this free tool maps every decision-maker hiding in your deal

(60 seconds)

Let me tell you about the deal that should've closed.

Your champion was all in. Told you the budget was approved. Told you the timeline was locked. Told you "we're good to go."

Three weeks later?

Radio silence.

You follow up. Nothing. Follow up again. Nothing.

Then you finally get the email.

"We decided to go in a different direction."

You never even got to pitch the person who killed it.

A VP you didn't know was involved. A procurement lead nobody mentioned. A CFO who Googled your competitor over lunch and made up their mind before you had a chance.

This happens all the time.

The average B2B deal has 6 to 10 people involved in the decision. Most reps are only talking to 1 or 2 of them.

That means you're not selling. You're hoping your champion can sell internally for you.

And they can't. That's not their job. They don't know your talking points. They don't know your case studies. They barely remember the demo.

So I built something.

It's called the Stakeholder Map Generator.

You paste in your deal notes, CRM entries, or email threads. It reads through everything and pulls out every single person involved in the deal. Decision-makers. Influencers. Champions. Blockers. People you forgot about. People you didn't know existed.

Then it maps them all out on a canvas so you can actually see the full picture.

Takes about 60 seconds.

The thing that makes it actually useful? It tags each person by role. So you're not just looking at a list of names. You know who's your champion, who's the decision-maker, who could block the whole thing, and who's quietly influencing the outcome behind the scenes.

Once you can see all of that, you can build a plan for each person instead of just pinging your champion and crossing your fingers.

It runs in your browser. Nothing gets stored. You can paste sensitive deal notes without worrying about where that data goes.

If your deals keep dying at the finish line and you can never figure out why, this is probably why.

Try it here (free, no signup): https://www.distribute.so/stakeholder-mapper

good luck have fun,
Andrew