The Power of Questions: How to use Questions as a B2B Sales Technique
Ever felt stuck in a sales call, watching a great opportunity slip away because the client doesn’t see what you see?
You don’t need to push harder - you need to ask smarter.
Ever been in a sales conversation where you can clearly see the customer’s real problem -yet they’re focused on something entirely different?
You know you have the perfect solution. But they’re not there yet. That’s where one of the most underrated tools in B2B sales comes in: asking the right questions.
Whether you're refining your approach or starting out in B2B sales, knowing how to use questions is essential for anyone who values authenticity in sales.
Why Questions Beat Pitching Every Time
Authentic selling is not about pushing your product - it’s about guiding a customer to discover their needs on their own. When a customer reaches a conclusion themselves, they’re far more invested in the solution.
Good questions don’t just open dialogue - they reframe thinking.
They help uncover real pain points hiding beneath surface-level problems. And they build trust, because instead of telling people what they should want, you help them understand what they actually need.
Step 1: Know the Likely Challenges Before You Ask
You launched your product or service for a reason: you saw a challenge you could solve.
So you already have a strong hunch about what your customer is up against.
Let’s say you’re a website builder. You might know your ideal client wants a sleek site but doesn’t know how to get there. Their surface-level challenge?
“I need a good website.”
But their real challenge might be:
“I need someone I can trust who gets what I’m trying to do.”
Step 2: Dig Deeper with Tailored Questions
The best way to show your value is by helping them surface what matters most.
So for example think about the strengths you offer, which could be:
Deep understanding of user experience (UX)
Specialisation in service-based businesses
SEO expertise
Known for being easy to work with (referrals galore)
You then turn those into powerful questions:
🎯 UX Focus:
“How important is it that your website feels intuitive and easy for customers to navigate?”
🎯 Easy to Work With:
“Have you worked with a web developer before? What worked—and what didn’t?”
🎯 Social Proof:
“Is it important that someone you trust has already used the provider you choose?”
Each of these opens the door to meaningful conversation and positions your strengths without sounding like a sales pitch. This is authenticity in sales at its best.
Step 3: Listen, Summarise, Confirm
Once you’ve had that deep-dive conversation, summarise what you’ve heard.
This shows you’ve actually listened—and gives the customer a chance to confirm or add to it.
An example summary might look like this:
“From what you’ve shared, it sounds like your key priorities are:
· A great user experience
· A developer that’s easy to work with
· Launching within three months
· A Wordpress platform
· Easy updates going forward
Did I get that right?”
This moment of clarity builds rapport and sets you up to align your offer exactly with their needs.
Step 4: Guide the Conversation - Don’t Control It
Sales is a journey, not a monologue. It should be heading toward a clear, mutually beneficial outcome.
The right questions help guide that journey.
They keep the conversation focused, value-driven, and moving forward. If you want to master authentic selling, learning how to ask the right questions is key.
When you sell with questions instead of assumptions, you’re not just closing deals—you’re building relationships grounded in trust.
Ready to Level Up?
If this approach resonates with you and you’re looking to go deeper, explore our B2B sales courses that focus on consultative selling.