There are moments in a sales cycle when the stakeholder landscape shifts. New people arrive, priorities change, and the picture you thought you understood becomes blurred. One team faced this recently and turned to the Value Pyramid to get their bearings again.
They had already built some initial relationships inside the account, which meant they weren’t starting from zero. Those early conversations gave them clues about how the business was evolving. With that context, they drafted an initial version of the Value Pyramid and used it to form a view of what the company’s new goals might be.
This first version was not meant to be perfect. Its purpose was to give the Economic Buyer something concrete to react to. By walking in with a thoughtful hypothesis, the team showed genuine interest in understanding the customer’s world. They kept the invitation open and light, saying that it would be helpful to spend some time exploring it together, but only if the Economic Buyer felt it was worthwhile.
Creating a Value Pyramid is never wasted effort. Even if you take a swing and miss, you discover where your assumptions went off track. That clarity is valuable because it brings you closer to strategic alignment. Alignment is the real job of the Value Pyramid. It creates a shared view of what matters, how value is created, and where your solution fits.
This approach also helps justify your time with the Economic Buyer. It demonstrates preparation, curiosity, and respect for their goals. Once you earn that trust, the Economic Buyer can unlock access to other parts of the organisation. They help you see the broader network of stakeholders and guide you to the people and conversations that move the deal forward.
A Value Pyramid will not close a deal on its own. It does, however, give you a structured way to understand a changing business and a meaningful reason to engage senior leaders. When you use it well, it becomes a reliable tool for navigating complexity and building stronger executive sponsorship.