Practice tough sales calls with an AI buyer
Choose your buyer type, difficulty, and sales objective. Get a detailed prompt that turns ChatGPT into a skeptical CTO, cautious CFO, or demanding founder — so you're ready for the real thing.
Set up your practice call
Your role-play prompt
Also fix your stuck deals
Use Deal Doctor to diagnose why a deal has gone cold and get scripts to revive it.
The Sales Role-Play Simulator creates a detailed AI buyer persona that you can use to practice live sales conversations in ChatGPT or Gemini. Get a tough, realistic buyer who raises real objections, asks hard questions, and pushes back on pricing — so you're fully prepared for the real call.
Your product, the buyer's industry, role, and company size.
Easy (receptive buyer), Medium (skeptical), or Hard (difficult buyer who challenges everything).
Cold call, product demo, pricing negotiation, or closing conversation.
Paste the prompt into ChatGPT — the AI becomes your practice buyer. Have a full conversation.
New sales reps learning their product, experienced salespeople prepping for high-stakes deals, SDR managers training their teams, and founders practicing their pitch before important investor or enterprise meetings.
Most salespeople only practice in real meetings — which means they're learning at the cost of real deals. Role-play before the call means you've already handled every objection, stumbled through every answer, and found your best responses before money is on the line.
How realistic is the AI buyer?
Very realistic when you give detailed context. The more specific you are about industry, company size, and buyer role, the more relevant the objections and pushback.
Can I practice in Hindi or Hinglish?
Yes — just add 'conduct this role-play in Hinglish' to the generated prompt before pasting into ChatGPT.
How long should a role-play session be?
15–20 minutes is ideal. Focus on one scenario per session — cold call or objection handling or closing, not all three at once.
Can my sales manager use this to train the team?
Yes — generate a prompt, share it with the team, and have everyone practice independently or in group sessions.