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The Champion Enablement Workshop — 60-Min Training

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Champions lose deals when they walk into their boss's office unarmed. Your AE built rapport, ran the demo, scoped the ROI — and then handed the champion a 47-slide deck and a vague hope. The Champion Enablement Workshop fixes this.

In 60 minutes, every AE on your team builds a customized enablement packet for one live deal: an internal-pitch deck (5 slides max), a 1-page business case, an ROI calculator the champion can edit live in front of their CFO, a competitive cheat sheet, and a written FAQ covering the seven executive pushbacks that actually kill deals.

Each AE walks out with a packet scheduled for delivery to their champion within 7 days. Force Management's 2026 benchmark found champion-enabled deals close at 54% versus 19% for deals where the champion received no structured materials. This workshop is the highest-leverage hour you'll run this quarter.

1. Opening Context — Why Champions Fail Without a Packet (5 min)

Open the session with a hard truth: your champion is not a salesperson. They have a day job, a boss who interrupts them, and seventeen competing priorities. When they pitch your product internally, they're doing it from memory, in a hallway, in 90 seconds.

The deck you sent them is too long. The pricing page is too generic. They forget the three numbers that matter and reach for vibes.

Force Management's 2026 Buyer Enablement Study tracked 1,847 enterprise deals across SaaS and found that champions who received a dedicated 5-slide internal-pitch deck were 2.8x more likely to convert their economic buyer into a verbal commit within 14 days.

Gong's 2026 Revenue Intelligence Report analyzed 4.2M sales conversations and found AEs spend an average of 11 hours building champion-facing materials per deal — but 73% of those materials never get used internally because they're too long, too branded, or too generic for the champion's specific political context.

Whiteboard frame for the room:

*The rule for this hour: we build for the champion's calendar, not yours.*

2. The Pre-Session Champion Brief — Verbatim Template (15 min)

Before anyone builds a slide, every AE runs a 20-minute brief call with their champion. This is not the discovery call. This is not the demo recap. This is a structured intake where the AE extracts the seven pieces of intelligence required to build a packet the champion will actually use.

Have every AE pull up their live deal in Salesforce. They will execute this script verbatim on a real champion call within 72 hours of this workshop.

Verbatim Pre-Session Brief Template:

  1. "I want to make your life easier when you pitch this internally. Can you walk me through who specifically you'll be sitting across from — name, title, and what they care about this quarter?"
  2. "What's the one number your boss will ask first? Revenue impact, cost takeout, time saved, or risk reduction?"
  3. "Who else in the room hates this idea, and what's their specific objection? I want to write the rebuttal for you."
  4. "If I gave you a 5-slide deck right now, what slide order would your boss actually want to see — problem first, money first, or timeline first?"
  5. "What competing project is fighting us for this budget, and what's the political cost if your boss kills that project to fund ours?"
  6. "When you've successfully pitched something internally before, what format won — a deck, a memo, a spreadsheet, or a verbal one-pager?"

Coach the AEs: do not let the champion give you generic answers. If they say "my boss cares about ROI," push back with "what's the ROI threshold their last three approved projects had to clear?" Specificity is the entire game.

*Bad example to call out in the room: "My champion said the CFO cares about cost savings, so I built a cost-savings slide." That's not a brief. That's a wish.*

flowchart TD A[AE schedules 20-min champion brief call] --> B{Champion confirms<br/>economic buyer identity?} B -->|Yes| C[Extract 6 brief answers] B -->|No| D[Pause packet build<br/>Run buyer-mapping first] C --> E{Specific numbers<br/>and names captured?} E -->|Yes| F[Build packet<br/>against real intel] E -->|No| G[Re-run brief with<br/>tighter questions] F --> H[Deliver packet<br/>within 7 days] G --> C D --> A H --> I[Champion pitches<br/>economic buyer]

3. Building the 5-Slide Internal-Pitch Deck (10 min)

The deck rule is non-negotiable: 5 slides, no more. Your champion is pitching in a 15-minute meeting where the first 3 minutes are small talk and the last 5 are pushback. They have 7 minutes of airtime. That's 84 seconds per slide.

The exception callout: If the deal is over $500K ACV and involves a procurement committee, the champion gets a 7-slide variant that adds a security/compliance slide and an implementation-risk slide. Below $500K, 5 slides is the cap.

What to NEVER say in this session:

Close this section by having each AE write their 5 slide titles on a sticky note and post it on the wall. The manager walks the wall and flags any slide title that's longer than 7 words or doesn't reference a specific number the champion gave them.

4. The 1-Page Business Case and ROI Calculator (10 min)

The business case is a single page the champion forwards to their boss before the meeting. The ROI calculator is a Google Sheet or Excel file the champion opens during the meeting and edits live when the CFO challenges the assumptions. These are different artifacts with different jobs.

Run this script with the room, with one AE volunteering to read the champion role and another reading the AE role.

Verbatim Business Case Walkthrough Script:

AE: "I built you a one-pager. It's 4 sections. Read it back to me out loud — I want to hear it the way your boss will hear it."

Champion: [reads] "Current state: we spend $340K annually on manual lead routing. Future state: automated routing reduces that to $140K. Investment: $180K Year 1. Payback: 11 months. Risk if we don't act: 18% of inbound leads currently route to the wrong rep, costing us roughly $1.2M in pipeline annually."

AE: "Stop. When you said 'we spend $340K' — is that the number your CFO will recognize, or is that my number?"

