The 13 Body Problem in B2B Marketing And What To Do About It
How Many Bosses Do You Have?
You’re ready to make your well-researched pitch, a snappy PowerPoint aglow on your laptop and wearing a confident grin that says "This will solve all of your problems." The door opens to a brightly lit room. Your smile fades, and your stomach drops as you discover you’re not presenting to one person but more than a dozen different stakeholders. All your persona development melts into a puddle like a Salvador Dali painting as you’re confronted with “The Buying Committee.”
Over there is the Skeptical CFO, arms crossed, certain you won’t be able to deliver the ROI you claim. On the other side of the table, the IT Director wants to know if implementing this is going to tie up resources and bring her team to a standstill. A gaggle of Procurement Geese scatter around the room as you enter and break up their whispered planning about how to squeeze every bit of profit margin you’ve got before signing off on the project. Over in the corner, the Head of Training wears no expression at all, the classic poker face, with an invisible thought bubble over his head that asks, "How much time will it take to train our people on this?" The Chief Revenue Officer seems sympathetic, desperate for something that will help her sales team make their numbers, and is secretly terrified that the system will take so long to implement that it won’t make a difference. The CEO just wants to mitigate risk. And so on. It’s like they rehearsed a carefully choreographed feeding frenzy, and you’re the unwitting meal.
Multiple stakeholders and purchasing departments are not new to the often glacial B2B buying process, and B2B sales teams are overwhelmed, like in the scene in Office Space where Peter Gibbons is interviewed by “The Bobs”:
Peter: I have 8 different bosses right now.
Bob: I beg your pardon?
Peter: Eight bosses.
Bob: Eight?
Peter: Eight, Bob.
But the reality in 2026 is even more insane. According to Forrester Research, 73% of purchases now involve 3 or more departments and an average of 13 people from within the organization, plus 9 more from outside the company. (Who invited them, anyway?)
Just like the “3 Body Problem” in physics, calculating the needs of a preponderance of buying bodies, measuring how they interact with each other, and calculating their buying signals becomes a chaotic system that’s nearly impossible to predict and inherently unstable to success. Tiny interactions among the different players can lead to vastly different sales and marketing outcomes. Meanwhile, these buyers have already completed nearly 80% of their vendor research before even contacting you.
How to Read the Room Before You’re In The Room
Traditional marketing metrics and signals break down when trying to decode the dynamics of the multi-stakeholder audience, each person looking for a reason to torpedo your proposal and get back to their work. We haven’t even completed Q1 of the new year, and you’re probably tired of AI this and AI that, but there’s no denying it: The ability to parse huge amounts of data and quickly find patterns we’d never be able to discover is a task artificial intelligence was made for. Here’s what’s on deck:
- Predicting Intent: AI agents like those from MassMetric can read signals from across the Buying Committee and across channels, even including private Slack groups, helping you to understand individual intent.
- AI as Decoder: AI agents can map the relationships between Buying Committee stakeholders (“The CFO read our case study after the IT Director checked out our API documentation.”)
- On-the-Fly Negotiation: Forrester says this year, at least 20% of B2B sellers will be “encouraged” to make their pitches to AI-powered buyer agents. Sellers may also have their AI agents making counteroffers. It remains to be seen whether this ushers in a dystopian hellscape or is merely a deft use of technology to save humans from having to deal with tasks they hate anyway.
Closing the Deal
Unlike the 3 Body Problem and its (except in special cases) impossible-to-solve physics, with the help of AI, the 13 Body Problem of the B2B buying committee is one we may yet solve. By identifying all members, their roles, their interactions and tailoring content to each in real time across multiple channels, AI technology will give B2B sellers an even better chance of shortening sales cycles and closing deals.
Ready to see how strategy-first design can scale your startup brand? Learn more about the power of purpose-driven identity.
Contact Us →