In B2B sales, identifying the economic buyer can make or break your deal. This individual isn’t always the budget owner, champion, or evaluator. They’re someone with the final authority to approve spending or stop it cold. In frameworks like MEDDIC, identifying this individual can make the difference between a won deal and a lost one, especially late in the sales process. However, sellers often mistake influence for authority. As a result, deals are stalled and targets are missed.In this guide, we break down what an economic buyer is, how they differ from other stakeholders, and how to engage them effectively. If you want faster and more predictable sales cycles, you must get to know the economic buyer.Defining the Economic BuyerAn economic buyer is the person within a company who has the final say on purchases. They control the purse strings; they can give the green light even when others have concerns. They can also stop a deal cold, even when others in the organisation support it. This isn’t about managing budgets or having influence. It’s about making the final decision about where to commit company resources. Sales frameworks like MEDDIC place the economic buyer at the centre of qualification. In MEDDIC, identifying this role early helps sellers avoid investing energy in the wrong relationships. Understanding who the economic buyer is and what they care about is important for a successful sales strategy. Without that clarity, sellers risk building momentum with the wrong person and losing promising deals.Economic Buyer vs Other StakeholdersComplex B2B deals can be confusing because many people play important roles in the buying process. Sellers may build strong relationships with these individuals but risk losing the deal if they mistake influence for final authority. Here’s how the economic buyer compares with other stakeholders.ChampionThe champion is your advocate inside the organisation. They support your solution, promote it internally, and may even guide you through the decision process. However, while champions can build momentum, they don’t control the budget and can’t approve spending.Example: A sales director might champion new software because it solves their team’s pain points. However, when the proposal reaches the CFO, budget needs can change, and the deal may be paused.Pro Tip: Sales teams should appreciate the champion’s influence but confirm who holds the purse strings. Ask: “Who else needs to be involved to green-light this?”Budget HolderA budget holder controls funds for a department or project. However, their authority is often limited. They may approve expenses within a set threshold, but need higher approval for larger commitments or to reallocate spend.Example: A VP of Operations might oversee a £500,000 budget, but any purchase over £100,000 needs board-level approval. Pro Tip: Always validate spending authority by asking about approval processes for purchases similar to yours. If someone says, “This needs to go to finance,” you haven’t reached the EB yet.Technical BuyerTechnical buyers check whether your solution meets functional requirements and integrates with existing systems. They focus on specifications, performance, and setup complexity rather than business value or return on investment.Example: An IT architect might have veto power over technology purchases that don’t meet security standards. However, they typically can’t approve spending independently.Pro Tip: Respect technical concerns. However, turn to commercial value when engaging the economic buyer. Yes, fit matters, but profit drives decisions. ProcurementProcurement professionals manage the buying process, negotiate terms, and ensure compliance with company purchasing policies. They control timelines, vendor evaluation procedures, and commercial terms. However, they don’t often decide whether the investment is worth it. Example: A procurement officer may request quotes and push for discounts, but they’re working within parameters set by the EB. They serve the economic buyer’s interests by managing risk and optimising commercial terms.Pro Tip: Treat procurement as process partners, not decision-makers. The economic buyer decides whether the project moves forward at all.End Users and InfluencersEnd users face daily pain points that shape solution needs. Meanwhile, influencers provide recommendations based on expertise or relationships. Both groups can influence buying decisions through their input and support, but they don’t have control over the budget and strategy. Example: A sales manager might desperately need better forecasting tools and strongly influence the evaluation process, but they can’t commit the organisation to a multi-year software investment.Pro Tip: Sales teams should gather insights from these roles, then build a business case that speaks to the EB’s priorities — risk, ROI, and strategic fit.Effective sales teams map organisational relationships by asking direct questions about approval processes: “Who needs to sign off on this type of investment?” and “What’s your process for technology purchases at this budget level?”Look for phrases like “I’ll need to check with…” or “This would go to…” as indicators that you haven’t reached the final person with authority yet.Also Read: Top Sales Tips What’s the Difference Between MEDDIC and MEDDPICC in Sales? Why the Economic Buyer Matters in B2B SalesThe economic buyer determines your sales success. Without their approval, even the most enthusiastic champion can’t commit organisational resources or deliver the green light your deal needs.Recent data shows why engaging the economic buyer is necessary:The average B2B deal involves 13 stakeholders, with 89% spanning multiple departments (Forrester)86% of deals stall during the buying process, often from a lack of EB alignment (Forrester)If the economic buyer raises ROI concerns after a solution is presented, the chance of closing drops by 79% (Ebsta)Previous buying committee members are 3x more likely to purchase again (49% win rate), emphasising economic buyer relationship value (Champify)Image via ChampifyHere’s why the economic buyer matters, with clear reasons tied to how sales teams succeed or fail:Accelerates the Buying/Approval Process: Engaging the economic buyer early reduces delays in the approval process. It helps prevent stalling due to uncertainty over who has the power to say yes. If you haven’t spoken to the person who defines success, you’re