1. Why methodology still matters
The recurring objection to sales methodology is that it's "just bureaucracy" — slides for senior leaders that reps ignore in real deals. That's partly true, and entirely the fault of how methodology gets implemented.
Used well, a methodology gives a team three things:
- A shared language. "Have you found the Economic Buyer yet?" is a question every MEDDIC-trained rep can answer the same way. Pipeline reviews get faster because everyone's scoring deals on the same axes.
- A diagnostic tool. When a deal stalls, methodology tells you what's missing — an unclear Decision Process, an unidentified Champion, an unaddressed Implication. Without it, "the deal is stalled" just becomes a status colour on a dashboard.
- A coaching framework. Managers can't coach "sell better". They can coach "your discovery doesn't surface the Implication clearly enough" — a specific, methodology-anchored gap.
The teams that get value from methodology don't use it as a deal-stage gate. They use it as a thinking tool — and adapt it to their specific motion.
2. The five methodologies side-by-side
MEDDIC / MEDDPICC
Enterprise + complex dealsQualification framework — Metrics, Economic Buyer, Decision Criteria, Decision Process, Identify Pain, Champion (+ Paper Process, Competition in MEDDPICC).
- Best for
- Multi-stakeholder enterprise sales, deal cycles over 60 days, technical/regulated buyers.
- Not for
- Transactional SMB sales, single-call closes, low-ACV product-led motions.
PTC (1990s); now ubiquitous in B2B enterprise SaaS sales.
SPIN Selling
Discovery-heavy salesDiscovery framework — Situation, Problem, Implication, Need-payoff. A question-led approach that surfaces and amplifies the cost of inaction.
- Best for
- Consultative sales where the buyer doesn't yet recognise the full cost of the problem.
- Not for
- Inbound deals where the buyer arrives ready to buy and just wants pricing.
Neil Rackham (1988) — based on 12 years of empirical research.
Challenger Sale
Selling change to entrenched buyersTeach, Tailor, Take Control. Reps lead with a commercial insight that reframes the buyer's mental model — then tie the insight to your solution.
- Best for
- High-stakes B2B sales where the buyer is comfortable with the status quo and needs a reason to change.
- Not for
- Relationship-driven account sales where rapport matters more than reframing.
Matthew Dixon + Brent Adamson, CEB / Gartner (2011).
Account-Based Selling (ABM)
Defined target account listsTreat each account as a market of one. Sales + marketing + CS coordinate around a small named account list with personalised plays.
- Best for
- High-ACV enterprise sales (>$100k ACV), strategic accounts, expansion motions.
- Not for
- Broad horizontal markets, low-ACV SMB targeting, products with mass appeal.
Evolved from ITSMA frameworks; mainstreamed by Engagio + Demandbase around 2015.
BANT
Fast lead qualificationBudget, Authority, Need, Timeline. The original lightweight qualification framework — a quick filter to decide if a lead is worth pursuing.
- Best for
- High-volume inbound qualification, BDR/SDR initial conversations, simple buying cycles.
- Not for
- Modern enterprise deals where budgets are flexible and authority is distributed — MEDDIC is usually better.
IBM (1960s) — the granddaddy of qualification frameworks.
3. How to choose for your situation
A working heuristic for picking your primary methodology:
- Average ACV under £10k, short cycles (under 30 days): BANT for inbound qualification. Layer SPIN-style discovery questions where the buyer needs to be educated.
- Average ACV £10k–£100k, mid-market motion: SPIN Selling as the discovery backbone, MEDDIC-lite for deal-stage qualification. Most B2B SaaS mid-market teams land here.
- Enterprise ACV (£100k+), multi-stakeholder, 90+ day cycles:MEDDIC (or MEDDPICC) is the standard. Add Challenger if your buyers are entrenched in a status quo that needs disrupting.
- Named-account / strategic motion: ABM as the operating model; MEDDIC underneath for deal qualification once a target account is engaged.
