Relationship intelligence for B2B sales

Build stakeholder trust with a simple weekly sales relationship system.

This module helps salespeople move from transactional follow-ups to deliberate stakeholder relationship building. They identify important decision makers and influencers, check the health of each relationship, choose one next action, and build trust through small, consistent value deposits.

Use it in 5 minutes: Pick one relationship → score it → read the behavioural examples → choose one action → follow up this week.
4Relationship stages
6Core frameworks
90Day sustainment rhythm
Relationship Health Snapshot
72 /100
  • Pick one priority relationship
  • Make one useful trust deposit
  • Review and follow up every Friday
Simple operating model

The Relationship OS in plain language

A relationship becomes stronger when you understand the person, add value, keep promises and stay in touch. The OS keeps the process simple: Map → Score → Act → Follow Up.

1. MapWho matters for this goal?
2. ScoreHow healthy is the relationship today?
3. ActWhat is one useful deposit you can make?
4. Follow upWhen will you reconnect?
01

Choose the relationship

Select one client, colleague, manager, partner or external contact where trust and access matter.

02

Check the current state

Use the audit to check relevance, trust, value given, reliability and recency of contact.

03

Make one useful deposit

Share insight, make an introduction, appreciate effort, solve a small issue or keep a promise.

04

Keep a rhythm

Review important relationships weekly and schedule light, relevant follow-ups before the connection goes cold.

Emotional Bank Account

Simple idea: every useful action is a deposit; every broken promise or selfish ask is a withdrawal. Build balance before you need support.

  • Deposit: keep a promise, listen deeply, share useful information.
  • Withdrawal: miss commitments, over-ask, ignore context, interrupt.

The Trust Equation

Simple idea: people trust you when you are competent, dependable, safe to talk to and not overly self-focused.

Formula: Trust = (Credibility + Reliability + Intimacy) ÷ Self-Orientation

  • Credibility: “They know what they are talking about.”
  • Reliability: “They do what they say.”
  • Intimacy: “I feel safe speaking openly.”
  • Self-orientation: “Are they focused only on themselves?”

Network Portfolio

Simple idea: keep three types of relationships: people who help you get work done, people who help you learn, and people who open future opportunities.

Reciprocity Flywheel

Simple idea: give useful value first, follow through, earn trust, receive access, then reinvest value back into the relationship.

Weak Ties Advantage

Simple idea: people you do not speak to often can still bring new information. Keep dormant contacts warm with light, relevant touchpoints.

Stakeholder Influence Map

Simple idea: not every relationship needs the same energy. Focus first on people with high influence and low current trust.

Interactive tools

Simple tools for real relationship action

Participants do not need theory first. They can start with one real relationship, score it honestly, and leave with one specific follow-up action. Entries are saved in this browser.

Step 1Run the Relationship Audit for one real person.
Step 2Use behavioural examples to avoid over-rating yourself.
Step 3Use the Trust Calculator to identify the weakest trust lever.
Step 4Add 3–5 stakeholders and choose practical next actions.

Relationship Health Diagnostic

Score an important relationship from 1 to 5. The tool will suggest a practical relationship action.

Behavioural examples for scoring

Strategic relevance

5: Can influence budget, approval, access or reputation. 1: Nice to know, but not linked to your current goal.

Current trust

5: They speak openly, ask for your view and trust your intent. 1: They avoid you, challenge motives or share very little.

Value given recently

5: You helped them solve something or shared relevant insight. 1: You only contacted them when you needed something.

Follow-through reliability

5: You close loops before deadlines. 1: You forget commitments, delay replies or need repeated reminders.

Your score --

Complete the diagnostic to receive your relationship strategy.

Trust Equation Calculator

Rate each dimension from 1 to 10. Lower self-orientation improves the trust score.

What each trust lever looks like in behaviour

Credibility

Use facts, examples, business context and a clear point of view. Avoid vague opinions and over-claiming.

Reliability

Confirm next steps, keep deadlines, reply when promised and close the loop without being chased.

Intimacy / safety

Listen without interrupting, protect confidential information and make it safe for the other person to speak honestly.

