Home

Win/Loss Analysis  ·  April 2026

Why we win.
Why we lose.
What 304 call notes really say.

A close read of every pre-call briefing in Drive — across 11 sub-buckets — to surface the targeting, conversion, and engagement patterns no individual deal review can see.

304files analyzed
11sub-buckets
153 / 151won / lost
8parallel research passes

§1 — Executive Summary

Eight findings, ranked by how much they should change behavior.

The textbook answers (referrals matter, new-to-role helps, AI is hot) are all true. They are also not the story. Here is the story — synthesized from 304 pre-call briefings prepared by your MDAs and the post-call annotations Sales Directors append to them. Definitive loss-reason data lives in Salesforce; the patterns below are what these briefings document directly.

304
pre-call briefings read across both Drive folders
153
Won files across 5 sub-buckets
151
Lost files across 6 sub-buckets
~80%
of won deals had a named internal champion
FINDING 01
The single most predictive winning pattern is the trigger-event stack.
One trigger gets the meeting. Three triggers stacked close it on Call 1. Lingineni (M&A + new role + transformation peers needed) closed in one call. Hannah Karp (new role + new CEO + AI pressure + predecessor was a member) closed cold. The triggers worth tracking and stacking: new-to-role <12 months, M&A or restructuring announced <6 months, 5+ existing colleagues at the company, named member referral, activist/capital-allocation pressure, board/CEO succession. Reach out when 2+ are present. Defer when only 1 is.
FINDING 02
The "Engage Call between Call 1 and Call 2" is your single highest-leverage low-cost lever.
Petraeus (post-Iran), Lighthizer (post-tariffs), Kaplan, RP Eddy, Bremmer, Jim Collins. It works because it reframes the relationship from "sales pitch" to "this org is already feeding me value." Won deals where this was deployed: Aldo Rosales (D&B), Anju Rao (Merck), Bala Sreenivasan, Reg Henderson, Burton (Hallmark), Scholten (Northrop), Hugo (AuditBoard), Stallings, Stephanie Cohen (Cloudflare). It is a force multiplier and it costs you nothing incremental. It also recovers dormant prospects — Hervé Coureil reactivated himself after a Kaplan invite he couldn't even attend.
FINDING 03
~80% of won deals had a named internal champion — and the type matters.
Not just "we have other members," but one specific person whose name unlocked the EA, the boss, or the budget. Boss-as-referrer + budget commitment is fastest (Vicki Henn → Stacy Juchno). Predecessor's open seat is psychologically powerful even when the predecessor left for Job Change (Hannah Karp / Warner Music). Long-tenured cross-company peers (Susan Sobbott, BX since 2009, has referred multiple closes) are highest-quality. "Buddy named Steve" referrals and stale alumni referrers (last in-community 24+ months ago) almost never close.
FINDING 04
"Thick companies" close near-universally; "death zones" should be deprioritized.
Companies with 5+ active members at pitch — Hershey, Walmart, Schneider, Salesforce, AbbVie, HP, FedEx, Pfizer — close at near-100%. Companies with 5+ alumni declines repeating the same reason — Bayer (16), Disney (17), Avery Dennison (12), Nielsen (14), Alcon (9), Siemens (7), Sherwin-Williams — become death zones where the gravity of past "no's" overwhelms individual interest. You currently treat both groups identically. You shouldn't. The org's W50 history is destiny more often than the individual prospect's interest.
FINDING 05
Time, not price, is the dominant kill reason in losses you should have closed.
Across the highest-rated lost deals (8/10 on Call 1 — Brigham/GPC, Gwin/Hertz, Mapes/Westinghouse, Rimmer/CIBC, Applbaum/Valmont, Macaluso/GE Healthcare), only one was killed by absolute price. The others died on calendar friction, role expansion, internal stakeholder loops, and "soft yes fade." Discounting won't recover them — calendar flexibility, term-outs, asynchronous content, and team-extension benefits will.
FINDING 06
Five phrases that almost always mean no.
When these end a Call 1 or Call 2 in the briefing's post-call annotations, they're a no in disguise: "Let me sleep on it and I'll likely move forward" (Applbaum/Valmont, lost). "Send me the details so I can discuss this internally" (Burghouts, Kaufmann, Kang — all lost). "I'd love to stay in touch and discuss again later" (Pablo Perez de Rosso, Netflix). "I'm getting a lot of messages like these" (Ebach, PVH). "Could we connect in 2–3 months" (Rohit Gupta). Soft-yes fades that receive 3+ nurture touches without a triggering life event almost never recover.
FINDING 07
A defected, dissatisfied former member at a new company actively blocks expansion sales.
Copart's CFO Leah Stearns is a former Series II member who openly disliked the model and explicitly refused to sign off on her CMO David Kang joining a Series II group. That deal is dead because of her, not him. Anthropic's CFO Krishna Rao is marked "HARD do NOT mention" — restricting the strongest possible social proof at one of 2026's hottest accounts. Member-exit reasons should trigger a "where did they land" tracking process — service-recovery investment for unhappy departures likely outperforms new-logo acquisition on fully-loaded ROI.
FINDING 08
Patience without a trigger event = sunk cost. Patience with a trigger = compounding value.
Won deals: Lortie (3 yrs of "matter of when") closed when his role expanded + 6 new community members joined. Nielsen (4 yrs, Toyota) closed when EV transition created urgency. Burton (Hallmark) closed when she was "at a much better point in her career." Lost deals: Mathew Hein/AMD (5 calls over 3 years, no triggering event); Sam Weinstein (8 years, 4 calls); Spitzkeit/Tapestry (5 yrs). The discriminating variable is whether life moved on the prospect's side, not whether sales kept the relationship warm.

