Skill Drill: Multithreading Deals for Medical Device Sales
Skill Drill: Multithreading Deals for Medical Device Sales
Direct Answer
This drill builds multithreading — the skill of deliberately building and maintaining relationships across every stakeholder who can advance or kill a medical device deal, instead of betting the whole quarter on one champion. A frontline sales manager runs it with a team of 4 to 12 reps in 45 minutes (compressible to 5, extendable to 60).
The team walks away able to map the full buying committee of a hospital or IDN, name the gaps in their live deals, and script the next contact for each missing thread — so a single transferred surgeon or a new value-analysis chair can no longer stall the forecast.
Why This Drill Matters in Medical Device Sales
Medical device buying is the most committee-heavy purchase in B2B. A capital or disposables decision routinely runs through a Value Analysis Committee (VAC), a physician champion, a service-line director, supply chain or GPO contract managers (Vizient, Premier, HealthTrust), biomedical engineering, infection prevention, finance, and increasingly a clinical evidence reviewer.
Gartner's research on the buying group pegs complex B2B purchases at 6 to 10 stakeholders; in device sales the practical number is often higher because clinical and economic buyers sit in different reporting lines.
Single-threading is the number one preventable loss driver here. A rep coddles one enthusiastic surgeon, the deal feels warm, and then the VAC tables it for lack of an economic case, or the champion takes a job at another health system and the relationship evaporates overnight. The Challenger Sale (Dixon and Adamson) and the MEDDICC qualification framework both put stakeholder coverage at the center: MEDDICC's *Champion*, *Economic Buyer*, and *Identify Pain* pillars are each a separate human you must reach.
Miller Heiman's Strategic Selling Blue Sheet exists precisely to force reps to plot every buying-influence role — Economic, User, Technical, and Coach — before they commit a forecast number.
The bottleneck is rarely product knowledge. Device reps know their catheter or their robot. The gap is the discipline to ask, "Who else touches this decision, and what does *that specific person* need from me?" — and then act on it before the deal is at risk. This drill makes that discipline a reflex.
What You'll Need (5 min prep)
- Group size: 4 to 12 reps. Above 8, split into pods of 3 to 4.
- Materials: One real, live deal per rep (pulled from CRM before the session); a printed or on-screen stakeholder map template (boxes for Economic Buyer, Physician Champion, User/Clinical, Technical/Biomed, Supply Chain/GPO, Finance, Detractor); colored pens or sticky notes; a timer visible to the room.
- Room setup: Tables in pods so reps can talk; a whiteboard or shared screen for the leader to model one map.
- Handout: A one-page MEDDICC + Strategic Selling buying-influence cheat sheet (roles and the one question each role answers).
- Leader prep: Pick one of your own past deals — ideally one you lost to single-threading — to demo the map honestly in Round 1.
Round 1 — Set the Scene (5 min)
The leader models the skill before asking anyone to perform it. Draw an empty stakeholder map on the board and fill it in live using your own demo deal.
Read aloud: "Multithreading is not networking for its own sake. It's making sure that if any one person in this account disappears tomorrow — gets promoted, quits, goes hostile — the deal still moves. We're going to map every human who can say yes or no, find the threads we don't have yet, and write the next message to reach them.
I'll show you with one of mine first, including the one I lost."
Walk the room through your demo map: name each box, state what that person actually wanted, and point to the empty box that cost you the deal. What good looks like: every role has a named human or a visible blank, and the leader admits one real gap.
Round 2 — Map Your Live Deal (12 min)
Each rep takes their own live deal and fills in the stakeholder map. Force completeness with the MEDDICC and Strategic Selling roles.
Steps:
- Write the named person in every box you can (Economic Buyer, Physician Champion, Clinical User, Technical/Biomed, Supply Chain/GPO, Finance, Detractor).
- For each named person, write one line: what they need to say yes.
- Circle every box that is blank or holds only a title with no name — those are your threads at risk.
- Mark your Coach: who inside the account is feeding you intel?
Read aloud: "A title is not a thread. 'VAC chair' is not a thread — Dr. Reyes who chairs the VAC and cares about reducing CLABSI rates is a thread. If all you have is a title, that box is empty. Circle it."
Role-play scenario: Pair up. Rep A presents their map to Rep B as if B is the regional manager doing a deal review. B must ask: "Who's your Economic Buyer, and have you ever spoken to them?" and "If your champion left Friday, who picks this up?" What good looks like: at least two circled gaps per rep, and the Economic Buyer is either named-and-contacted or honestly marked as unreached.
Round 3 — Run the Reps: Script the Missing Thread (15 min)
Now the team practices actually reaching a missing stakeholder — the part most reps avoid.
Steps:
- Each rep picks their single most dangerous gap (usually the Economic Buyer or a Detractor).
