GROWTH

Growth Doesn’t Fail in the Pitch, It Fails in Approval

Feb 11, 2026

This is the second article in a three-part series on priority account growth, following Your Priority Accounts Aren’t Failing, They’re Undecided, and focuses on separating what sounds good from what can actually be approved.

Most agencies think account growth fails because the pitch wasn’t strong enough. The idea wasn’t compelling. The scope wasn’t clear. The timing wasn’t right. That’s rarely the real problem.

Growth usually fails after the pitch, when the decision has to survive the client’s internal approval process.


Interest is not approval

Agencies regularly confuse three very different things:

  • client interest

  • client agreement

  • client approval

Interest feels like progress. Approval is what actually moves money. A client can like the idea, agree it makes sense, and still never approve it. When that happens, growth doesn’t stall loudly. It dissolves quietly.

“We’ll come back to this.” “Let’s revisit next quarter.” “Once budget frees up.” Nothing is rejected. Nothing moves forward.


Most growth ideas die inside the client

Expansion rarely fails because the agency didn’t sell hard enough. It fails because the growth move can’t survive:

  • internal politics

  • procurement scrutiny

  • competing priorities

  • budget owners protecting downside risk

From the agency side, the idea feels obvious. From the client side, it feels risky, optional, or poorly timed. That gap is where growth goes to die.


Relationship strength doesn’t equal decision leverage

This is where agencies misread reality. A strong relationship helps you get heard. It does not guarantee approval. Clients don’t approve growth because they like you. They approve it because:

  • someone inside must defend the decision

  • there’s pressure to act now

  • not acting carries real cost

Here’s the harder truth most agencies avoid: they usually know when a growth move won’t get approved. They keep it alive anyway to protect the relationship, avoid internal conflict, or keep hope in the forecast.

That’s not optimism. That’s avoidance.


The approval test every growth move must pass

Before leadership treats any account as a growth account, it should be required to pass this approval test:

  • Who inside the client must approve this?

  • What pressure forces them to act now?

  • What risk do they personally take by saying yes?

  • What happens if they say no or delay?

  • Would this survive procurement scrutiny as written?

If these answers aren’t clear, growth isn’t blocked. It’s not approvable yet.


Why agencies keep misreading this

Because internal processes reward optimism. QBRs highlight opportunity. Account plans list expansion ideas. Forecasts assume growth before it’s defensible.

No one wants to be the person who says, “This won’t get approved.” So growth ideas stay alive without passing the approval test. Leadership stays involved. Teams keep warming the account. And nothing closes.


How to stop chasing growth that won’t get approved

The fastest way to expose false growth is simple: Remove it from the forecast and see who fights to defend it.

If no one owns the approval risk, growth was never real. That’s not pessimism. That’s discipline. Leadership time, attention, and credibility should only be invested where approval is possible, not where hope is convenient.


The real growth filter

A real growth account isn’t one with ideas. It’s one where a decision can actually happen. If approval can’t happen:

  • this quarter

  • with a named owner

  • under real pressure

Then, leadership should stop pretending growth is imminent. That’s not conservative. That’s focus.


The Account Growth Accelerator is a 10-day decision system that applies The Buyer Clarity Map to prove whether growth is real in one priority account.