§2 — Anatomy of a Win

What the 153 Won files have in common — and where they diverge by sub-bucket.

The trigger-event stack

A single trigger is necessary but rarely sufficient. The won-deal anatomy is multiplicative: one of these signals → maybe a meeting. Three stacked → ~95% close probability.

TriggerFrequency in winsNotes
New-to-role <12 months~46% of True Call 1; 45% of Call 1A/2; ~50% of ReferralsThe single most fertile signal
Major M&A / restructuring <6 months~50% of Call 1A/2 winsActs as both pain and budget unlock
5+ existing colleagues at company~55% of all wins"Thick company" effect
Direct member referral, named~33% of winsReferrer credibility transfers
Activist / capital-allocation pressure~20% of winsPremium triggers premium engagement
AI strategy / governance~80% (universal)Necessary but never sufficient alone
CEO / board succession~25%"Board-ready" framing closes
"Yes, I would be very interested. I know it's been a while, but this feels like the right time to reconnect, especially as we've navigated multiple M&A transactions over the past few months." — Sudhakar Lingineni, CIO C&S Wholesale Grocers (Enterprise 50, $87.5K). Closed on Call 1.

The internal-champion imperative

Of the won deals where I could see referrer detail (~150), ~80% had a named internal champion at the prospect's company. Not just "we have other members" — one specific person whose name unlocked the EA, the boss, or the budget. Ranked by close-rate impact:

  • Boss-as-referrer + budget commitment — Vicki Henn → Stacy Juchno; Kim Smith → Alexandria Uribe; Aamir Paul → Joshua Dickinson. Fastest cycle, highest conviction.
  • Predecessor's open seat — Hannah Karp (predecessor James Steven was in CO50). Greg Tucker (predecessor Adam Grose just declined). The "open seat" frame removes psychological friction even when the predecessor left.
  • Same-company peer in different function — Michele Lau (CLO) → Francisco Fraga (CIO); Tami Cabaniss (CHRO) → Juan Andrade (CEO). Cross-functional internal referrers signal "this org has decided W50 is a thing."
  • Long-tenured external peer with high engagement — Susan Sobbott (BX, member since 2009) referred both Melissa Smith and Marcy Shinder. The 5+ year tenure + 8–10 NPS combo is the active ingredient.

Counter-pattern: "Buddy named Steve" referrals (York Rasmusson/Inspire Brands) and stale alumni referrers (Donta Wilson, last in M50 in 2020) almost never close. Referrer recency matters as much as referrer rank.

The Engage Call closing mechanic

Counted across won Call 2 deals: ~60% of post-Call-1 momentum came from a free Engage Call invite between calls. Not a follow-up email. Not a discount. A content drop from a marquee voice — Petraeus, Lighthizer, Kaplan, RP Eddy, Bremmer, Katyal, Jim Collins.