selling blind.Clarifies Decision Criteria and Reduces Risk: Economic buyers are focused on big-picture outcomes: ROI, risk, and alignment, focusing on strategies. If you only discuss features or usability with technical or operational stakeholders, you won’t be aligned as the EB sets the decision criteria.Improves Deal Win Rates: When the person with the final say is involved early and understands the business case, you’re more likely to close the deal. Neglecting this often leads to losing deals, not because of product fit, but because the deal was never “owned” at the right level.Ensures Predictable Sales Strategy and Forecasting: When you know who the economic buyer is, your sales team can better forecast outcomes. You can align resources, invest in proof-points, and avoid surprises like budget rejections or shifting priorities at the executive level.Shapes the Value Conversation: The EB cares about investment, pricing and cost savings, revenue impact, pay-back periods, and broader business value. Speaking in their language (profit, risk, strategic fit) rather than just technical specs or usability wins attention and trust.Getting the EB involved is the difference between stalled deals and a streamlined, high-conversion sales process.Also Read: Sales Qualification: Why Rigour Wins More Opportunities, Faster A Guide to Spin Selling Technique, with Question Examples How to Identify the Economic BuyerMost sellers trip up because they rely on job titles, org charts, or assumptions. But the only sure test is this: can this person approve the spend — and reallocate money if needed? The following approaches can help you find the real EB. Key Questions FrameworkSuccessful economic buyer identification starts with direct, professional questioning that reveals approval processes and spending authority. Refer to this quick checklist: Who can say yes even if others say no?Who can approve or reallocate budget from one priority to another?Who has the final say on technology investments at this budget level?What happens if the recommended solution goes over the current budget allocation?Who is responsible for aligning the purchase with company-wide initiatives?If priorities shift, who decides whether this project still moves forward?Whose signature is required before contracts move to procurement?These key questions help you find who has the real purchasing power without hurting your relationship with your current contract. Budget and Approval Process MappingFollow the money, not just the titles. Understanding how your prospect’s organisation handles similar purchases reveals economic buyer patterns:Understand budget cycles and how they affect decision-making timingDocument the formal procurement process from evaluation through contract signatureClarify whether approval authority changes based on solution type or vendor relationshipMap spending thresholds that trigger different approval levels (e.g. “Anything over £100K goes to the CFO”)Identify who was involved in previous technology purchases of comparable sizeThis reveals whether you’re dealing with a manager or the ultimate decision-maker.Organisational Hierarchy InvestigationJob titles can mislead. A “VP” in one firm might have limited authority, while a “Director” in another holds profit and loss responsibility. Look beyond titles to understand real reporting relationships and decision-making flows:Trace P&L responsibility to identify profit centre leadersIdentify who controls multiple budget lines across departmentsUnderstand matrix reporting relationships that might affect authorityIdentify leadership roles that guide major technology decisionsInvestigate recent organisational changes that might have shifted authorityRed Flags and Warning SignsCertain phrases and situations show that you haven’t identified the real economic buyer yet, despite what stakeholders might claim about their authority:This looks good, but it needs to go to the board.The executive committee reviews all technology purchases.I’ll have to check with my manager.Procurement will take it from here.We’ll need to run this by finance.Sometimes the “real EB” is an operating committee or a C-suite member with quiet but decisive influence. Sellers need to confirm through multiple talks, sources, and small tests of authority.Also Read: What Will Customer Success Look Like in the Future?How to Sell B2B SaaS: Expert Insights for Sales Success How to Engage the Economic BuyerIdentifying and reaching the economic buyer is only half the battle. Engaging them effectively by earning their attention and confidence is what moves deals forward. Unlike other stakeholders, EBs guard their time carefully, weigh multiple competing priorities, and focus on outcomes rather than features. Here’s how to engage them right. Time Your ApproachEconomic buyer engagement timing can make or break your deal. Too early, and you may not have sufficient data about their priorities. Too late, and key decisions may already be made without your input.The optimal timing is after you’ve built momentum with champions and technical buyers, but before formal procurement processes begin. Key timing strategies include: Partner with champions to arrange economic buyer meetings rather than attempting direct approaches that might create internal political issuesFrame EB involvement as a shared goal by asking, “When and how should we bring [CFO/COO] into the conversation?”Leverage milestone moments, such as completed technical evaluations or pilot programme results, to justify economic buyer involvementRequest strategic alignment meetings that ensure organisational fit rather than sales presentationsAvoid procurement handoff timing when economic buyers may view engagement as vendor pressure rather than strategic consultationUse external catalysts like industry events, regulatory changes, or competitive pressures to create natural conversation opportunitiesAsk for introductions at the right time to ensure a warm handoff when your champion sees traction, rather than forcing a cold outreachUse Resonant MessagingEconomic buyers think in business terms, not product specifications. They care about the “so what?” factor, so your messaging must connect directly to their strategic priorities and financial responsibilities.Effective economic buyer messaging focuses on measurable business results, not technical details or features:Lead with strategic value by connecting your solution to their publicly