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How to Research Prospects Before a Call: Sales Rep Guide

Elie Steinbock
Elie Steinbock
Brief My Meeting
How to Research Prospects Before a Call: Sales Rep Guide

How to Research Prospects Before a Call: A Sales Rep's Guide

You have a call in 20 minutes. The prospect's name looks familiar. You know you have talked before, maybe exchanged a few emails. But you cannot remember the details.

So you start scrambling. You search your inbox. You click through LinkedIn. You try to piece together who this person is and what you discussed. By the time the call starts, you are frazzled and half-prepared.

This is the reality for most sales reps. According to research, 82% of B2B decision-makers find sales representatives unprepared for their calls. That is not just awkward. It is costing you deals.

The good news is that learning how to research prospects before a call does not have to take hours. With the right approach, you can gather the context you need in minutes and walk into every conversation ready to lead.

This guide covers exactly what to research, where to find it, and how to do it efficiently. You will also learn how to avoid the over-research trap that wastes time without improving results.

Why Researching Prospects Before a Call Matters

Let us start with the data. HubSpot reports that 42% of B2B sales professionals say researching a prospect's company to uncover challenges and opportunities is the most effective way to close a deal.

But here is where it gets interesting: 76% of top-performing sales reps conduct research before making calls, while 42% of average reps report lacking sufficient information before calling. The gap between high performers and everyone else often comes down to preparation.

The Buyer Has Changed

Today's prospects have already done their homework. Studies show that 96% of prospects research companies and products before engaging with a sales representative. In fact, 71% prefer independent research over talking to a rep.

What does this mean for you? When a prospect agrees to a call, they already know the basics. They are not looking for a product walkthrough. They want to know if you understand their specific situation and can solve their particular problems.

If you start from scratch, asking questions they expect you to already know, you signal that you have not done your part. Trust erodes before the conversation even begins.

The Business Impact

Personalized, research-driven calls have a 202% higher conversion rate than generic outreach. That is not a small improvement. It is a fundamental shift in outcomes.

When you research someone before a meeting, you can:

  • Reference specific details that show you value the relationship
  • Ask informed questions that get to the real issues faster
  • Identify pain points before they are explicitly stated
  • Position your solution in terms of their exact challenges
  • Build rapport by acknowledging their context

The bottom line: prepared reps close more deals. It is that simple.

Where to Research Prospects Before a Sales Call

Not all research sources are created equal. Here is where to focus your time for maximum impact.

LinkedIn: Your Primary Research Hub

LinkedIn has become the essential platform for prospect research. It is centralized, up-to-date, and packed with information that directly applies to sales conversations.

When researching a prospect on LinkedIn, look for:

Professional Background

  • Current role and how long they have been in it
  • Previous companies and positions
  • Career trajectory that might indicate goals or priorities

Recent Activity

  • Posts they have shared or written
  • Articles they have liked or commented on
  • Topics they consistently engage with

Mutual Connections

  • Shared connections who might provide warm introductions
  • Former colleagues who could offer insights
  • Industry peers who might have dealt with similar challenges

Company Updates

  • Recent news about their organization
  • Funding rounds or major announcements
  • Changes in leadership or strategy

One tip from LinkedIn's own sales team: pay attention to what prospects are publicly discussing. If they shared an article about AI in customer service last week, that tells you something about their priorities and interests.

Company Website and News

The prospect's company website reveals strategic priorities that individual profiles might miss. Focus on:

About Page and Mission Statement

  • Core values and positioning
  • How they describe themselves to the market
  • Key differentiators they emphasize

Recent Blog Posts and Press Releases

  • New product launches or features
  • Partnership announcements
  • Industry awards or recognition

Leadership Changes

  • New executives who might be driving change
  • Departures that could signal shifting priorities
  • Promotions that indicate growth areas

Job Postings

  • What roles are they hiring for?
  • This often reveals strategic initiatives
  • Hiring patterns can indicate budget availability

Your CRM and Email History

Here is where many reps miss a major opportunity. Your internal data often contains the most valuable research of all.

Check your CRM for:

Previous Interactions

  • Past call notes from any team member
  • Previous objections raised
  • Deal history (won or lost)
  • Support tickets or issues

Email Exchanges

  • What topics have you discussed before?
  • What commitments were made?
  • What questions did they ask?

