skills/by-role/sales/account-plan/SKILL.md
Build a strategic account plan for winning, retaining, or expanding a named account. Use when the user says "build an account plan", "strategic account planning", "how do I grow this account", "account expansion strategy", "whitespace analysis", "QBR prep", "key account review", "map the stakeholders in this account", "land and expand plan", "how do I break into [company]", or wants a structured strategy for a specific account.
npx skillsauth add qa-aman/claude-skills account-planInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Based on "The New Strategic Selling" by Robert B. Miller and Stephen E. Heiman. Miller and Heiman's framework established that complex B2B sales are never one-to-one - they involve multiple buying influencers, each with different priorities and different definitions of "win." Strategic Selling maps every key player in the account, diagnoses your position with each one, and builds a coordinated plan to move the account forward.
Write one sentence: what does winning this account mean in the next 90 days, and what does it mean in 12 months?
Format:
Without a clear objective, every action in the account plan is activity without direction.
Miller and Heiman identified four roles in every complex sale. Every account has all four - find them.
| Role | Who they are | What they care about | |---|---|---| | Economic Buyer | Final financial authority. One person, usually senior. | ROI, strategic fit, risk to the organization | | User Buyer | People who will use your product day-to-day. Often multiple. | Ease of use, workflow impact, job security | | Technical Buyer | Evaluates fit against technical, legal, or compliance requirements. | Risk elimination, standards, integration | | Coach | Your internal ally. Wants you to win. Provides intelligence. | Their own credibility and advancement |
For each person you've identified, record:
For each key influencer, answer:
Overconfidence is the most dangerous. If you rate a relationship Green without evidence of recent advocacy from that person, you're in Overconfident mode.
Strengths (what's working in your favor):
Red flags (gaps that threaten the account):
Each red flag requires a specific action in Step 5.
For every red flag and every key influencer in Yellow or Red status, write one action.
Format per action:
Limit to 5-7 actions total. More than that is a list, not a plan.
Example actions:
Objective: Gain access to Economic Buyer Action: Ask Coach to arrange 20-min exec briefing with CFO Owner: [AE] / By: [date]
Objective: De-risk Technical Buyer concern about integration Action: Schedule technical deep-dive with [your SE] and their IT lead Owner: [SE] / By: [date]
Set two things:
An account plan that isn't reviewed is a document, not a plan.
1. Building the plan around one contact Bad: An account plan that lists one stakeholder and calls it done. Good: Map all four buying influencer types. If you only know one person in the account, that's the first red flag.
2. Confusing activity with progress Bad: "We had 3 calls this month - account is healthy." Good: Progress means a buying influencer moved from Yellow to Green, or a specific red flag was closed.
3. Treating the Coach as the Economic Buyer Bad: "Our Champion told us the budget is approved - we're good." Good: Verify with the Economic Buyer directly. Coaches report what they believe, not what's decided.
4. Static plans Bad: Building the account plan at the start of the quarter and never updating it. Good: Review monthly. Update influencer status and red flags as new information comes in.
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