

.png)


Because most battlecards are stitched together from analyst reports, marketing pages, and one tenured AE's memory. Reps know it. They call it a slide of bullet points the team made up. They open it once and never again. Battlecards built from real recordings get used because reps trust them.
Per competitor, the rep's pitch verbatim. The objections they raise about your category. The proof points they deploy. The comparative attacks they make. The pricing approach. The counter-moves your team can actually use. Every claim citation-linked to the moment in the recording where the competitor said it.
We capture list prices, discount thresholds, and the negotiation moves the rep makes when pushed. Your AE knows in real time whether the price the prospect is comparing you against is real, inflated, or fully negotiable. That changes the close.
Battlecards age the way the underlying competitor moves. Most partners refresh annually for stable competitors and quarterly for fast-moving ones. The Notion board makes refreshes targeted because we know exactly what changed and what to recapture.
Battlecards live in your enablement workspace. When a prospect names a competitor on discovery, the rep opens the matching card, scans the top objections and proof points for that vendor, and walks into the demo with the right counters loaded. Two-minute prep replaces a week of guessing.
Yes, that's the centerpiece. Each claim links to the exact moment in the recording. When a rep loses a deal to a specific objection, sales leadership can pull the clip and review it as a team. Coaching gets sharper.
Both. The pitch shows you what the competitor sells. The attacks show you what they say about you. Most partners discover that the attack surface is larger and more specific than they thought, and the battlecard updates handle it head-on.
One per competitor by default. Larger projects sometimes warrant a buyer-persona overlay if the competitor pitches enterprise versus mid-market with materially different framings. We can split where it matters.
Six to nine point lifts against a named competitor are common in the quarter after partners ship the new battlecards. The lift comes from removing the moments where reps fumble objections that battlecards should have prepared them for.
That's one of the highest-leverage uses. New reps walk into competitive deals with the same recording-backed battlecards a senior AE has. The ramp curve flattens because the institutional knowledge that usually takes a year to build is sitting in the Notion board on day one.
Because most battlecards are stitched together from analyst reports, marketing pages, and one tenured AE's memory. Reps know it. They call it a slide of bullet points the team made up. They open it once and never again. Battlecards built from real recordings get used because reps trust them.
Per competitor, the rep's pitch verbatim. The objections they raise about your category. The proof points they deploy. The comparative attacks they make. The pricing approach. The counter-moves your team can actually use. Every claim citation-linked to the moment in the recording where the competitor said it.
We capture list prices, discount thresholds, and the negotiation moves the rep makes when pushed. Your AE knows in real time whether the price the prospect is comparing you against is real, inflated, or fully negotiable. That changes the close.
Battlecards age the way the underlying competitor moves. Most partners refresh annually for stable competitors and quarterly for fast-moving ones. The Notion board makes refreshes targeted because we know exactly what changed and what to recapture.
Battlecards live in your enablement workspace. When a prospect names a competitor on discovery, the rep opens the matching card, scans the top objections and proof points for that vendor, and walks into the demo with the right counters loaded. Two-minute prep replaces a week of guessing.
Yes, that's the centerpiece. Each claim links to the exact moment in the recording. When a rep loses a deal to a specific objection, sales leadership can pull the clip and review it as a team. Coaching gets sharper.
Both. The pitch shows you what the competitor sells. The attacks show you what they say about you. Most partners discover that the attack surface is larger and more specific than they thought, and the battlecard updates handle it head-on.
One per competitor by default. Larger projects sometimes warrant a buyer-persona overlay if the competitor pitches enterprise versus mid-market with materially different framings. We can split where it matters.
Six to nine point lifts against a named competitor are common in the quarter after partners ship the new battlecards. The lift comes from removing the moments where reps fumble objections that battlecards should have prepared them for.
That's one of the highest-leverage uses. New reps walk into competitive deals with the same recording-backed battlecards a senior AE has. The ramp curve flattens because the institutional knowledge that usually takes a year to build is sitting in the Notion board on day one.