Self-orientation

High score means you are pushing your agenda, talking too much or asking before adding value. Keep this score low.

Trust score --

Use this to identify which trust lever needs the most attention.

Emotional Bank Account Ledger

Track relationship deposits and withdrawals. Aim for a positive balance before asking for support.

DateContactTypeActionPoints

Stakeholder Relationship Map

Place people into four simple boxes: build, sustain, nurture or monitor. This makes relationship action visible.

Common stakeholder examples

Business Sponsor

High influence. Cares about outcomes, ROI, reputation and risk. Next action: share a short value summary.

Champion / Internal Ally

Medium to high influence. Supports you informally. Next action: equip them with a simple message they can repeat.

Procurement / Gatekeeper

High process influence. Cares about compliance, pricing and vendor fit. Next action: clarify decision criteria early.

Skeptic / Blocker

Influence may be high even without title power. Next action: listen to concerns before trying to persuade.

High influence

Priority build

High influence + weak relationship

    Sustain

    High influence + strong relationship

      Monitor

      Low influence + weak relationship

        Nurture

        Low influence + strong relationship

          Low influence
          Conversation playbooks

          Scripts for strategic networking

          Use these conversation structures to create relevance without sounding transactional.

          First Connection Message

          “I noticed your work on [topic]. I work with [audience/problem]. I found your perspective on [specific point] useful. Would be glad to stay connected and exchange ideas around [shared area].”

          Principle: specific relevance before request

          Value Deposit Follow-Up

          “You mentioned [challenge/context]. I came across this [insight/tool/example] and thought it may be useful. No action needed — just sharing in case it helps.”

          Principle: deposit before withdrawal

          Reactivation of Dormant Contact

          “It has been a while since we last connected. I was reminded of our conversation on [topic]. I hope things are progressing well at your end. Would be good to exchange notes sometime.”

          Principle: revive weak ties with warmth

          Stakeholder Alignment Conversation

          “Before I suggest a direction, I would like to understand what success looks like for you, what concerns you have, and which constraints we should respect.”

          Principle: trust through context and listening

          Asking for Support

          “You may be the right person to guide me. I am trying to [goal]. Would you be open to sharing how you would approach this? I am not looking for a shortcut — just your perspective.”

          Principle: respectful ask, low self-orientation

          Post-Meeting Trust Builder

          “Thank you for the discussion. My key takeaways are [1], [2], and [3]. I will follow through on [commitment] by [date].”

          Principle: reliability compounds trust
          Sustainment rhythm

          Easy 90-Day Relationship Rhythm

          Do not overcomplicate networking. Use a weekly habit: choose, deposit, follow up and review.

          Days 1-15

          Map and prioritise

          List 25 professional relationships. Identify 5 strategic relationships, 5 operational allies and 5 weak ties worth reactivating.

          Days 16-30

          Make deposits

          Share useful insights, make introductions, appreciate contributions, and follow through on small commitments.

          Days 31-45

          Deepen trust

          Hold context-building conversations. Understand goals, pressures, constraints and stakeholder priorities.

          Days 46-60

          Create joint value

          Collaborate on a small win, share a relevant opportunity, or solve a problem without over-asking.

          Days 61-75

          Expand network

          Request low-pressure introductions, join communities, attend targeted events and contribute visibly.

          Days 76-90

          Systemise cadence

          Create a follow-up rhythm: weekly priority contacts, monthly value sharing and quarterly relationship reviews.

          Networking Rhythm Checklist

          Use the checklist below every Friday to keep relationships warm without becoming transactional.

          • I made at least three value deposits this week.
          • I followed through on all relationship commitments.
          • I reactivated one weak tie with a useful message.
          • I asked one stakeholder about their priorities or constraints.
          • I updated my stakeholder map and next actions.
          For organisations

          Build relationship intelligence across your teams.

          This Relationship OS can be converted into a workshop, leadership lab, sales enablement journey, stakeholder management program or executive presence intervention.

          Leadership networkingClient relationship managementStakeholder influenceConsultative sellingExecutive presence
          Book a conversation

          Want this customised for your organisation?

          Use it as a client-facing microsite, internal capability platform, workshop pre-work page or post-session sustainment tool.