The Skyp Newsletter
Insights, tips, and strategies for modern AI-powered outreach and sales automation
Insights, tips, and strategies for modern AI-powered outreach and sales automation
You did everything right. You ran good discovery. You built real rapport. You got a genuine believer inside the account. And then you handed the deal to someone who couldn't explain it without you in the room.
That's the Champion Without Power problem. And it's more common than a bad product or a bad pitch.
Why champions fail upward
Your champion understands the value. But their boss doesn't have your context, didn't feel the pain the same way, and has a different job to protect.
When your champion tries to sell internally, they usually do one of three things:
Over-explain the features (because that's what they remember)
Under-explain the business case (because that felt obvious to them)
Cave at the first objection (because they don't have the counter)
None of this is their fault. You didn't give them the tools.
The champion's real job is one conversation
Not a presentation. Not a business case doc. One Slack message, or one sentence in a leadership meeting.
If your champion can't explain your value in a single message their boss will actually read, the deal is already at risk.
Rule: If you can't write your champion's Slack message for them, your positioning isn't done.
The Champion Enablement Stack
Three things your champion needs before you leave any call:
The one-line pitch Not your positioning statement. The version that makes sense to someone who wasn't in your discovery calls. Format: "[Product] helps [persona] [do specific thing] — we're working with [champion's name] on [specific use case]." Test: Can someone forward this without editing it?
The objection they'll face — and the answer Every deal has a predictable blocker. Usually one of:
"We already have something for that."
"Is this the right time?"
"What's the ROI?"
"Legal/security will slow this down."
Don't wait for your champion to discover it on their own. Name it explicitly: "The most common pushback you'll get is X. Here's how other teams have answered it."
The risk-reduction language Their boss isn't buying your product. They're approving a decision — and decisions carry risk. The language that unlocks approval isn't about value. It's about safety:
"We can start with one team before rolling it out."
"There's a defined scope, no long implementation."
"The downside of trying this is [small]. The downside of not trying it is [large]."
Rule: A safer decision beats a better product. Always write the risk-reduction framing before your champion goes to their next internal meeting.
The signal your champion is under-equipped
Watch for these in your follow-up calls:
"I shared it and they want to think about it" — no hook, no urgency
"They liked it but aren't sure it's the right time" — no second-order pain
"I'm waiting to find the right moment to bring it up" — no internal pitch at all
Any of these means the deal has stalled inside the account. Not because the buyer said no — because your champion ran out of words.
The fix isn't more follow-up. It's better ammunition.
Most reps respond to stalled deals by adding another touchpoint. "Just checking in." "Wanted to circle back." "Let me know if there's anything I can do."
That's asking your champion to do the work without giving them the tools.
Instead, send one thing:
A short reframe they can paste
A one-sentence answer to the objection you know is coming
A "here's what other teams did" example that makes the decision feel less risky
The best sales reps aren't better closers. They're better ghost-writers for the people selling on their behalf.
Where Skyp fits
If your GTM messaging is sharp, your champion doesn't have to translate it. When your outreach is built around a specific pain, a clear consequence, and a tight offer — your champion already has the language. They heard it. They believed it. They can repeat it. Skyp helps you build outbound that doesn't just open doors — it gives the people inside the account something to work with. Because the deal doesn't close when your buyer says yes. It closes when their boss does.
Join thousands of sales teams using AI-powered email outreach to drive consistent, measurable results.
Get a Demo