Process

Buying processes are no longer explicit or linear
Modern B2B buying has evolved into something buyers cannot easily explain, let alone articulate step‑by‑step. Decision paths now span ~13 stakeholders, and 89% of purchases involve two or more departments, producing a complex mix of inputs and risk controls that rarely follow a clean, linear “process.” [business.l...nkedin.com]
At the same time, buying journeys now span around ten interaction channels, from email to procurement portals to internal Slack threads. More than half of buyers say they will switch suppliers if their omnichannel experience is inconsistent, revealing just how many hands—and how much friction—touch a purchase.
The result is structural ambiguity. Buyers often give sellers the “official” process, but this rarely reflects the real journey—one shaped by governance layers, internal politics, data‑quality gaps, and cross‑functional risk mitigation.
Translation: discovering the real buying process now requires interpreting behavior, not asking for a checklist.
Stated process and real process rarely match
Deals stall even when the stated process appears complete. This is because declared steps (e.g., “We just need procurement approval next”) seldom map to the actual forces that determine whether a decision advances.
Forrester’s latest global study shows that 86% of B2B purchases stall, and buyers cite their own internal process as a top cause of delay—meaning even they do not have full visibility into how decisions move.
Add in the fact that 81% of buyers end up dissatisfied with the provider they chose, often due to evaluation confusion or misalignment, and it becomes clear why relying on their stated process is risky. [business.l...nkedin.com]
Real buying happens through informal influence, hidden risk reviews, late‑stage Finance and Legal scrutiny, and cross-departmental alignment that rarely appears in the narrative buyers share early.
Elite sellers infer process from constraints, not steps
Top sellers assume the buyer’s process is an emergent system driven by:
Risk sensitivity (especially as CFO and Legal oversight intensify)
Governance (driven by data‑quality issues, siloed tech, and AI‑era risk controls)
Accountability pressures (buyers want defensibility more than speed)
Example: IT leaders report that 81% of organizations struggle with data silos, and only ~28% of apps are integrated—meaning any project that touches data is inherently high‑risk and faces extra review cycles, even if buyers don’t mention them. [learn.g2.com]
Elite sellers map these invisible forces and construct a more accurate buying‑process model than any explicit answer a buyer could provide.
Why asking “What’s your process?” fails
There are three structural reasons:
1. Buyers only see their slice of the process
Large committees mean no one sees the whole picture. Even strategic buyers cannot fully describe how decisions really move across 13+ stakeholders. [business.l...nkedin.com]
2. Buyers describe the idealized process, not the real one
Real buying includes exceptions, shadow approvals, political workarounds, and risk escalations triggered by sensitivity—not sequence.
3. The question triggers defensiveness
Many buyers fear revealing disorganization, delays, or internal politics. Others interpret the question as a qualification probe and respond vaguely, protecting autonomy.
Result: sellers receive a tidy but misleading process description that sets their strategy on the wrong track.
How the real buying process reveals itself
The authentic process becomes visible when sellers track behavior—not words. Five categories of signals consistently reveal how buying actually happens.
1. Decision friction points
Every buying journey has predictable slowdowns:
Security and architecture reviews
Procurement involvement
CFO or Legal approval
Cross-functional risk assessments
For example, 79% of buyers say the CFO frequently has final decision-making power, and 61% report Legal slows or blocks purchases—meaning these friction points are structural, not incidental. [6seconds.org]
Whenever momentum slows, sellers should ask: What risk did this step introduce? Who holds the fear here?
2. Stakeholder entry timing
The timing of involvement reveals process mechanics.
Early Finance involvement → risk-averse, scrutiny-heavy buying
Late Legal involvement → exploratory autonomy followed by risk review
Sudden executive reappearing → political alignment needed
This aligns with McKinsey’s finding that buyers now move fluidly across 10+ channels, consulting different stakeholders at different times.
Sequencing > stakeholder list.
3. Language shifts over time
As deals evolve, buyer language naturally shifts from:
Exploration → “We’re trying to understand options.”
