Lonere Labs · FDM
A free field guide  ·  9 pages  ·  by Lonere Labs

How theater training fixes AI deployment failures.

Three drills your team can run on Monday. The reading list. Zero workshop pitch until slide eight.

Read time  ·  06:00 or swipe
CTO COMPLIANCE CFO CHAMPION LEGAL OPERATOR DECIDES THE ROOM · TOP-DOWN VIEW

AI deployments don't fail on accuracy. They fail in rooms.

Expert
goes quiet
Demo
breaks
Compliance
asks
Hallucination
at the CFO
Week-3
incident
A frontline expert felt threatened and went quiet.
Pilot dies
The demo broke and the team got defensive.
Deal dies
Compliance asked one question nobody had rehearsed.
Rollout dies
A hallucination landed in front of the CFO.
Trust dies
Week-three production incident handled badly.
Renewal dies
Evaluating the model
∞ hours
Rehearsing the rooms
0 hours

Deployment moments are improvised. Theater is the only discipline that trains improvisation.

Pilots
when the engine fails mid-air
→ Flight simulator
Surgeons
when the patient crashes on the table
→ Cadaver lab
Firefighters
when the structure collapses
→ Burn-house drills
AI teams
when the demo breaks in front of the CFO
→ ???
We fix that — using a hundred years of theater training methods, stripped of the theater.

5 theater skills. 5 deployment moments they train.

StatusReading who actually holds power.
Spotting that the frontline operator — not the CTO — decides adoption.
"Yes, and"Accepting offers instead of blocking.
Treating "it hallucinates" or "compliance won't allow it" as material to build with.
ListeningHearing the real story under the words.
Discovery where the real use case hides in a throwaway remark and an unofficial spreadsheet.
RecoveryWhen a scene collapses on stage.
A calm protocol for the moment the demo fails — the moment that builds trust if handled right.
Role rangeCommitting fully to different characters.
Technical expert at 10am, risk officer at noon, incident commander at 2pm — deliberately.

Read who actually decides.

Status is the invisible hierarchy in any room. The title-holder speaks; the status-holder decides. In enterprise AI that's usually the senior operator — not the CTO championing you.

RUN ON MONDAY
The whisper test · 15 minutes
  1. Pair up. Person A is the pitcher; Person B is the observer.
  2. Pitch 60 seconds. A delivers a normal product pitch.
  3. B watches the imagined room of six — not A. Who leans in? Who reaches for their phone?
  4. Debrief by whisper. "This person moved when you said this." That's a status moment.
  5. Re-pitch, targeting that listener. Notice what changes in your delivery.
SCREEN YOU TABLE CTO CFO LEGAL COMPL. CHAMPION OPERATOR ★ DECIDES THE ROOM YOU'RE PITCHING TO
The status you
need to find

In the field: for every meeting, ask — "who is actually deciding?" If you can't name them in five minutes, you're losing.

Every objection is material.

Block · the defensive response ↓ kills the scene
Buyer"It hallucinates." You"Well, the rate is only 2.3% on standard benchmarks…" Buyer"…"
×Conversation dies
Build · the next-move response ↓ keeps building
Buyer"It hallucinates." You"Yes — and here's the trust boundary we put around exactly that." Buyer"Show me the eval set." You"Plus the human-in-the-loop layer for cases that fall outside it."
Deal moves forward
RUN ON MONDAY
The objection inversion · 20 minutes
  1. List your 10 hardest AI objections. The real ones — not the easy ones.
  2. Write the BLOCK response. The defensive one you instinctively give.
  3. Write the BUILD response. "Yes, and" — what does this objection let you offer next?
  4. Say both out loud, three times each. The mouth needs the reps, not the brain.
  5. Drill weekly until BUILD comes out first under stress.

When the demo breaks, the recovery is the product.

Every live demo will fail sometime. The question is whether your team has drilled what to do in the 90 seconds after. Calm recovery → "they can ship." Panic → "they can't."

THE 7-STEP PROTOCOL
Demo recovery — drill until reflex
  1. Name it. Out loud, plain. "Yep — that's not what should have happened."
  2. Slow down. Drop your speech 20%. Don't fill silence.
  3. Describe what you saw. Not what you think happened.
  4. Say what it tells you. About the system, the data, the edge case.
  5. Show the fix path. Name the next experiment, not "we'll look into it."
  6. Ask the room. "What would you have wanted the system to do instead?"
  7. Keep moving. Don't apologize twice. Resume at normal pace.
The reflex you
drill until it's automatic

Drill it like fire drills. A teammate sabotages the demo mid-flow — break the API key, swap the prompt, kill the database. Run the protocol cold. By the fifth repetition, it's a reflex. That's the deliverable.

Want this drilled into your team?

09:00 Session 1 — Status & Yes-andWhisper test · objection inversion · live drills 3 HRS
Lunch & forensic debrief
13:30 Session 2 — Recovery & Deployment sim7-step protocol · adversarial simulation · incident drill 3 HRS
17:00 Final debrief & playbook handoffWritten artifacts go home with the team 30 MIN
One day · min 20 per cohort

The three drills from this guide — practiced against trained adversaries playing skeptical operators, hostile compliance, and ambushing procurement.

  • 70% live drills · 30% forensic debriefs
  • Played against a professional adversary, not a peer
  • Every exercise produces a written artifact
  • Team walks out with playbooks they keep
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If you only read six.

The improv canon, plus two field manuals from outside theater that work on the same axis. Start with Johnstone. Then pick whichever drill on the previous slides you most need to install in your team.

IMPRO Improvisation and the Theatre KEITH JOHNSTONE
Impro: Improvisation and the Theatre
Keith Johnstone · 1979

The foundational text on status — read once a decade. Chapter on status alone reframes every meeting you've ever been in.

IMPRO for Storytellers KEITH JOHNSTONE
Impro for Storytellers
Keith Johnstone · 1999

Narrative + recovery. The Theatresports playbook — every "the scene is failing, now what?" pattern is here.

THE IMPROV HANDBOOK A COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE SALINSKY · FRANCES-WHITE
The Improv Handbook
Salinsky & Frances-White

The most practical drill collection in print. Use the exercises directly — they translate to any sales-engineering team.

TRUTH in COMEDY THE MANUAL OF IMPROVISATION HALPERN · CLOSE · JOHNSON
Truth in Comedy
Halpern · Close · Johnson

Where "Yes, and" was codified. Drier than Johnstone but pinpoints the discipline of building on what the room offers you.

NEVER SPLIT THE DIFFERENCE NEGOTIATING AS IF YOUR LIFE DEPENDED ON IT CHRIS VOSS
Never Split the Difference
Chris Voss · 2016

Outside theater, same axis. Tactical empathy and labelling — exactly how to handle a hostile compliance officer or a skeptical CFO.

PITCH ANYTHING AN INNOVATIVE METHOD FOR PRESENTING & WINNING OREN KLAFF
Pitch Anything
Oren Klaff · 2011

Status and framing for high-stakes rooms. Cynical, occasionally crass — but the chapter on "frame control" is required reading.