- Write a 3-to-4 sentence outreach: a reason to meet that is about *that person's* world, not your product. Use a referral path through the champion where possible.
- Role-play it live in pods: one rep is the seller, one plays the stakeholder, one observes and scores.
Verbatim leader script to model the champion-referral move: "Dr. Patel, you've seen how the system performs clinically. The piece I haven't earned yet is a conversation with whoever owns the capital budget for the service line — partly so the economic case is built *with* them, not dropped on them at the VAC.
Who should I be talking to, and would you make the introduction?"
Pressure-test prompt for the observer: interrupt with a realistic objection — "We're standardized with a competitor through Vizient" or "Finance froze capital this quarter." The seller must keep the thread open, not retreat. What good looks like: the outreach references the stakeholder's metric (cost-per-case, throughput, infection rate), names a referral path, and survives one objection without collapsing into a product pitch.
Round 4 — Debrief and Lock It In (8 min)
Convert reps into committed actions.
Steps:
- Each rep names, out loud, the one thread they will open this week and by when.
- The pod scores each plan: is the target a named human, is the message about them, is there a date?
- Leader logs each commitment and adds the missing stakeholders to the CRM deal as required fields.
Read aloud: "We're not done when the map looks pretty. We're done when there's a name, a message, and a date in the CRM for every red circle. Say yours."
What good looks like: every rep leaves with at least one specific, dated outreach committed and entered into the system, and at least one deal has gained a previously invisible stakeholder.
Scaling It: 5-Minute, 30-Minute, and 60-Minute Versions
- 5-minute stand-up version: Skip prep and role-play. Each rep pulls one deal and answers a single question out loud — "Name your Economic Buyer and the last time you spoke to them." Silence is a flagged risk. Use this as a weekly forecast-call ritual.
- 30-minute version: Run Rounds 1 through 3 but drop the observer scoring in Round 3; do the role-play once per pod with the leader watching. Best for a mid-week team meeting.
- 60-minute version: Run all four rounds, then have each rep map a second deal and finish with a 5-minute 1:1 where the manager commits to co-attending one stakeholder meeting. Best monthly or at quarter-start.
Common Mistakes & Coaching Cues
- Mistaking a friendly champion for full coverage. Cue: "Warmth is not coverage. Who signs the PO?"
- Logging titles instead of names. Cue: "If you can't text them, it's not a thread."
- Ignoring the Detractor. Cue: "Every device deal has someone defending the incumbent — name them or they'll surprise you at the VAC."
- Outreach that's about the product, not the person. Cue: "Rewrite that opening line so it mentions their number — cost-per-case, throughput, infection rate."
- Skipping the Economic Buyer because the champion 'has it handled.' Cue: "Champions get overruled by finance every quarter. Build the case *with* the buyer."
- Treating the map as a one-time artifact. Cue: "Re-map at every stage gate; committees change mid-cycle."
FAQ
How is this different from just adding contacts in the CRM? The CRM stores names; multithreading is knowing what each person needs to say yes and having an active thread to reach them. This drill forces the second part — the message and the date — not just the contact record.
What if my rep genuinely only has access to one surgeon? That's the highest-value output of the drill: a named, single-point-of-failure deal. The Round 3 champion-referral script exists exactly to break that wall using the surgeon as the introduction path.
How often should we run this? Run the 5-minute version weekly in forecast calls and the full 45-minute version monthly or at quarter-start when the pipeline resets.
Does this work for disposables and reorders, not just capital? Yes. Disposables run through supply chain, GPO contracting, and VACs too. The roles shift weight — supply chain and contract managers matter more than capital finance — but the mapping discipline is identical.
My veterans say they already do this. How do I keep them engaged? Have them map a deal they recently lost and find the thread they missed. Veterans engage fast when the exercise exposes a real miss rather than teaching theory.
How do I tie this to the forecast? Make a fully threaded stakeholder map a requirement for any deal called "commit." A deal with a circled Economic Buyer cannot be commit-stage. The drill produces the artifact that enforces it.
Bottom Line
After this drill the team can map a hospital or IDN buying committee, spot single-threaded risk on sight, and write a referral-driven outreach to the missing stakeholder — turning "I have a great champion" into "I have coverage across the committee." Run the 5-minute version every week and the full version monthly so multithreading becomes the default motion, not a save attempt after a deal stalls.
Sources
- The Challenger Sale — CEB / Gartner
- MEDDICC Qualification Framework
- Miller Heiman Strategic Selling — Korn Ferry
- Gartner: The B2B Buying Journey
- SPIN Selling — Huthwaite International
- Vizient: Value Analysis in Healthcare
- Association for Talent Development (ATD)
- Harvard Business Review: Making the Consensus Sale
*multithreading skill drill — a runnable team training exercise for medical device sales, with scripts, timing, and coaching cues.*