Multithreading: why a single contact puts your deal at risk
Resting a complex sale on one person is a gamble. Multithreading — working several contacts in the account — protects the deal and speeds up the close.
Imagine you have spent months working a deal with a single contact and, suddenly, that person changes companies. The deal evaporates. It is one of the most common and avoidable risks in B2B sales, and the solution has a name: multithreading.
What multithreading is
Multithreading is working several contacts within the same account in parallel, instead of depending on one. It does not mean hounding the whole org chart, but having a relationship with the key decision-makers: the user, the technical evaluator, the budget owner. Several threads, one account.
Why it reduces risk
A single contact is a single point of failure: if they leave, lose interest or change roles, you lose the account. With several threads open, the deal survives those changes. Plus, knowing several decision-makers gives you a fuller view of the account and its real objections.
- Identify the account key decision-makers
- Build relationship with several, not one
- Do not hound: add value to each contact
- Arm your champion for internal meetings
- Protect the deal against people changes
It accelerates consensus
Multithreading not only protects: it accelerates. In a committee sale, internal consensus builds sooner if several decision-makers already know and value your proposal. Instead of waiting for your single contact to convince the others, you help build that consensus directly.
Starting with the right contact
Multithreading is built from a good entry point. When the lead arrives with the decision-maker identified, you have a clear first thread and can open the others from there. The quality of the initial lead makes it easier to extend the contact network within the account.