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The "Find a Champion" quadrant of the Passion/Evidence matrix reveals a critical truth: market data alone is insufficient. Without a person or team who passionately wants to own the initiative, it will wither from a lack of internal advocacy, budget defense, and the sheer willpower needed to succeed.

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When pitching new marketing initiatives, supplement ROI projections with research demonstrating a clear audience need for the content. Framing the project as a valuable service to the customer, rather than just another marketing tactic, is a more powerful way to gain internal support.

A founder's deep, intrinsic passion for their company's mission is critical for long-term success. Even with a sound business model, a lack of genuine care leads to burnout and failure when challenges arise. Leaders cannot sustain success in areas they consider a distraction from their "real" passion, like AGI research versus product monetization.

The difficulty of enterprise procurement is a feature, not a bug. A champion will only expend the immense internal effort to push a deal through if your solution directly unblocks a critical, unavoidable project on their to-do list. Your vision alone is not enough to motivate them.

In a crowded market, a leader who lives and breathes the business, acting as a charismatic ambassador, can be the deciding factor in its success. Visionary leadership that inspires the team and the market is crucial. A technically superior product can fail under a flat, uninspiring leader.

A simple 2x2 framework can clarify project strategy. Plot ideas on axes of internal team passion and external market evidence. This creates four quadrants: Kill (low/low), Find a Champion (low passion/high evidence), Sandbox (high passion/low evidence), and Scale (high/high), providing a clear path for each initiative.

A single internal advocate can be easily dismissed by others as just "the person who likes that vendor." However, cultivating three or more champions from different parts of the business fundamentally changes the dynamic. This transforms individual preference into organizational consensus, making your solution the clear and accepted choice.

Managers cannot just be soldiers executing orders. If you don't truly believe in a strategy, you cannot effectively inspire your team. You must engage leadership to find an angle you can genuinely support or decompose the idea into testable hypotheses you can commit to.

The GM of Spiral felt demotivated and his product stagnated because he didn't personally use it or believe in its vision. The breakthrough came when he pivoted to solve a problem he genuinely cared about—making AI a tool for better thinking, not just faster content production.

The traditional definition of a champion (power, influence, vested interest) is incomplete. The most critical, and often overlooked, criterion is their proven willingness to actively sell on your behalf when you are not present. Without evidence of them taking action, you don't have a champion, regardless of their position.

You cannot directly instill passion in your team. Passion emerges from a genuine belief that a goal is both attainable and worthwhile. As with Roger Bannister breaking the 4-minute mile, a leader's job is to first build that foundational belief through evidence, stories, and a clear plan. Only then can authentic passion ignite.