. Every piece of content should be trained as a speakable situation – for example live by voice with an AI counterpart."}] language: "en" source_id: "wissen/vertriebstraining-inhalte" source_hash: "4f63ef7f2b2cbfcf22222e1e8716efc473e091e85855c33712756231627d1888" --- A good sales training covers the stages of a real sales conversation: opening, needs analysis, benefit argumentation, objection handling, price negotiation and closing. What matters here is less the completeness of the topic list than the form: every piece of content must be practiced as a speakable situation – not consumed as a slide. ## The six core building blocks 1. **Conversation opening:** The first sentences decide whether a conversation develops or a defensive stance forms. What's trained: naming the reason, sparking interest, without sounding rehearsed. 2. **Needs analysis:** Ask questions and listen instead of presenting early. Whoever doesn't know the need argues into the void. 3. **Benefit argumentation:** From product feature to customer benefit – answering "what's in it for me?", not reciting the catalog. 4. **Objection handling:** "Too expensive", "no need", "we already have a supplier" – taking the classics in stride instead of fending them off. For many teams the most important building block, which is why we dedicated a separate article to it: [Practicing objection handling](/en/wissen/einwandbehandlung-ueben.html). 5. **Price negotiation:** Stating the price calmly, setting value against it, avoiding discount reflexes. 6. **Closing:** Sealing the deal – asking closing questions, establishing commitment, fixing the next steps. ## What's often missing: the uncomfortable conversations Many trainings end at closing. In everyday work, though, these situations are also part of sales: - **Complaint conversations:** A well-handled complaint secures the customer relationship. - **Win-back:** Approaching former customers without appearing like a supplicant. - **Following up:** The offer is with the customer – how do you follow up without being annoying? - **Coping with and using rejections:** Cleanly asking what the issue was. These conversations in particular determine customer loyalty and referrals – and are practiced the least, because they are unpleasant. ## Content is nothing without a practice form The most common mistake in sales training is not the wrong topic list, but the wrong form: content is presented instead of practiced. Selling is a behavior, and behavior changes through repetition in conversation – with a counterpart who reacts, interrupts and pushes back. With [webRichtung train](https://www.webrichtung.de/module/train/) you practice each of these building blocks **live by voice** with an AI counterpart that gives you nothing for free: you choose a scenario from categories like sales or service & complaints, see how your counterpart opens, and lead the conversation yourself – as often as you want, without an audience. ## From standard to company: your own scenarios Generic content only carries up to a point. The difference is made by the situations of your company: your product, your price structure, the three objections that really come up at your place. In train you build your own exercises for that under **My Trainings** – with a name, greeting and a description of how the counterpart behaves. That turns the "price negotiation" building block into the concrete conversation about *your* offer. ## A practical training plan - **Weeks 1–2:** Needs analysis and opening – the foundation for everything else. - **Weeks 3–4:** Objection handling with your company's three most common objections. - **From then on, ongoing:** Price negotiation, closing and the uncomfortable cases – short, regular, with increasing difficulty. This turns a topic list into a training you recognize by the result: by conversations that run differently than before.