Because most battlecards are stitched together from analyst reports, marketing pages, and one tenured AE's memory. Reps know it. They call it a slide of bullet points the team made up. They open it once and never again. Battlecards built from real recordings get used because reps trust them.
Per competitor, the rep's pitch verbatim. The objections they raise about your category. The proof points they deploy. The comparative attacks they make. The pricing approach. The counter-moves your team can actually use. Every claim citation-linked to the moment in the recording where the competitor said it.
We capture list prices, discount thresholds, and the negotiation moves the rep makes when pushed. Your AE knows in real time whether the price the prospect is comparing you against is real, inflated, or fully negotiable. That changes the close.
Battlecards age the way the underlying competitor moves. Most partners refresh annually for stable competitors and quarterly for fast-moving ones. The Notion board makes refreshes targeted because we know exactly what changed and what to recapture.
Battlecards live in your enablement workspace. When a prospect names a competitor on discovery, the rep opens the matching card, scans the top objections and proof points for that vendor, and walks into the demo with the right counters loaded. Two-minute prep replaces a week of guessing.
Yes, that's the centerpiece. Each claim links to the exact moment in the recording. When a rep loses a deal to a specific objection, sales leadership can pull the clip and review it as a team. Coaching gets sharper.
Both. The pitch shows you what the competitor sells. The attacks show you what they say about you. Most partners discover that the attack surface is larger and more specific than they thought, and the battlecard updates handle it head-on.
One per competitor by default. Larger projects sometimes warrant a buyer-persona overlay if the competitor pitches enterprise versus mid-market with materially different framings. We can split where it matters.
Six to nine point lifts against a named competitor are common in the quarter after partners ship the new battlecards. The lift comes from removing the moments where reps fumble objections that battlecards should have prepared them for.
That's one of the highest-leverage uses. New reps walk into competitive deals with the same recording-backed battlecards a senior AE has. The ramp curve flattens because the institutional knowledge that usually takes a year to build is sitting in the Notion board on day one.
Because most battlecards are stitched together from analyst reports, marketing pages, and one tenured AE's memory. Reps know it. They call it a slide of bullet points the team made up. They open it once and never again. Battlecards built from real recordings get used because reps trust them.
Per competitor, the rep's pitch verbatim. The objections they raise about your category. The proof points they deploy. The comparative attacks they make. The pricing approach. The counter-moves your team can actually use. Every claim citation-linked to the moment in the recording where the competitor said it.
We capture list prices, discount thresholds, and the negotiation moves the rep makes when pushed. Your AE knows in real time whether the price the prospect is comparing you against is real, inflated, or fully negotiable. That changes the close.
Battlecards age the way the underlying competitor moves. Most partners refresh annually for stable competitors and quarterly for fast-moving ones. The Notion board makes refreshes targeted because we know exactly what changed and what to recapture.
Battlecards live in your enablement workspace. When a prospect names a competitor on discovery, the rep opens the matching card, scans the top objections and proof points for that vendor, and walks into the demo with the right counters loaded. Two-minute prep replaces a week of guessing.
Yes, that's the centerpiece. Each claim links to the exact moment in the recording. When a rep loses a deal to a specific objection, sales leadership can pull the clip and review it as a team. Coaching gets sharper.
Both. The pitch shows you what the competitor sells. The attacks show you what they say about you. Most partners discover that the attack surface is larger and more specific than they thought, and the battlecard updates handle it head-on.
One per competitor by default. Larger projects sometimes warrant a buyer-persona overlay if the competitor pitches enterprise versus mid-market with materially different framings. We can split where it matters.
Six to nine point lifts against a named competitor are common in the quarter after partners ship the new battlecards. The lift comes from removing the moments where reps fumble objections that battlecards should have prepared them for.
That's one of the highest-leverage uses. New reps walk into competitive deals with the same recording-backed battlecards a senior AE has. The ramp curve flattens because the institutional knowledge that usually takes a year to build is sitting in the Notion board on day one.