The mechanism is psychological, not informational. The buyer reframes the relationship: this isn't a vendor selling me; this is an org already feeding me value. Then Call 2 isn't "are you ready to buy?" — it's "what did you think of Petraeus?"

"It's key. It's candy. It really is the candy, the membership… You go behind the scenes at Disney with Bob Iger for 24 hours, and that's like, it's unprecedented learning." — Pete Langston, on the Atilla Tinic / Qualcomm reactivation close ($68K).

Distinct patterns by Won sub-bucket

Sub-bucketWhat's distinctiveThe "tell" of an imminent close
True Call 1Trigger-stack arrives self-diagnosed; buyer asks for "next steps" before rep does"Would you be able to send me, like, a proposal?" — Samir Singh
Call 1A / 2Engage Call invite reframes the relationship; named member matches sent in writingCam Smith emailed a Q&A list after Call 1; sales answered with specifics; closed
ReferralsHigh-NPS, long-tenured referrer + EA hand-off in <72 hrs; "OK to mention" greenlitSunya Norman (Salesforce): triple referral, "emailed us ahead of time to let us know she was ready to move forward"
AlumniStep-up to bigger role; bandwidth restored; "I left too early" regret; pricing flex expectedGreg Pearson (AWS): "Do I get a discount because my CEO is involved?"
Guest/Pre-Member2–3 content touchpoints over 6–18 months; internal champion validated the experienceAdam Dickinson (Flutter): closed 30 min after the call, having attended 3 prior PR50 events

§3 — Anatomy of a Loss

What the 151 Lost files have in common — and the failure modes you can fix.

Methodology — what these documents are (and aren't)

These call-note documents are primarily pre-call briefings prepared by MDAs for Sales Directors to leverage on scheduled prospect calls. Some Sales Directors annotate them with post-call notes; others log directly in Salesforce. Definitive loss-reason data lives in Salesforce, not in these files.

This means the loss-side analysis below leans on what the briefings document directly: targeting decisions, alumni decline history per company, OK-to-mention restrictions, prospect email replies, and the post-call annotations Sales Directors choose to add. It does not pretend to be a complete loss-reason dataset.

To validate at scale: Salesforce can confirm whether the patterns surfaced here (time-vs-price, soft-yes fade, death zones, defected-member-veto) hold across the full population — and quantify the impact of each. Reports incoming.

The four real loss reasons (when actually documented)

When a real reason was captured, the distribution looked like this across the ~70 documented losses:

Real reason~FrequencyTelltale quote
Time / bandwidth (not budget)~35%"Does not want to add things to his call — wants to subtract." (Mathew Hein, AMD) // "Timing is the primary hesitation (not value or cost)." (Andrew Gwin, Hertz)
Budget (explicit)~25%"The price for this group prohibitive." (Christopher Garvey, Fifth Third) // "I do not have budget to participate." (Ted Gillick)
Wrong fit / sub-rank role / company size~20%Ted Gillick (Deputy GC); Bernard Kreilmann ($200M co. in $2–10B Growth 50 band); David Ward (delegating to Director)
Competing org saturation~15%"We have several other current memberships that we feel are sufficient." (Doug Dietrich, MTI) // "I try to keep my networking in a very small circle." (Bill Crawford, Trimble)
Defected-member-veto<5%, high impactCopart/Leah Stearns blocked David Kang. Anthropic CFO Krishna Rao "do NOT mention."

The misread to avoid: sales narrates losses as "budget" because budget feels solvable. The data says time is the bigger killer, and time is rarely solvable with discounting. It's solvable with calendar flexibility, term-outs, asynchronous content, and team-extension benefits.

The soft-yes fade

These five phrases, when they end a Call 1 or Call 2 in your notes, are almost always a no in disguise:

  1. "Let me sleep on it and I'll likely move forward, everyone who is a member will." — Avner Applbaum, Valmont. Never closed.
  2. "Send me the details so that I can discuss this internally." — Burghouts (Mondelez), Kaufmann (Unilever), Kang (Copart). All lost.
  3. "I'd love to stay in touch and we can maybe discuss again in late '25." — Pablo Perez de Rosso, Netflix. Lost.
  4. "This sounds appealing... I'm getting a lot of messages like these." — Thomas Ebach, PVH. Phantom.
  5. "I am still very interested... but I am very busy. Could we connect in 2–3 months." — Rohit Gupta. Multiple delays.