Engagement Signals

  • Which emails did they open?
  • What links did they click?
  • Did they attend any webinars?
  • Have they visited your website recently?

When you prepare for client meetings, this internal history is often more valuable than any external research. It tells you what actually matters to this specific person based on real interactions.

Industry Publications and Press

For strategic context beyond the individual company:

  • Industry-specific news about trends affecting their business
  • Competitive landscape changes they might be navigating
  • Regulatory updates that could impact their operations
  • Market conditions that affect their buying decisions

Social Media Beyond LinkedIn

While LinkedIn is primary, other platforms can provide additional context:

Twitter/X

  • Real-time thoughts and reactions
  • Industry commentary
  • Engagement with competitors

Company Social Accounts

  • Marketing priorities
  • Product focus areas
  • Customer engagement style

What Information to Gather During Prospect Research

Knowing where to look is only half the equation. You also need to know what to look for.

Company Intelligence

Before any sales call, you should know:

  1. What they do: Their core business, products, and services
  2. How they make money: Revenue model and primary customers
  3. Company size: Employee count and approximate revenue
  4. Recent developments: News, funding, expansion, or challenges
  5. Competitive position: How they differentiate in their market

Individual Prospect Details

About the person you are speaking with:

  1. Role and responsibilities: What do they actually do day-to-day?
  2. Decision-making authority: Can they approve purchases or influence decisions?
  3. Professional background: Where have they worked before?
  4. Communication style: Formal or casual based on their content?
  5. Interests and priorities: What topics do they engage with publicly?

Pain Points and Challenges

The real gold in prospect research is identifying problems before they are stated:

  • Industry-wide challenges affecting their sector
  • Company-specific issues based on news or hiring patterns
  • Role-specific pain points common to their position
  • Timeline pressures from funding, quarters, or initiatives

Previous Interactions and History

If you have any relationship history:

  • What have you discussed before?
  • What did they respond positively to?
  • What objections or concerns came up?
  • Who else from their company have you engaged?
  • Any promises made by either side?

The Prospect Research Checklist for Sales Reps

Use this checklist before every prospect call. It takes five minutes or less once you know where to look.

Company Research (2 minutes)

  • Confirm what the company does and their target market
  • Check for recent news in the past 90 days
  • Note any major changes: funding, leadership, products
  • Identify 1-2 industry trends affecting them

Prospect Research (2 minutes)

  • Review their LinkedIn profile: role, tenure, background
  • Check recent posts or articles they have engaged with
  • Note any mutual connections
  • Identify something personal but professional to reference

Internal History (1 minute)

  • Search CRM for previous interactions
  • Check email history for past conversations
  • Review any notes from colleagues
  • Note any engagement signals: opens, clicks, downloads

Call Preparation (30 seconds)

  • Write down your warm opener referencing research
  • Prepare 2-3 targeted questions based on what you found
  • Identify the one thing you want to learn from this call

This checklist is designed for efficiency. The goal is not exhaustive research. It is having enough context to lead a meaningful conversation.

How to Research Prospects Quickly: Time-Saving Tips

Here is the tension every sales rep faces: thorough research improves outcomes, but you have dozens of calls to make. How do you research without killing your productivity?

The 3x3 Method

One popular approach is the 3x3 method: find three relevant pieces of information in three minutes or less.

These three pieces might be:

  1. A recent company development or news item
  2. Something specific about the prospect's role or background
  3. A mutual connection or shared interest

With just these three elements, you have enough to personalize your approach and demonstrate preparation without falling into a research rabbit hole.

Prioritize High-Value Information

Not all research is equally useful. Prioritize:

High value: Pain points, recent changes, decision-making authority Medium value: Company background, professional history Low value: Generic company information easily found on their homepage

Focus your limited time on the high-value items that actually change how you run the call.

Avoiding the Over-Research Trap

Here is an uncomfortable truth: many sales reps use research as a form of call reluctance. It feels productive, but it is really avoidance.

Signs you are over-researching:

  • Spending more than 10 minutes on a single prospect
  • Gathering information you will never actually use
  • Feeling like you need "just one more thing" before you are ready
  • Research consistently cutting into your calling time

The solution is time-boxing. Set a five-minute timer. When it goes off, you stop researching and start calling. The perfect is the enemy of the good, especially in sales.

