Hospitality Lead Qualification Script Templates

Six hospitality lead qualification scripts for hotels and venues -- covering dates, party size, event needs, budget, decision makers, and holding the booking. Use the variants as-is, edit the placeholders, or download the editable Word doc.

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Open and set the frame

Script

Hi first name, thanks for getting in touch with property name -- I am your name, and I look after enquiries here.

Can I ask you four quick things? It takes about two minutes, and by the end I can tell you whether we actually have space, what outcome looks like for your dates, and roughly what it would cost. If we are not the right fit, I will say so and point you to somewhere that is -- I would rather do that than waste your afternoon.

If they agree

Perfect. First one is the easy one -- what dates are you looking at?

If they just want a price

Totally fair. The honest answer is that our rate moves with the date and the size of the group, so let me get those two things and I will give you a real number rather than a guess.

Why it works

Hospitality enquirers are almost always comparison shopping under time pressure. This opener caps the time, promises a genuine availability answer instead of a brochure, and pre-commits to an honest referral -- which buys you the four questions you actually need.

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6 ready-to-use variants

1

Open and set the frame

When to use: Use it as your first reply once a guest or planner makes contact.

Script

Hi first name, thanks for getting in touch with property name -- I am your name, and I look after enquiries here.

Can I ask you four quick things? It takes about two minutes, and by the end I can tell you whether we actually have space, what outcome looks like for your dates, and roughly what it would cost. If we are not the right fit, I will say so and point you to somewhere that is -- I would rather do that than waste your afternoon.

If they agree

Perfect. First one is the easy one -- what dates are you looking at?

If they just want a price

Totally fair. The honest answer is that our rate moves with the date and the size of the group, so let me get those two things and I will give you a real number rather than a guess.

Why it works

Hospitality enquirers are almost always comparison shopping under time pressure. This opener caps the time, promises a genuine availability answer instead of a brochure, and pre-commits to an honest referral -- which buys you the four questions you actually need.

2

Dates, party size, and rooms

When to use: Use it as your first real question, before anything about budget or extras.

Script

Let me get the basics down, first name. What dates are you looking at, how many people in total, and how many rooms do you think you need?

Checking

Give me one second while I look at date range -- I want to check this properly rather than tell you something I have to take back later.

If you have space

Good news, we do have room type open across those dates for that number.

If you do not

I am going to be straight with you -- date range is tight for a group that size. Before I say no, is there any flex in the dates at all? If you could move to alternative dates, I have real availability and it usually comes in lower too.

If the dates are fixed

Understood. I would rather tell you now than string you along for a week.

Why it works

Dates, heads, and rooms are the only three facts that make an enquiry real. Getting them first stops you quoting into a booking that was never possible, and the flex question rescues a large share of enquiries that would otherwise die on the spot.

3

Event or group requirements

When to use: Use it once the dates and headcount are confirmed and the enquiry is a group, wedding, conference, or celebration.

Script

So this is occasion for around headcount -- tell me a bit about what you are picturing. What does the day need to feel like for the people coming?

Follow-ups

Are you thinking catering with it, or just the space? Anything on the AV or setup side -- screens, mics, a stage? And is there anything the group needs that a venue has got wrong for you before?

If they name a requirement

Noted on requirement. Let me be clear about what we can and cannot do there, because I would rather you find out now than on the day.

Reflecting it back

Let me play that back so I have it right: headcount for occasion, catering included, and requirement is the part that really matters. Have I missed anything?

Why it works

Group enquirers rarely lead with the thing that will actually make or break the booking. Asking about the feeling first surfaces it, and playing it back proves you listened -- which is most of why planners pick property name over an identical venue down the road.

4

Budget range

When to use: Use it after requirements, once they can see you understand what they are trying to build.

Script

Let me talk numbers, first name, because I do not want to build you something lovely that turns out to be double what you had in mind.

For occasion at headcount, bookings like yours usually land somewhere between low range and high range depending on how the catering and the extras land. Where in that does your budget sit -- or is it somewhere else entirely?