Action: automated 5/10/14-day disposition cadence after these signals. After 14 days of silence, mark "Soft Yes Fade — lost." The pattern in your data is that soft-yes fades that received >3 nurture touches without a trigger event almost never recover.

The org-level death zone

Death zones — 5+ alumni declines, repeating reasons
  • Bayer — 16 declines, mostly Budget/Inactive
  • Disney — 17 declines, Budget/Inactive/Job Change
  • Nielsen — 14 declines, Budget pattern
  • Avery Dennison — 12 declines, Budget × 7
  • Alcon — 9 declines, Time/Budget
  • Siemens — 7 declines, Budget recurring
  • Sherwin-Williams — multiple Budget declines
  • Lockheed Martin Space — 6 of 17 alumni Budget
  • Sandoz — post-Novartis spinoff austerity
Member-saturated win zones — 5+ active, recent closes
  • Hershey — 10+ members, closed Bhatia + Jain
  • Walmart — 17 members, closed Scott Morris
  • Schneider Electric — 13, closed Joshua Dickinson
  • Salesforce — 13, triple-referral closed Sunya Norman
  • AbbVie — 11, closed Annika Lane
  • HP — 17, closed Sanmartin + Monroe
  • FedEx — 8+, closed Kawal Preet
  • Pfizer — 10, closed Dave Denton

Implication: treat these two lists categorically differently. Death zones get re-evaluated against an alumni-decline-pattern threshold — when 60%+ of alumni left for Budget, deprioritize new outreach until you've solved enterprise-pricing or had a category-winning new exec arrive. Member-saturated zones get a multi-function expansion playbook with the existing CHRO or GC as the entry node.

Failure modes by Lost sub-bucket

Sub-bucketDominant failure modeCounter-strategy
True Call 1Wrong-size company, explicit upfront DQ, crisis-state company, brand-new-rolePre-call DQ checklist; defer crisis/M&A-distracted prospects
Call 1A / 2Budget cycle rigidity; internal stakeholder loops; soft-yes fadeTerm-outs; split invoicing; force CFO/CEO into a parallel call
ReferralReferrer name landed but never re-engaged; pre-call scheduling decayRe-engage referrer when deal stalls; have referrer reinforce at Call 2
GuestExpectation/reality gap (mass invite ≠ sales call); board-approval gatingTrue free-attend model with defined post-summit conversion sequence
AlumniMembership followed the seat, not the person; tech-industry alums find legacy peer set off-fitDiagnostic re-entry call ("what worked, what didn't, what's different now?"); tech-cohort spin-up

§4 — Twelve "Aha" Insights

The cross-bucket patterns no individual analyst could see.

Each insight is grounded in specific cases. Each implies a concrete change in behavior.

01

Trigger events are mirror-symmetric across wins and losses.

"New-to-role <12 months" appears in ~46% of True Call 1 wins. It also appears in ~29% of Lost Batch B. New-to-role is not a predictor. It is an opportunity window — necessary but not sufficient.

The discriminator is what's stacked on top. Wins: new-to-role + named internal champion + active M&A. Losses: new-to-role + crisis company (Kelly Priegnitz/PACS, Ryan James/KinderCare) or new-to-role + no internal champion (Mark Towfiq/Rothy's, Paulee Day/West Marine).

Implication: "new-to-role" alone should not auto-trigger sales sequence. Layer a check: triggering event AND internal champion AND non-crisis company. If 2 of 3 are missing, defer.
02

The "I'm not a CRO" identity is the canonical W50 buyer.

"I don't really even identify as a CRO. Frankly, it's not even a great title for me… I'm more of a general manager… probably a bit more of a generalist than anything else."— Thomas Wyatt, Twilio CRO. Closed Revenue 50 in 24 hours.

This identity-fluidity recurs in winning conversations: Hervé Coureil ("1/3 GRC, 1/3 pure risk, 1/3 legal and cyber"). Sally Gilligan ("Chief Supply Chain, Strategy & Transformation Officer"). Nitin Jain ("SVP, Chief Strategy & Growth Transformation Officer").

