Claim
Dixon's machine-learning analysis of 2.5M recorded sales conversations found that 40-60% of B2B deals are lost to "no decision" (not to competitor wins) and that 87% of deals show medium-to-high levels of indecision somewhere in the cycle. The buyer's fear of messing up (FOMU) — distinct from fear of missing out (FOMO) — is the dominant cause of stalled deals, not insufficient differentiation against named alternatives.
Mechanism
The Challenger Sale framework addressed FOMO — the fear of missing out on a better solution, which Challenger reps overcame by making the status quo intolerable. JOLT addresses the opposite fear: FOMU, the fear of making the wrong purchase decision, getting blamed, or having the implementation fail. FOMU paralyses the buyer in a different way than FOMO — they don't say "your solution isn't good enough"; they say "we need more information," "let's revisit next quarter," or simply ghost the rep. Standard sales tactics that pressure the status quo amplify FOMU because they raise the stakes of the decision rather than lowering them. The right response is the JOLT framework: Judge the level of indecision, Offer your personal recommendation, Limit the exploration, Take risk off the table.
Conditions
Holds when:
- The deal is large enough that buyers feel personal exposure to the consequences (most enterprise B2B, some mid-market).
- The buyer has multiple stakeholders to satisfy, increasing FOMU in proportion to stakeholder count.
- The purchase has a non-trivial implementation risk that's visible to the buyer.
Fails when:
- Low-stakes purchases where FOMU is below the threshold of conscious feeling.
- Forced-buy moments (compliance, billing crisis) where indecision isn't an option.
- Categories with strong default-vendor dynamics where "stay with current" doesn't feel like a decision.
Evidence
"40-60% of deals are lost to \"no decision\" and that 87% of deals show medium to high levels of indecision."
— see raw/expert-content/experts/matt-dixon.md line 21.
Signals
- Win/loss analytics tag every "lost" reason as either lost-to-competitor, lost-to-no-decision, or lost-to-other; if no-decision is >40%, the playbook needs JOLT.
- Sales reps trained to diagnose FOMU vs. FOMO at each stage; different tactics deploy.
- Indecision-flagging is built into the CRM as a stage-attribute, not just a closed-lost reason.
Counter-evidence
The 40-60% figure is consistent with April Dunford's positioning research (40–60% of B2B buyers say "no decision" — your real competitor is the status quo) — different methodology, similar empirical finding. The convergence is strong evidence the no-decision phenomenon is real. The diagnostic question is whether the FOMU framing (Dixon) or the problem-framing-failure framing (Dunford) better fits the specific deal.
Cross-references
- The biggest source of lost B2B deals is customer indecision, not competitor wins. JOLT them out. — the canonical Dixon card; this card details the empirical finding behind it.
- 40–60% of B2B buyers say "no decision" — your real competitor is the status quo — Dunford's adjacent claim with different mechanism (problem-framing failure).
- When buyers are indecisive, 73% of reps double down on hammering the status quo — and it backfires 84% of the time — what happens when reps respond to FOMU with FOMO tactics.
- Status quo / no-decision is the real competitor — the broader convergence pattern.