If they are below the range

Okay, that is honest and I appreciate it. There are two options: we trim the parts that are driving the cost and get closer, or I tell you now that we are not the right venue. Which would you rather I do?

If they will not say

No problem at all. Then let me ask it differently -- if I came back with high range, would that be a straightforward yes, a conversation, or a no?

Why it works

Naming your own range first turns budget from an interrogation into a comparison, and the fallback question gets you a usable read even from enquirers who will never state a figure out loud.

5

Decision maker and timeline

When to use: Use it once budget is roughly aligned and the booking looks real.

Script

Two last things and then I will let you go, first name.

Aside from you, who else needs to be happy with this before occasion is booked? And when do you need to have it settled by?

If someone else is involved

That makes sense. What is other party going to care about most -- the price, the space, or something else? If I know that, I can put it in writing so you are not the one having to defend it.

If the timeline is vague

Let me put it this way: date range is the kind of window that goes. If you are deciding around decision date, that is fine and we can work with it -- I just want to be honest that I cannot promise the space is still here after that.

Why it works

Hospitality bookings die in the gap between the enthusiastic enquirer and the person holding the card. Naming the other party early lets you arm your champion instead of hoping, and pinning the decision date turns scarcity into a fact rather than a sales tactic.

6

Hold the booking and next step

When to use: Use it as the close, once dates, needs, budget, and the decision maker are all clear.

Script

Here is what I would like to do, first name. I will put a provisional hold on date range right now so nobody else takes it while you are deciding. The hold runs for hold length and costs you nothing.

You will have the written proposal proposal time with everything we discussed itemised, so there are no surprises in it.

The commitment

Then can I call you on follow up day? Not to push -- just so you have a real person to ask the awkward questions to rather than emailing into a void. Does that work?

If they hesitate on the hold

The hold is not a commitment and there is nothing to sign. If you walk away at the end of hold length, you walk away and we are still on good terms.

Why it works

A free, expiring hold gives the enquirer something valuable at zero risk, which makes it very easy to say yes to. The dated follow-up turns a proposal into a conversation -- and proposals that come with a scheduled conversation close far more often than ones that land alone in an inbox.

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How to use this template

  1. 1

    Pick the closest variant. Choose based on the situation, not only the channel.

  2. 2

    Replace every placeholder. If you cannot fill a field, ask one clarifying question first.

  3. 3

    Save the final version into sem.chat, your CRM, or your help desk so the team stays consistent.

  4. 4

    Review results weekly. Drop variants that create confusion and improve the ones that work.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use these templates commercially?
Yes. Copy, edit, and use them in your business, client work, CRM, help desk, or sem.chat workspace.
Why are there six variants?
One generic template rarely fits every situation. Six variants give your team practical choices without a messy library.
Should I paste these into sem.chat?
Yes. Save the best variants as canned replies, knowledge base entries, routing rules, or CRM notes so your AI agent and team stay consistent.
How many questions should a hospitality qualification call cover?
Four to six, and no more. You need dates, party size and rooms, what the group actually requires, a budget range, and who signs. Anything beyond that belongs in the proposal or the site visit -- enquirers are usually contacting several venues in one sitting, and the one who gets to a real answer fastest tends to win the booking.
What if the enquirer refuses to give a budget?
Do not push. Name your own range first, then ask whether your upper number would be a straightforward yes, a conversation, or a no. That gives you a usable read without ever forcing a figure out of them, and it feels like transparency rather than an interrogation.
Should I hold dates before qualifying properly?
No. A hold placed before you know the party size or the budget ties up inventory for an enquiry that may never have been possible. Qualify first, then hold -- and always attach a real expiry to the hold and honour it, or planners quickly learn your dates never actually run out.
How do I qualify without sounding like a call centre?
Ask permission, cap the time, and say what the enquirer gets out of answering. Then react to their answers instead of marching through a list -- reflecting their requirements back in your own words does more for the booking than any question you could ask next.

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