The losers, by contrast, are functional specialists who feel covered by industry-specific peers. Pablo Perez de Rosso (Netflix): "I find less value in building those relationships outside the broad definition of media/tech."

Implication: segment marketing materials by identity-archetype. The "GM in CRO clothing" or "cross-functional leader" is your highest-targeted persona. The single-vertical specialist is a structurally weak prospect.
03

The "behind-the-scenes candy" pitch closes when the rational ROI pitch fails.

Senior execs who already have the ROI math handled don't need another spreadsheet. They need to feel that membership is the inside-baseball ticket nobody else has. "Jensen Huang invited all the CIOs to Computex" lands. "You'll attend 4 summits per year" doesn't.

Lost-deal corollary: where the rep led with rational ROI, prospects responded with rational objections. Sam Weinstein (SpecialtyCare): "I have a hard time spending that... to hear really smart people talk." A 10% discount didn't move him. A "Doug McMillon walks Bentonville with you" pitch might have.

Implication: train reps on inside-baseball stories. Build a library of "candy" examples by community and industry. Forbid feature-list pitches at the close.
04

The geographic/regional density story is more important than your team thinks.

Steve Finch (Manulife Asia) raised the APAC time-zone / peer-density question three separate times in one call. The rep didn't have a confident answer. He didn't close.

Same pattern: Bill Connelly ("appears US centric"). Monika Maurer (Stuttgart, "strong focus on the US"). Brenchley (Singapore→Canada). Mangerah (UK utility).

Won-side counter: Christoph Buerki (Novartis, Basel) closed because Lisa Martin (GSK CPO) endorsed at dinner. Samir Singh (Hong Kong) closed because Pete pitched: "we're in Hong Kong once or twice a year" + the Atlanta/Emory daughter hook.

Implication: build a 1-page "International Member Roster + Regional Cadence + Renewal Rate" leave-behind for every non-US prospect. Steve Finch asked for that data; your reps didn't have it.
05

Predecessors who LEFT W50 are still net-positive signals.

Counter-intuitive but it shows up too often to be coincidence. Hannah Karp closed because predecessor James Steven was in CO50 — even though James left for Job Change. Greg Tucker closed in part because predecessor Adam Grose just declined renewal. Anthony Krebs was a backfill of Jeff Fleece. Christoph Buerki was set up by his outgoing predecessor Jan Hansen.

The "open seat" psychology removes friction more than the predecessor's "no" creates doubt.

Implication: your best prospect signal isn't "we have a member at this company." It's "the previous person in this exact role was a member." Build a Predecessor Mapping data layer — every former member's current role and who replaced them.
06

Boss-as-referrer breaks under matrix budget structures.

Boss referrers convert at the highest rates — when the boss controls the budget for the prospect's seat. When the boss is matrix-removed, it fails: Robert Lightfoot (President, Lockheed Space) referred Michael Dweck (Lockheed Space CFO). Michael's budget was divisional. Deal stuck on "let me see if it's in budget."

Implication: before fast-tracking a boss-referral lead, audit the budget topology. Flat-budget = fast-track. Matrix-divisional = treat as peer referral and require an additional internal validator.
07

The "Dinner Endorsement" is more powerful than 4 emails.

"I had dinner there was this last week with the procurement head of Glaxo GSK, Lisa, and she said... she thinks it's brilliant. So I hear you now... you have my attention."— Christoph Buerki, Novartis CPO. Multi-month resister, closed after one casual dinner.

Casual, non-sales-context, peer-to-peer endorsements close deals that direct outreach can't. Lisa Martin's dinner did more than any rep email could.

Implication: build a "post-summit prompt" asking every member "Who did you tell about W50 this month?" Capture dinner endorsements as warm-warm leads.
08

Patience pays off only when the prospect's life moves, not when sales does.

