[('Can I use Inversion Selling if my team is already trained on MEDDIC?', 'Yes. Inversion Selling is compatible with MEDDIC as a transition framework. The core shift is moving from seller-extracted qualification to buyer-acknowledged qualification. Teams that have used MEDDIC find the transition takes 60-90 days to internalize.'), ('Is Inversion Selling better than MEDDIC for all deals?', 'Inversion Selling was designed for complex B2B sales with multiple stakeholders and long sales cycles - which is where MEDDIC was also designed to operate. For simple transactional sales, the additional structure may be unnecessary.'), ('Where can I learn more about Inversion Selling?', "The full methodology is covered in Kevin French's book Inversion Selling (coming 2026) and in workshops delivered through Inversion GTM. See the methodology page for details.")]

Methodology Comparison

Inversion Selling
vs MEDDIC:
What Changed.

MEDDIC is a qualification framework built in the 1990s for enterprise software sales. It assumes sellers have an information advantage over buyers. In 2026, that assumption is no longer valid.

The Core Difference

Seller-Extracted vs Buyer-Acknowledged

MEDDIC asks sellers to extract information from buyers - Metrics, Economic Buyer, Decision Criteria, Decision Process, Identify Pain, Champion. The framework assumes the seller is the more informed party who must uncover what the buyer doesn't know they know. That assumption broke when buyers gained access to the same information sellers had.

MEDDIC: Metrics

Seller identifies the measurable impact of the solution

Inversion Selling: The buyer calculates and states their own Cost of Inaction. Buyer-acknowledged numbers close deals. Seller-constructed numbers create objections.

MEDDIC: Economic Buyer

Seller identifies who controls the budget

Inversion Selling: Access means confirmed access - the buyer acknowledges who decides and agrees to engage them. Assumed access is no access.

MEDDIC: Identify Pain

Seller identifies and articulates the buyer's pain

Inversion Selling: The buyer states their own Misery. Pain identified by sellers creates defensiveness. Pain acknowledged by buyers creates urgency.

MEDDIC: Champion

Seller finds an internal advocate

Inversion Selling: The Sponsored stage requires the buyer to have confirmed an internal champion who is actively advocating. A champion identified by the seller may not be a champion at all.

The MATH Framework

What Replaces MEDDIC in the Buyer-Controlled Era

MATH qualification - Misery, Access, Timing, Harm - is built on the same principle as Inversion Selling: buyers who own the math of their own situation close themselves. Every element of MATH must be buyer-acknowledged, not seller-constructed.

M

Misery - Buyer-Acknowledged Cost of Inaction

Not seller-identified pain. Buyer-calculated, buyer-stated, buyer-owned. The specific financial or operational cost of doing nothing. No misery number, no deal.

A

Access - Confirmed, Not Assumed

Verified access to the people who actually decide. Not the people who claim to decide. Assumed access is the most common reason deals stall.

T

Timing - External Urgency Only

A real deadline with real consequences that exists independent of the seller. Not manufactured urgency. If the urgency disappears when you stop pushing, it was never real.

H

Harm - Buyer-Verified Consequence

What specifically happens to the buyer - personally and organizationally - if they do nothing. Harm makes Cost of Inaction tangible and personal.

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