The Multi-Thread and Champion Build Reboot — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The Multi-Thread and Champion Build Reboot is a 60-minute live AE training that replaces single-threaded hope with a 3-thread minimum rule (champion + economic buyer + technical evaluator), a brutal champion qualification test ("would they take a call from me about their own career?"), a gift-giving cadence to keep secondary threads warm, and a live buying-committee map drawn on the whiteboard.
Gartner's research pegs the modern B2B buying group at 6.8 stakeholders — if your AEs only know one, the deal is already losing. This template runs end-to-end, scripts included.
Section 1 — Cold Open: The Single-Thread Graveyard (5 min)
Manager opens standing up. No slides yet. Say verbatim:
*"Pull up your top three open opportunities. Write down every person you've personally exchanged at least two messages with in the last 14 days. Not CC'd. Not 'met once.' Two-way exchanges. Go."*
Give them 90 seconds. Then ask the table:
- "How many of you have only one name on at least one of those deals?" Hands will go up.
- "That deal is not a deal. It's a wish." Sit on the silence.
Frame the hour:
- The Gartner number: B2B purchases now involve an average of 6.8 buying-group members (Brent Adamson, CEB/Gartner, *The Challenger Customer*). If you know one, you are 14% threaded.
- The 3-thread minimum rule: No deal moves past stage 2 in our pipeline without a documented champion, economic buyer, and technical evaluator in the CRM. Non-negotiable starting Monday.
- The reboot promise: By the end of this hour, every AE leaves with one named outreach to send today to a second or third thread on their largest open deal.
Section 2 — The Champion Qualification Test (15 min)
Most "champions" are coaches at best and tour guides at worst. Use Force Management / Tim Caito's three-part definition (codified in MEDDPICC):
- They have power or influence with the economic buyer.
- They have a personal win tied to your solution succeeding.
- They will sell on your behalf when you are not in the room.
Then run the brutal qualification test (Andy Paul, *Sell Without Selling Out*):
*"Would this person take a 20-minute call from me about their own career — not about my deal?"*
If the answer is no, they are not a champion. They are a contact. Write the difference on the whiteboard:
- Contact: Returns your emails. Attends demos. Says "looks great."
- Coach: Gives you intel. Tells you who matters. Won't put their name on it.
- Champion: Forwards your one-pager to their boss with their own commentary attached.
Live drill (8 min): Each AE picks their largest open deal and writes the named champion on a sticky note. The manager walks the room and asks, for each one: *"What is their personal win? Say it in one sentence."* If they stumble, the champion isn't real. Mark it red. This is the homework target.
Section 3 — Mapping the Buying Committee on the Whiteboard (10 min)
Draw the canonical six-box map. This is Command of the Message (Force Management) plus MEDDPICC stakeholder mapping merged:
Walk the room through each box for 90 seconds each:
- Economic Buyer — controls the budget line, not the seat. Often two levels above the champion in $100K+ deals.
- Champion — passes the test above. One per deal. If you have two, one is fake.
- Technical Evaluator — usually IT, Security, or RevOps. They cannot say yes, but they can absolutely say no. Disarm early.
- End User — the person whose workflow changes Monday morning. Their dread kills more deals than pricing.
- Executive Sponsor — your senior counterpart who provides air cover when procurement squeezes.
- Procurement / Legal — assume they enter the deal 30 days before close. Pre-position the paper.
Rule of the room: A deal is only "qualified" when every box has a named human in the CRM — first name, last name, title, and last-touch date.
Section 4 — The Gift-Giving Cadence (10 min)
Threads die from neglect, not rejection. Anthony Iannarino calls this "trading value for access" (*Eat Their Lunch*). You don't ask secondary threads for time — you give them reasons to want yours.
The monthly gift cadence for non-champion threads:
- Week 1 — Insight gift: A relevant article, benchmark, or analyst note with two sentences of why-you-specifically. *"Saw this Forrester piece on FinOps adoption in mid-market — page 4 is exactly the cost-attribution problem you mentioned in our June call."*
- Week 2 — Connection gift: Introduce them to a peer at a non-competitor. No agenda, no ask.
- Week 3 — Internal-credit gift: Send them a customer case study they can forward to their boss with their name attached as the one who "found this."
- Week 4 — Direct ask: Now you earn the 15-minute call.
