Interview prep · 1 min read
Technical sales interviews: what to expect
Role plays, mock calls, and case studies in SaaS hiring.
Mukul Sharma · Founder, HuntForTomorrow
Published 24/6/2026 · Reviewed 24/6/2026
Expertise: B2B SaaS sales, Resume writing, Interview coaching
TL;DR
Expect a mock discovery or demo; show curiosity, qualification, and next steps.
Quick answer
Ask discovery questions, summarize pain, and propose a clear mutual action plan.
Key facts
Primary test
Discovery process and next steps
Demo structure
Pain recap → capability → metric → MAP
Case studies
Explain assumptions aloud
Prep minimum
Product site + one demo video
Technical sales interviews—mock discoveries, demos, and case studies—test whether you can run a professional sales conversation, not whether you are a product engineer. Interviewers score process, communication, and next-step control.
Mock discovery calls
You will play AE; the interviewer plays prospect. Open with agenda, ask open-ended questions about pain, current process, and impact. Summarize before pitching. Avoid jumping to features in the first five minutes.
- Current state and desired outcome
- Decision process and timeline
- Budget or economic buyer access
- Mutual action plan for next step
Demo and presentation exercises
You may demo their product with a brief cheat sheet, or present a generic solution to a scenario. Structure: recap pain, show relevant capability, tie to metric, confirm interest, propose next step.
Case studies and pipeline exercises
Some companies ask you to prioritize accounts, build a territory plan, or forecast a hypothetical quarter. Talk through assumptions aloud—logic matters more than a perfect number.
How to prepare without product mastery
Review the product site, watch a demo video, and note three customer outcomes. Bring a one-page plan: questions you will ask, how you handle "we are happy with incumbent," and how you close for next steps.
Interviewers forgive imperfect product knowledge; they rarely forgive poor discovery hygiene.
Summary
Role plays, mock calls, and case studies in SaaS hiring.