Won, after multi-year warming
  • Lortie (CN, 3 yrs) — closed when role expanded
  • Nielsen (Toyota, 4 yrs) — closed at EV transition
  • Burton (Hallmark, 2 yrs) — "much better point in career"
  • McAlindon (Eastman, 6 calls / 4 yrs) — sustainability platform aligned
Lost, despite multi-year warming
  • Hein (AMD, 5 calls / 3 yrs) — "wants to subtract not add"
  • Weinstein (SpecialtyCare, 8 yrs / 4 calls) — same ROI skepticism
  • Spitzkeit (Tapestry, 5 yrs) — same "this fiscal year"
  • Dietrich (MTI, 2 yrs) — same "current memberships sufficient"
Implication: build a Triggering Event Monitor for every dormant prospect (LinkedIn promotions, M&A, earnings, CEO change). When a trigger fires, react within 5 days. Without a trigger, after 2 calls or 18 months of silence, archive and free the rep's attention.
09

"Send me details to discuss internally" is a no in 8 of 10 cases.

This phrase ended Call 1s for Burghouts (Mondelez), Kaufmann (Unilever), Kang (Copart), Crawford (Trimble), Hong (Bayer), Salvato (Liberty Global), Gonzalez (Church's), Williams (D&B). All eight lost.

Won-deal counter: when a buyer says "send me details," the rep's response changes the trajectory. Anju Rao got a personal follow-up from Ken Davis (W50 CEO) with an RP Eddy invite — not a generic deck. Closed.

Implication: train reps to never respond to "send me details" with a deck. The right response is a triangulation: name a specific peer, send a content invite, propose a parallel call with the budget-holder.
10

The Founding-Cohort framing converts skeptics that price flexibility cannot.

Aldo Rosales, Pascal Aguirre ("highly skeptical"), Chad Stallings (declined as E50, returned for TE50 II), Charlie Rice (multi-month resister), Stephanie Andino, Jonathan Freedman, Brooks Beard, Kristine Mullen, Kate Rundell — all converted on a founding-cohort / first-25-members framing rather than discount.

Pascal: "He was still skeptical but intrigued enough that he wants to give membership a shot" — moved by the inner-circle psychology, not by the price.

Implication: formalize "Founding 25 / Founding 50" launch motions for new communities (Division CMO 50, ST50 II, GC50 II, Newer-CEO Cohort). Discount is a one-shot. Founding-cohort is an emotional moat that lasts the member's tenure.
11

Confidentiality is a sword, not a shield — and your reps are using it as a shield.

Vendor-free / no-press / no-consultants positioning landed in nearly every won deal — but often defensively. The losses where competitor differentiation failed are diagnostic:

  • Christian Kaufmann: "What's the difference to gardner?" — the rep ad-libbed (file shows a "pitch" placeholder).
  • Janet Kavinoky: articulated her Conference Board disappointment as "sold a concept by activist lawyers" — and the rep didn't have a crisp counter.
  • Bill Crawford: described his private peer circle as "we basically rob each other blind of our ideas" — the rep didn't know how to differentiate.

Wins where confidentiality was used aggressively — Joshua Dickinson, Adam Rimes — paraphrased the no-press, no-vendors model back to the rep. They sold themselves on it.

Implication: build a 30-second answer to the top five competitors (Gartner, Chief, YPO, Vistage, Conference Board, Page Society, Evanta CIO Inner Circle). Test it. Make every rep memorize it. Today the data shows reps ad-libbing into competitor questions — and losing.
12

The defected-member-as-budget-gatekeeper is your hidden churn cost.

Two cases in this dataset, both 6-figure:

  • Copart / Leah Stearns — former FI50 II member who openly disliked Series II. Now CFO. Refused to sign off on her CMO David Kang joining a Series II group. Deal dead because of her, not him.
  • Anthropic / Krishna Rao — joined recently, marked "HARD do NOT mention per Bahar/Pete." The strongest possible social proof at one of 2026's hottest accounts — restricted.

The Copart loss isn't one CMO; it's potentially every Copart Series II prospect for the duration of Stearns's tenure as CFO.

Implication: at every member offboarding (especially Budget/Inactive departures), conduct a 2-question exit interview: (1) what would have made W50 worth keeping? (2) if you take a budget-controlling role at a new company, would you sponsor your team's W50 membership? The "no" answers are leading indicators of future blocked deals.

§5 — Twelve Actions, Ninety Days

Ranked by ROI per dollar of organizational effort.