The mistake is picking a methodology that's heavier than your motion needs. MEDDIC on a 14-day SMB deal is overkill and slows reps down. BANT on a £500k enterprise deal misses everything that actually determines the close.
4. Combining methodologies
The strongest sales orgs don't pick one methodology — they layer them by stage:
- Discovery: SPIN's Situation → Problem → Implication → Need-payoff sequence. This is the most-tested question framework in sales history and still works.
- Qualification: MEDDIC / MEDDPICC to score deals on six (or eight) axes. Use as a diagnostic, not a gate.
- Differentiation / influence: Challenger insight delivery to reframe how the buyer thinks about the problem.
- Account strategy: ABM principles for the named account list, with marketing + sales + CS coordinated on each one.
You don't need to teach reps all four at once — that's how methodology becomes the slide-deck-no-one-uses problem. Pick the one that fixes your biggest current gap, embed it deeply, then layer the next.
5. Common implementation mistakes
- Treating methodology as a deal-stage gate. "You can't progress the deal until every MEDDIC field is filled in." Result: reps fabricate the data to clear the gate. Use it as a coaching prompt instead.
- Picking a methodology that's heavier than the motion. Full MEDDPICC on transactional SMB deals slows everyone down and produces no additional close rate.
- Buying a methodology training programme then never embedding it.The standard pattern: external trainer comes in, runs a 2-day workshop, reps forget within 4 weeks. Embed it into deal reviews, ride-alongs, and 1-on-1s — or skip the training.
- Letting methodology language replace selling skill. Reps who can spell "Economic Buyer" but can't actually identify one in a real deal. Methodology is scaffolding for skill, not a substitute.
- Refusing to adapt the framework. Every methodology was built for a specific era and product type. Adapt the labels, the order, and the fields to your motion. The original authors would want you to.
6. The SalesTap methodology library
12 curated articles, newest first. New methodology pieces appear here automatically as they're published.
Build a Mutual Action Plan Buyers Actually Use
A mutual action plan only works if the buyer co-owns it. Here's how to build a MAP that survives past the demo and forces real commitment.
Why Deals Stall Between Stages 2 and 3
Deals stalling between stage 2 and 3 usually fail on problem, sponsor, or timing. Here's how to diagnose which one is breaking your pipeline.
How to scope a POC that closes, not stalls
A tactical guide to scoping a proof of concept that drives a buying decision, with the four pre-POC agreements and stall signals every AE should know.
Promoting SDRs to AE Without Breaking Both Roles
Promoting an SDR to AE on tenure alone wrecks pipeline on both sides. Here's how to structure the transition so neither role takes the hit.
Running a Sales Team Through a Product Pivot
A product pivot playbook for sales leaders: how to triage pipeline, rebuild discovery, reset comp, and keep senior reps from quietly opting out.
Selling to a Committee With No Clear Owner
Selling to a committee with no clear decision owner requires a different playbook. Here's how to engineer consensus, multi-thread, and force a date.
Multi-threading deals: building 3+ champions fast
Multi-threading deals is the cheapest insurance against single-champion risk. Here's how to build three durable internal advocates before proposal stage.
BANT vs GPCT vs MEDDPICC: How to Use All Three
Qualification gets sharper when you run BANT, GPCT, and MEDDPICC side by side. Here's how top AEs use all three lenses on the same deal without overloading discovery.
Land-and-Expand Playbook for 10x Account Growth
A tactical land-and-expand playbook for turning a $20K wedge into a $200K account through wedge selection, stakeholder mapping, and contract design.
Run a Sales Kickoff That Changes Behaviour
A practical sales kickoff playbook for VPs and managers who want SKO investment to show up in next quarter's calls, deals, and forecast.
Build a Sales Playbook Reps Actually Use
A sales playbook only works if reps open it mid-deal. Here's how to structure, surface, and update one they'll actually reach for under pressure.
How to Calculate Your True Win Rate
Your true win rate is probably well below the number in your dashboard. Here's how to calculate it honestly and where the real lift actually comes from.
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