Verbatim script for the Week 1 nudge to a dormant technical evaluator:
*"Hey [Name] — not chasing the deal today. Saw the attached benchmark on SOC 2 remediation timelines and remembered your point that your team is buried in audit prep. Page 7 has the median hours-per-control number you were looking for. No reply needed — just thought of you."*
Send three of these per AE per week minimum. Track in CRM with a custom last_value_given_at field.
Section 5 — Multi-Thread Sequencing Scripts and the Executive Sponsor Outreach (15 min)
This is the working block. Two scripts, drilled in pairs.
Script A — Asking your champion to open a second door (5 min role-play):
*"[Champion], we're at the point where I want to make sure I'm not creating risk for you internally. Two questions: who else in [function/department] would you want bought-in before this goes to [EB] for sign-off? And — would you be comfortable forwarding an intro note from me, or would it land better coming from you with my one-pager attached?"*
Why it works: it frames the multi-thread as risk reduction for them, not pipeline coverage for you. Force Management calls this "selling the way they buy."
Script B — Cold executive sponsor outreach when your champion stalls (5 min role-play):
*"[Exec Name] — I've been working with [Champion] on [specific business outcome they care about, in their language]. We're seven weeks in and I want to make sure the work product lands at your desk with no surprises. Could I send you a one-page brief by Friday — and a 15-minute slot the week after if it's useful?
Happy to copy [Champion] so we stay aligned."*
Three rules the manager enforces during role-play:
- Never go around the champion without telling them first. That's how champions become detractors.
- Lead with their outcome, not your product. The exec doesn't care about your platform.
- Always offer the smallest possible next step. A one-pager beats a meeting ask.
Designing the Q&A meeting (5 min teach): The capstone is a 30-minute "open questions" meeting with all three threads in the room. Agenda sent 48 hours ahead, three pre-submitted questions per attendee, no demo. This is where champions self-identify by what they choose to ask in front of the EB.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
End the hour with named, public commitments. Each AE states out loud:
- One deal where they will document the three threads in CRM by EOD.
- One named secondary thread they will send a gift-cadence Week 1 message to before they leave the room.
- One champion they will run the brutal qualification call with this week.
Manager logs commitments in a shared doc. Next Monday's standup opens with the scoreboard. What gets reviewed gets done.
FAQ
Q: What if my deal is too small for 3 threads? A: Under $25K ACV, two threads is acceptable (champion + EB). Above that, three is the floor. Above $250K ACV, target five.
Q: My champion explicitly told me not to talk to anyone else. Now what? A: That's a coach, not a champion. A real champion wants you talking to others because it de-risks them. Run the qualification test and start a parallel thread quietly.
Q: How do I multi-thread without seeming pushy? A: Frame every new thread as risk reduction for the champion. Anthony Iannarino's line: *"I want to make sure no one is surprised at signature."*
Q: How often should the manager inspect threading? A: Weekly 1:1s, every stage-2+ deal, named-human check. If a box is empty, the deal does not move forward in the forecast.
Q: Does this apply to PLG / bottoms-up motions? A: Yes, with different boxes. Replace "Economic Buyer" with "Budget Owner" and "Champion" with "Internal Power User Who Will Expand." The 3-thread rule still holds.
Q: What's the single biggest mistake AEs make here? A: Believing the champion's enthusiasm equals organizational consensus. It almost never does.
Sources
- Adamson, B., Dixon, M., Spenner, P., Toman, N. *The Challenger Customer* (CEB/Gartner, 2015) — origin of the 6.8 buying-group statistic.
- Force Management. *Command of the Message* methodology — stakeholder mapping and MEDDPICC champion definition.
- Caito, T. (Force Management). "What Makes a Real Champion" — three-part champion test.
- Paul, A. *Sell Without Selling Out* (2022) — career-call champion qualification heuristic.
- Iannarino, A. *Eat Their Lunch: Winning Customers Away from Your Competition* (2018) — trading value for access framework.
- Gartner. "The B2B Buying Journey" research, 2023 update — 6.8-stakeholder data point reconfirmed.
- Dickie, J. & Trailer, B. (CSO Insights). Annual Sales Performance Study — multi-threaded deals close at 34% higher rates than single-threaded.
- Roose, J. (MEDDIC Academy). *MEDDPICC: The Ultimate Guide* — Champion (C) and Competition (C) addenda.