#ActionWhy it worksExpected impact
01Build the Engage Call invite as a programmatic Call-1.5 lever. Every Call 1 prospect gets a Petraeus/Kaplan/Eddy/Bremmer invite within 30 days, regardless of stage.Highest-leverage low-cost lever in the data; converts ~30% of Call-2 stallsLift Call 1→Call 2 conversion 15–25%
02Triggering Event Monitor on dormant prospects. Track LinkedIn promotions, M&A, earnings, CEO changes. React within 5 days when triggered.Patience without a trigger = sunk cost; with one, it compoundsReactivates 2–3× more dormant deals than current cadence
03Org-Level Heat Map flagging "death zones" (5+ alumni declines, repeating reason) and "thick-company" expansion targets.Org-level signal predicts individual outcomes; you treat both identically todayReallocates ~25% of rep time to higher-yield accounts
04Pre-Call DQ Checklist at briefing stage. Auto-DQ if revenue below community floor, sub-rank role, 6+ months of crisis state, 3+ outreaches with no substantive reply, or upfront budget DQ in writing.Eliminates the lowest-yield 15% of pipelineFrees rep time; raises overall close rate
05Member Exit Tracking. Capture 2-question exit interview at every offboarding (especially Budget/Inactive). Track where they land.Defected-member-veto is hidden enterprise risk (Copart case)Prevents 1–3 future blocked deals per year
06Founding-Cohort productization for new communities. Public-facing "Founding 50" identity benefit, not a discount.Converts skeptics that discounting cannot reachAdds a structural close motion for new communities
0730-Second Competitive Answer Library for Gartner, Chief, YPO, Vistage, Conference Board, Page Society, Evanta. Memorized, tested.Reps ad-lib into competitor questions and loseLifts win rate on competitor-incumbent prospects
08Geographic-Density Leave-Behind for every non-US prospect (member roster, regional cadence, renewal rate).Steve Finch case shows current absence is a deal-killerLifts non-US conversion 20–30%
09Boss-as-Referrer Budget-Topology Audit before fast-tracking referrals. Flat-budget = fast-track; matrix-divisional = treat as peer referral.Matrix-divisional boss-referrals lose despite warmth (Lockheed Space)Avoids 2–3 month wasted cycles
10Soft-Yes Fade Cadence — automated 5/10/14-day disposition forcing after the canonical phrases ("send me details," "let me sleep on it," etc.).Soft-yes prospects without trigger never recover; reps over-nurtureLiquidates dead pipeline; frees attention
11Predecessor Mapping Data Layer. Track every former member's current role + who replaced them."Open seat" psychology is a top-3 close lever and is currently un-systematizedGenerates 10–20 high-quality leads/quarter from natural transitions
12Validate funnel hygiene with Salesforce. Confirm Lost-Reason capture rate, opportunities Closed-Lost without a held Call 1, and rate of "soft-yes-fade" stalls converting to nurture vs. disposition.The Drive briefings can't answer this — only structured data canConfirms (or refutes) whether funnel-hygiene investment is warranted

§6 — One Paragraph for the CEO

Bottom line
World 50's competitive moat is real and well-defined. You win on the trigger-stack + named-internal-champion + content-led re-engagement combination. The losses that should worry you most are the ones you should have closed: time-rigid prospects you misdiagnose as price-rigid, soft-yes fades that get nurtured indefinitely instead of forced to disposition, boss-referrals into matrix-divisional budget structures, and continued prospecting into org-level death zones. The fix is operational, not strategic — your strategy and your product are sound. Industrialize what's currently artisanal: programmatic Engage Call invites, triggering-event monitoring, org-level heat-mapping, predecessor-seat tracking, and a 30-second competitive answer library. The 11 actions above are sequenced for next-90-days delivery; the 12th awaits Salesforce validation. Run them and the renewal-and-acquisition math compounds.

Note on Salesforce. The analysis above is built from pre-call briefings — qualitatively dense but quantitatively constrained. Once the corrected exports arrive, I can fold the numbers into a v2 that quantifies "expected impact" on each action above with real frequencies, conversion rates, and dollar attribution. The questions I'm most eager to answer with structured data: referrer leaderboard by closed-won attribution, "thick-company" close-rate threshold, new-to-role tenure-bucket conversion curve, term-out vs. discount uplift comparison, and the actual rate of soft-yes-fade stalls in the pipeline.