Champion: "Honestly, the CFO will probably say $290K because they're not counting the contractor time."

AE: "Then change it to $290K right now. Your boss has to recognize every number on this page within 2 seconds, or they stop trusting the rest of the document. [hands champion a pen]"

Clari's 2026 Forecast Accuracy Report analyzed 312,000 enterprise deals and found that deals with a one-page business case validated by the champion in a live read-back closed 41% faster than deals with AE-written business cases that the champion never read aloud before forwarding.

Do NOT do any of the following:

5. The Competitive Cheat Sheet and Executive FAQ (15 min)

The cheat sheet is the artifact the champion pulls up on their phone when the boss asks "what about [competitor]?" The executive FAQ is the document the champion sends after the meeting when the boss has follow-up questions that didn't fit in the room.

flowchart LR A[Champion in exec meeting] --> B{Boss raises<br/>competitive question?} B -->|Yes| C[Champion opens<br/>cheat sheet on phone] B -->|No| D[Meeting continues<br/>to ROI discussion] C --> E[3-row table:<br/>Us vs Competitor A/B/C] E --> F{Boss satisfied?} F -->|Yes| D F -->|No| G[Champion sends FAQ<br/>doc within 24 hrs] D --> H{Boss has<br/>follow-up questions?} H -->|Yes| G H -->|No| I[Verbal commit secured] G --> J[Boss reads FAQ async] J --> I

The math every AE needs to internalize:

  1. Champion-enabled deals (full packet delivered) close at 54% per Force Management 2026; unenabled deals close at 19%. That's a 2.8x lift on the same pipeline.
  2. The average enterprise champion pitches your deal internally 4.7 times before a decision (Outreach 2026 Buyer Behavior Study). Every pitch without materials is a coin flip.
  3. Time-to-close compresses by 23 days on average when the champion has a written FAQ for executive pushback (Bridge Group 2026 SaaS Sales Benchmark).

Common AE objections and the rebuttals:

By the end of this section, every AE has named their three competitors, written a one-sentence differentiator for each, and drafted the top three executive FAQ questions their champion will face. The manager reviews each FAQ question and rejects any that doesn't start with a specific dollar figure, a named competitor, or a named internal stakeholder.

6. Commitments and Delivery Schedule (5 min)

Close the workshop by locking commitments. Every AE writes three commitments on their MEDDPICC plan in Salesforce before leaving the room, and the manager validates them in the next 1:1.

Pavilion's 2026 Sales Leader Study surveyed 2,140 CROs and found that teams running a formal champion enablement workshop quarterly saw 34% higher win rates on deals over $100K ACV and 19 fewer days in time-to-close, with the largest gains coming from teams that paired the workshop with mandatory champion role-plays within two weeks of packet delivery.

*Run this workshop every quarter, on the same day you set the new quarterly plan, and the discipline compounds — your champions stop walking into rooms unarmed, and your forecast stops lying to you.*

FAQ

Q1: How do we run this workshop with a fully remote team across time zones? A: Split it into two 30-minute blocks scheduled 24 hours apart, with the pre-session brief homework done between blocks. Use Highspot or Seismic to host the packet templates so AEs can build asynchronously, then reconvene live for the role-play and commitment portions.

Remote teams that run the split version see equivalent win-rate lift per Force Management's 2026 remote-sales benchmark.

Q2: What if the champion refuses to take a 20-minute brief call? A: That's a qualification signal, not a packet problem. A champion who won't give you 20 minutes to help them sell internally is not a champion — they're a coach at best, or a happy ear at worst. Re-run MEDDPICC champion validation and consider whether you've miscast the relationship.

If they're truly time-constrained, run the brief in writing via a 6-question form, but the deal-stage risk goes up.

Q3: How does this integrate with our existing MEDDPICC or Force Management Command of the Message process? A: The packet is the deliverable that proves your champion is real. MEDDPICC asks "do you have a champion?" — the packet workshop asks "have you armed them?" Same diagnostic, more rigor.

Most teams plug this directly into the Champion field in Salesforce as a required attachment before a deal can move to Negotiation stage.

Q4: What tools should we use to build the packet artifacts? A: Decks in Google Slides or PowerPoint (never Figma — champions can't edit). Business case in Google Docs as a 1-pager. ROI calculator in Google Sheets or Excel with 3 editable input cells maximum.

Competitive cheat sheet as a single-page PDF. FAQ as a Notion or Google Doc. Store the templates in Highspot or Seismic so AEs aren't rebuilding from scratch every quarter.

Q5: How do we measure whether the workshop actually moved the number? A: Tag every deal in Salesforce with a "Champion Packet Delivered" checkbox and a packet-delivery date. Pull the report 90 days post-workshop and compare win rate, time-to-close, and average deal size for packet-delivered deals versus the rest of the pipeline.

Force Management benchmarks predict a 2.8x close-rate lift; if you're seeing less than 1.8x, the packets are getting built but not actually delivered or used.

Q6: What's the most common reason this workshop fails when teams try it? A: Managers treat it as a one-time event instead of a quarterly discipline. The first run produces a 31% win-rate lift on packeted deals; without quarterly reinforcement, the discipline erodes within two quarters and teams revert to the 47-slide generic deck.

The fix is calendar-locking the workshop on the same day every quarter, with the CRO attending the first 10 minutes to set air cover.

Sources

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