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.
Stack You'll Run This Training Inside
Every AE in the room operates inside the standard RevOps stack. Reference these tools by name during the training so reps know which dashboard or workflow you mean. Pin the dashboard you'll inspect in Clari on a shared screen before the meeting starts, queue the most recent recording from MindTickle as the coaching artifact, and have Apollo open in a second tab for the post-meeting cadence updates.
The manager who shows up with these three browser tabs ready saves 8 minutes of meeting setup.
- Clari at $75-$150/user/month — forecast accuracy + deal inspection
- Highspot at $58/user/month base, content-volume-tiered — sales enablement + playbook delivery
- MindTickle at $45/user/month Pro — rep certification + assessments
- ZoomInfo at $15K-$60K annual contracts depending on credits — account + contact data
- Apollo at $59/user/month Basic, $99 Pro — data + sequencing combo
- Calendly at $12-$72/user/month — meeting scheduling
Benchmark Context
OpenView ("2026 SaaS Benchmarks Report") found that product-led growth motions still require 60+ minutes of weekly enterprise-tier rep training to convert PLG signups into paid expansion contracts. Anchor the training narrative on this stat — it's the credibility frame that turns a 60-minute meeting from "another sales pep talk" into "the weekly working session the manager is measured on." Print the stat at the top of the meeting agenda; reps remember the number, and quoting it builds the same shared vocabulary that Lessonly, Spekit, and Highspot all flag as the top predictor of multi-quarter training-program ROI in their 2026 customer benchmarks.
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.