stated KPIs, business objectives, and market positioningPresent financial impact through specific ROI calculations, payback periods, and competitive advantage metrics rather than generic benefit statementsAddress risk mitigation by demonstrating how your solution reduces exposure, ensures compliance, or protects against competitive threatsUse peer validation through reference customers at similar firms facing comparable challenges and achieving measurable resultsSpeak their language with terms like market share, operational efficiency, customer acquisition cost, and strategic differentiation, not technical jargonFrame implementation strategy around business continuity and minimal disruption rather than technical deployment detailsAvoid one-size-fits-all messaging and instead tailor messaging by personality, speaking directly to the EB’s unique lens of accountabilityBuild Credibility and TrustEconomic buyers make decisions that affect their organisation’s success and their own professional reputation. They require vendors who demonstrate competence, reliability, and strategic understanding.Therefore, trust is often the deciding factor in whether an EB moves forward with you or a competitor. They want confidence that your solution will deliver, and that your team can execute. Here are some credibility-building approaches that resonate with economic buyers:Bring industry expertise through insights about market trends, regulatory changes, or competitive dynamics that affect their businessShare relevant case studies featuring organisations of similar size, industry, and complexity with specific outcome metricsDemonstrate implementation competence through detailed project plans, risk mitigation strategies, and change management approachesProvide executive references from other economic buyers who can speak to business outcomes and vendor partnership qualityOffer pilot opportunities that allow them to validate business value with minimal risk before full commitmentBe transparent about limitations, acknowledge where your solution might not be a perfect fit, and offer realistic outcomes, as overpromising can reduce trustMaintain executive presence by communicating with confidence, clarity, and brevity — qualities EBs expect from peers, not vendorsAlso Read: The Burnout Buyer: How Decision Fatigue is Killing Deals The Most Important Stages of the Sales Process Common Mistakes Sellers Make with the Economic BuyerEven seasoned sales teams make critical errors when dealing with economic buyers, often costing themselves deals that seemed certain to close. Here are the most damaging mistakes to avoid:Title-Based Assumptions: Assuming a VP or Director holds economic buyer authority without validating their actual spending limits. Many sellers spend too much time building relationships with stakeholders who ultimately can’t approve purchases above specific thresholds.Late-Stage Engagement: Waiting until the proposal stage to meet the economic buyer often reveals misaligned priorities or concerns that could have been addressed earlier. By then, competitor relationships may already be established at the executive level.Wrong Messaging Approaches: Presenting technical features and functionality to executives wastes their time and demonstrates poor business judgment. Economic buyers care about strategic outcomes, not product capabilities.Champion Bypass Attempts: While reaching EBs directly might seem efficient, this approach often creates internal political issues and may position you as naive about organisational dynamics. Partner with champions to plan economic buyer meetings, rather than working around them.FAQ1. What is the difference between an economic buyer and a technical buyer?An economic buyer decides whether to invest, focusing on ROI and strategic fit. A technical buyer evaluates whether a solution is compatible and practical. Both matter, but only the EB can provide final approval. 2. What is economic buying?Economic buying is the process of evaluating potential purchases based on financial impact, risk, and alignment with company priorities. It’s less about product features and more about business outcomes.3. Why is identifying the economic buyer important?Without engaging the economic buyer, deals often stall in endless reviews. The EB defines success criteria, controls the budget, and decides whether the solution aligns with business priorities. Sellers who reach the EB early influence priorities, align with decision criteria, and speed up the buying process.4. Can there be more than one economic buyer in a deal?Yes, particularly in large enterprises or complex purchases. Different economic buyers might control separate budget areas or have authority at different spending levels. The primary economic buyer typically holds the highest approval authority, but multiple stakeholders may need to approve different aspects of your solution. Map all potential economic buyers and understand their relative influence and decision-making scope.5. How do I know if I’ve reached the economic buyer?Ask direct questions about approval authority, like, “Who else needs to sign off on investments at this level?” True economic buyers can answer definitively without referring to other stakeholders. They also discuss strategic business outcomes rather than operational details. Lastly, they show concern about implementation risk and competitive positioning.Also Read: Mutual Action Plans: Your Secret Sales WeaponWhat is Sales Management? Guide to Managing a Sales TeamThe Bottom LineThe uncomfortable truth? Until the EB says yes, you’re forecasting on hope. Sellers who master economic buyer engagement don’t just close more deals — they run cleaner, faster, and more predictable sales cycles. Everyone else? They stay busy, they stay optimistic, and they stay stuck. To sell with confidence, you must identify authority early, speak the language of value, and build trust with the person who holds the final say. That’s how successful sales teams win.Footnote: While this article uses terms like “economic buyer” and “decision-maker,” it’s worth noting that the idea of a single “decision-maker” is increasingly outdated. Today’s buying groups are cross-functional, consensus-driven, and politically complex. Smart sellers treat everyone as part of the decision — but they still know who holds the final authority over the money. Aaron Evans29 October 2025 Share :URL has been copied successfully!