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A prospect's unwillingness to introduce you to other decision-makers or share proprietary information (even under an NDA) is a definitive red flag. These are not signs of a slow deal, but of a dead one. It indicates a lack of serious commitment, and you should disengage to reinvest your time elsewhere.

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Persisting with prospects who are not fully committed, even if they meet some criteria, is a sacrifice of your integrity. Taking their money when you know you cannot deliver optimal results undermines your value and guarantees a poor outcome for both parties.

When a deal goes cold, send a message acknowledging their busy schedule and telling them not to worry about replying. This removes the pressure to respond while giving you permission to continue providing value through follow-ups. It reframes the interaction from pestering to supportive, keeping the door open.

Two clear red flags indicate a deal is at risk: relying on a single contact and having a close date not tied to a specific buyer deadline. To de-risk a deal, sales reps must engage multiple stakeholders (multi-threading) and anchor the timeline to the buyer's critical business needs.

To avoid stalled deals, continuously test the prospect's engagement. If a stakeholder consistently fails to meet small commitments—like providing requested information on time—it is a strong indicator that the deal is not a priority for them and is at high risk of stalling.

A single contact qualifying out an offer does not mean the entire account is a dead end. In B2B deals with large buying groups, other stakeholders may have different needs. Marketing must continue to monitor the account for other buying signals.

A leader focused solely on closing a deal quickly will often ignore subtle warnings and their own intuition about a prospect. Slowing down the sales process allows time for these 'spidey senses' to surface, helping to vet clients properly and avoid costly, bad-fit relationships.

Prospects often express interest to gather information but lack a commitment to solve the problem. Sellers must differentiate by probing for concrete timelines and stakeholder involvement to avoid chasing deals that won't close, rather than hoping to convert interest into commitment on the call.

The buying committee is larger than just the key contacts sales engages. Hidden influencers, particularly in procurement, play a crucial role. If they have no brand awareness or trust in your company when the deal reaches their desk for final approval, they can single-handedly block it.

Sales cycles often lengthen not because of lost interest, but because your internal champion feels embarrassed to repeatedly ask you for information needed for other stakeholders. Proactive multi-threading and enablement prevents this friction and keeps the deal moving.

When a proposal goes silent, avoid empty 'checking in' emails, which position you as a nuisance. Instead, every follow-up must deliver additional insights or value relevant to the prospect's business. This reframes you as a helpful peer and consultant, keeping the conversation alive without sounding desperate.