Justification → “We need to show this aligns with X priority.”
Defensibility → “Finance will ask about ROI and integration risk.”
These language shifts correlate with buying stages more reliably than any CRM field. They also track the psychological progression described in Forrester’s research, where buyers increasingly demand provider knowledge, defensibility, and ease of internal justification.
4. Approval behavior, not approval claims
Sellers must watch how buyers prepare for approvals:
Which approvals create stress?
Which require extensive documentation?
Which are rubber stamps?
Buyers often claim procurement is the “final step”—but behavior (prep effort, sequencing, emotional tone) reveals whether the real gate is an executive narrative review, architectural clearance, or CFO validation.
Given that 57% of buyers expect ROI within three months, anything affecting time-to-value gets more attention than buyers admit. [6seconds.org]
5. Risk management mechanics
Modern buying is risk-first.
Requests for:
Pilots
Phased rollout
Architecture diagrams
Data governance explanations
Integration testing
are not preferences—they’re signals.
IT leaders say 95% of organizations face integration challenges when adopting new systems, and 81% say data silos hinder transformation. That means risk mitigation is encoded into the process whether buyers mention it or not. [learn.g2.com]
Understanding what risk each step reduces offers a direct view into how the process really works.
Indirect questions that surface process without resistance
Instead of asking for a process map, elite sellers ask about constraints, blockers, and comfort—areas where buyers can be honest.
Examples:
“What typically slows decisions like this down?”
“Where do similar initiatives usually get stuck internally?”
“Who needs to feel comfortable for this to move forward?”
“What has caused past initiatives to stall?”
“What would make leadership uneasy about this?”
These questions don’t ask the buyer to expose internal procedure—they ask for patterns buyers recognize and can safely share.
Interpreting process in motion
After collecting signals, sellers piece together the process dynamically.
Early executive involvement + late legal review
→ political alignment first, risk mitigation laterHeavy documentation requests
→ high reputational or compliance riskRepeated alignment language
→ distributed ownership, consensus-based processFinance questions surfacing late
→ the true gate is economic defensibility, not timelines
Elite sellers continuously update this interpretation as new behaviors surface—they avoid anchoring on an early explanation that later proves incomplete.
Implications for influencing the buying process
Understanding the real process enables sellers to steer it.
If Legal is the real gate → pre-send documentation, smooth reviews
If Finance is the real gate → co-build a 90-day ROI narrative
If executive narrative matters → reframe messaging for strategic elevation
If data confidence is a blocker → address silos, integration, architecture early
Influence emerges not from pressure, but from anticipation.
A brief illustrative case
A buyer told the seller that procurement was the “last step.” The seller believed them. Midway through, the deal slowed dramatically—even though procurement was prepared.
By watching behavior, the seller noticed:
Executive leaders kept reappearing with macro questions
The buyer’s language shifted toward political alignment
Prep effort focused on narrative, not procurement materials
The true gate was executive comfort—not procurement.
The seller reframed the conversation around strategic clarity and defensibility.
The deal moved forward immediately.
Actionable takeaways
For sellers
Stop relying on stated processes—observe the real ones.
Track friction points, stakeholder timing, and language shifts.
Use indirect questions tied to risk and constraints.
Continuously revise your understanding of the process.
Influence by addressing risk early, not by pushing harder.
For sales leaders
Coach reps to infer process from behavior, not buyer narration.
Inspect forecast deals for real approval paths vs. stated ones.
Normalize ongoing process discovery—not just early qualification.
Celebrate anticipation, not compliance with CRM stages.
Buying processes aren’t hidden; they’re simply expressed indirectly through behavior, risk mechanics, and organizational signals. Sellers who rely on explicit descriptions compete on compliance. Sellers who learn to read the signals compete on foresight.
In modern B2B sales, discovering a buyer’s process without ever asking for it isn’t a trick.
It’s the only reliable way to understand how decisions truly get made.