Using Your Research Effectively During the Call

Research without application is wasted time. Here is how to actually use what you find.

Warm Openers That Work

Instead of generic openings, reference your research:

Generic (avoid): "Thanks for taking this call. Let me tell you about our product."

Research-based (better): "I noticed your team just closed a Series B. Congratulations. I imagine that's creating some interesting scaling challenges on the sales side."

The research-based opener shows you did your homework, creates an immediate talking point, and positions you as someone who understands their context.

Tailored Questions

Your questions should reflect what you already know:

Without research: "Tell me about your current challenges."

With research: "I saw you are hiring three new account executives. Is the challenge finding the right people, or is it more about ramping them quickly once they're hired?"

The second question shows you understand their situation and helps you get to the real issue faster.

Addressing Pain Points Proactively

When your research reveals likely pain points, you can address them before they are mentioned:

"Given the regulatory changes coming in Q3, I imagine compliance is top of mind for your team right now. Many of our customers in your space are dealing with the same thing. Here is how we are helping them..."

This positions you as an informed advisor, not just another vendor.

Automating Prospect Research for Faster Prep

Here is the reality: manual research does not scale.

According to Salesforce's State of Sales report, sales reps spend only 30% of their time actually selling. The rest goes to administrative tasks, data entry, and research.

That means if you have 20 prospect calls a week and spend 10 minutes researching each, you are losing over three hours just on pre-call prep. For many reps, that time gets cut, and calls suffer as a result.

The Problem with Manual Research

Manual prospect research has inherent limitations:

  • Time-consuming: Even efficient research takes 5-10 minutes per prospect
  • Inconsistent: Some calls get thorough prep, others get nothing
  • Incomplete: You cannot search through months of email history in minutes
  • Unsustainable: As your calendar fills up, research is the first thing cut

The teams that solve this challenge gain a significant competitive advantage.

What Automated Research Looks Like

Modern tools can automate much of the research process. The best ones:

  • Scan your calendar for upcoming external meetings
  • Gather attendee information from LinkedIn and company data
  • Surface your complete email history with each attendee
  • Compile relevant documents and attachments
  • Deliver everything to your inbox before the meeting starts

This is exactly what Brief My Meeting does. Four hours before every external meeting, you receive a briefing email with:

  • LinkedIn profiles for all attendees
  • Your complete conversation history from email
  • Relevant documents and calendar events
  • Key context from past interactions

No searching. No scrambling. Just open your email, review for two minutes, and you are prepared.

For sales reps with packed calendars, this automation is the difference between consistent preparation and walking into calls cold.

The ROI of Automated Research

Teams using AI-powered research tools report:

  • 90% reduction in research and personalization time
  • 202% higher conversion rates from personalized outreach
  • 30% higher win rates compared to manual-only processes

The math is straightforward. Automation handles the time-consuming gathering. You focus on the high-value activity: actually talking to prospects.

Key Takeaways

Learning how to research prospects before a call is one of the highest-leverage skills in sales. Here is what to remember:

  1. Research drives results: 42% of top performers cite prospect research as their most effective closing technique. Prepared reps simply win more deals.

  2. Focus on the right sources: LinkedIn, company news, and your internal CRM data are the highest-value research sources. Prioritize these over generic information.

  3. Use the 3x3 method: Find three relevant pieces of information in three minutes. This prevents over-research while ensuring you have enough to personalize.

  4. Apply what you find: Research without application is wasted time. Use your findings in warm openers, tailored questions, and proactive pain point discussions.

  5. Consider automation: Manual research does not scale. Tools like Brief My Meeting can automate the gathering so you focus on the selling.

The difference between good and great sales performance often comes down to preparation. Every prospect you research properly is a prospect more likely to become a customer.

Ready to stop scrambling before calls? Try Brief My Meeting free for 7 days and get automated briefings delivered before every external meeting. Set it up once, and never walk into a prospect call unprepared again.

Elie Steinbock

About the Author

Elie is the founder of Inbox Zero and Brief My Meeting. He's passionate about helping professionals save time and stay prepared for every meeting.