There is a phrase that quietly destroys growth in complex markets.
“Almost there.”
Not rejected. Not approved. Just… almost.
When a deal is “almost there,” it feels alive.
Meetings continue.
Questions are asked.
Documents circulate.
But something subtle has happened.
The cognitive energy has flattened.
The buyer is no longer progressing.
They are stabilising.
And stabilisation in complex decisions is expensive.
Long sales cycles are often accepted as normal in technical and capital markets.
But consider what “almost there” really means:
Even a 10 per cent improvement in stage progression across a six-step sales process compounds dramatically.
But most organisations do not measure stage progression.
They measure pipeline volume.
Pipeline volume hides friction.
Stage stagnation reveals it.
Because the underlying confusion has not been diagnosed.
The buyer may:
In these conditions, forward movement feels risky.
So the safest move is neutral.
Stay engaged.
Delay commitment.
Where are your deals stabilising?
Early curiosity?
Technical validation?
Board submission?
Contract negotiation?
“Almost there” is not a timing issue. It is a structural one.
When you map hesitation to the stage of cognitive progression, it becomes predictable.
And once predictable, it becomes designable.
Fit 4 Market is the specialist in Marketing Complex Ideas. Read more in the Guidebook below and contact Fit 4 Market here.