In this module, you’ll master the art of the Discovery/CNA meeting. From the prep work that makes you look brilliantly organized, to conducting the conversation like a pro, to knowing what to do afterward so you don’t ghost your client (or leave them guessing).
Then, we’ll roll up our sleeves and dive into presentation building in Current, including how to add spec creative or big-brain creative concepts that make clients say, “Ooh, keep talking…”
Get ready, you’re about to become the client-whispering, solution-building wizard you were always meant to be.
Discovery (or Customer Needs Analysis) meetings are where you uncover the real problems, motivations, and goals behind a business’s marketing needs. The goal is to ask relevant questions so you can listen and learn about your prospect’s goals and challenges, and uncover the key pieces of information to build a buyable proposal.
You never want to ask a prospect questions about their business that you could have researched yourself. Use this checklist to guide your pre-call research. This will give you a solid foundation and necessary context to have an effective CNA. You may not use all this information, but you'll be able to navigate the conversation, where ever it may go.
Make sure to share these notes with the everyone that will be attending the meeting with you.
Your CNA questions should vary based on industry, business maturity, and the role of the person you're speaking with (owner vs. marketing coordinator vs. director).
A great CNA isn’t just about gathering data — it’s about building trust, reading nuance, uncovering real business problems, and influencing buying behavior. Those things happen best in a conversation, not a questionnaire. Here are some important things to keep in mind:
When you walk into a CNA already understanding their business, competitors, website experience, and advertising footprint, you immediately elevate the conversation beyond basic questions. You shouldn't be asking any questions that you could find out yourself.

If a prospect is local, always aim for in-person meetings. Not only does in-person establish more trust but in person makes them more likely to follow through on their commitment to meet with you.
Asking open ended questions gives the prospect the opportunity to share context, pressure points and what is REALLY keeping them at night. Giving prospects the attention and space to share information with you not only establishes trust, but priorities will become clear to you and objections will surface naturally so you can address those early on with them. 

Taking two minutes to restate what you heard — goals, challenges, timing, priorities — ensures alignment and prevents misunderstandings. This recap becomes the backbone of your strategy and proposal, and it shows the prospect that you listened, understood, and can be trusted with next steps.

If you don’t know how they measure success, you cannot build a meaningful strategy.
Understanding their KPIs, benchmarks, tracking methods, and current gaps allows you to design a plan tied directly to their business goals — not generic marketing activity.
This clarity is also what ultimately closes the deal, because you’re aligning your solution with what they already care about.

Most businesses think they know who their ideal customer is — but many are wrong.
Your job is to dig into who actually buys from them, who is profitable, who converts, and which customers align with their goals.
When you challenge assumptions (respectfully), you become a strategic partner, not a note-taker.

A great presentation isn’t just about the deck—it’s about the experience you create for the client. By the time you’re presenting, you should already understand their goals, challenges, and what matters most to them. The presentation is where you connect the dots and show them a clear, strategic path forward.
Below are the standards and practices that ensure every presentation feels polished, purposeful, and client-centric.
These trainings require you to be logged into Current. If you need help accessing Current contact your manager.
Proposal Builder: The Proposal Builder is one of two ways to build a proposal. The other way is through SmartProposal. With either method, you will start by creating a new deal in Hubspot.
Maverick SmartProposal: is one of two ways to build a proposal. The other way is by using the custom proposal builder.
As a first-of-its-kind technology, SmartProposal creates automated, market-proven, ready-to-launch media plans within seconds. Instantly build high-performing omnichannel media proposals based on industry-specific recommendations and real data from 100K+ campaigns. SmartProposal does the following:For answers to frequently asked questions about SmartProposal, see FAQ: SmartProposal.
Prep! Prepare for ALL meetings CNA, pitch, internal, monthly performance reviews, EVERYTHING! Prepping for all meetings will ease the anxiety and increase the confidence! Boom!
Melissa Williams
CMG Jacksonville - Radio
Look at you, gathering insights, building solutions, and basically becoming the Sherlock Holmes of sales. If you had a detective badge, you’d have earned at least three by now.
Go ahead, click into the next module. The mystery of becoming an elite sales pro isn't solved yet… but you’re dangerously close.

Learn how to identify high-value prospects, craft compelling outreach, and position CMG effectively to open meaningful conversations.
Understand the steps to onboard clients smoothly, set expectations, and launch campaigns with precision and collaboration.