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ENTRY TYPE · framework

Champion builder

Last updated 2026-05-02 RevOps

A champion is an internal advocate inside the buying organization who sells your solution when you are not in the room. They are not the economic buyer and not the user. A real champion has personal motivation tied to the project’s success, political capital to spend, and the access to spend it. Without one, complex deals do not close on time.

The three tests of a real champion

Most reps mistake a friendly contact for a champion. Apply three tests before you put “Champion: green” in CRM:

  1. Power. Do they have the standing to influence the economic buyer? A junior analyst who likes the demo is not a champion.
  2. Vested interest. Will their career, scope, or status improve if this project succeeds? A neutral evaluator is not a champion.
  3. Action. Have they done something for you that cost them political capital? Sent an internal email, set up a meeting with their boss, shared an internal document, defended you in a committee?

If any test is no, they are a coach or a fan, not a champion. Keep working.

How to develop one

Champions are made, not found. The progression looks like:

StageBehaviorSignal
1. CoachAnswers your questionsInternal context flows to you
2. MobilizerSets up meetings on your behalfTheir calendar holds your deal
3. ChampionDefends you when you are absentThey reframe objections themselves
4. Co-conspiratorCo-authors the business case with youThey send you their CFO’s pushback before you ask

Each stage requires that you give before you ask: tailored research, a prepared internal narrative, slides they can present without you, an answer to the objection their VP will raise.

What to give your champion

The single highest-leverage artifact is a one-page internal business case the champion can forward without editing. It should include the metric, the dollar impact, the 12-month risk of inaction, and a specific 30-day pilot scope. If they have to rewrite it, you have not done your job.

A close second is rehearsing the meeting with the economic buyer. Walk through the three objections most likely to come up and the answer to each. A champion who fumbles in front of their CFO loses faith in your product and in themselves.

Common pitfalls

  • Single-threading. One champion is fragile. Champions get reorged, fired, or change their mind. Develop two, ideally on different teams.
  • Confusing access with advocacy. A friendly contact who takes your calls but never escalates is not a champion. Test their willingness to act.
  • Outsourcing the deal to the champion. They cannot win it for you. They can only multiply your access. The AE still owns the strategy and the close.
  • No champion test before forecast Commit. If the C in MEDDDPICC is yellow, the deal is not Commit. Coach to the test.
  • MEDDDPICC — the qualification framework where champion lives
  • Discovery call — where champion identification starts
  • BANT vs MEDIC — frameworks that include champion as a field
  • Gong — call analytics that surface who is talking and who is silent