Selling to a large company rarely means selling to just one person. According to Gartner data, an average of 5 to 7 people are involved in a purchasing decision at medium-sized companies, and that number rises to 10 or more at large enterprises.
B2B sales outreach that ignores this reality targets a single contact, hoping that person alone will handle the internal advocacy. This is a risky strategy.
1. Understanding the roles within a B2B purchasing committee
The champion is leading the project internally. Your job is to provide them with the arguments they need to convince others.
Economic decision-makers (CFOs, CEOs) are concerned with ROI, risk mitigation, and financial impact.
End users whose buy-in is critical to preventing implementation bottlenecks.
The roadblocks (IT, legal, compliance) that don’t initiate the purchase but can stop it. It’s best to identify them early on.
2. Map out the committee before reaching out
LinkedIn Sales Navigator is the most effective tool for mapping out your target organization: filter by company, department, and job level. Create a stakeholder map that includes their likely roles, concerns, and priorities for your B2B sales outreach. This approach is at the heart of Account-Based Marketing, as detailed in our article onABM and AI in key account outreach.
3. Tailor the message to each role
Each committee member receives a message tailored to their specific concerns. For the champion: how to build internal support. For the business decision-maker: quantified ROI and risk reduction. For users: ease of use and time savings. For skeptics: compliance and security.
Our article onhyper-personalization in lead generation and our guide to writing compelling emails explain how to create these tailored messages without having to write them entirely by hand.
4. Break down the multi-touch approach
Top-down: Start with the business decision-maker, who can appoint your internal champion. Advantage: Immediate legitimacy. Disadvantage: It’s harder to gain access without an existing relationship.
Bottom-up: Start with end users, build internal buy-in, then move upward. Advantage: Easier initial access. Disadvantage: Longer process.
In both cases, a structured multi-channel program spanning several weeks is more effective than isolated approaches.
5. Handling the committee’s objections
In a multi-stakeholder sale, objections can come from many different directions. Your champion is your best ally in identifying and addressing them. Provide them with responses to common objections, comparison points, and social proof. Our article on managing B2B objections provides a framework for structuring this preparation.
6. Maintain engagement throughout the cycle
Longer multi-stakeholder cycles increase the risk of "cold down." Our article on post-prospecting follow-up explains how to maintain meaningful contact with each stakeholder throughout the entire cycle.
Conclusion
B2B sales prospecting for accounts with multiple decision-makers is more complex but also more resilient. A sale built around several internal champions is less vulnerable to changes in job roles or priorities. Investing in mapping out the buying committee early in the sales cycle significantly boosts closing rates.
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