“Three weeks into procurement they asked for our SOC 2 Type II report. We didn’t have one. We lost the deal.” If you’re in that three-week window right now, this is the seven-day playbook. About 80% of “in security review” stalls are recoverable with the right escalation, but only if you move deliberately.
Diagnose: who’s actually blocking?
A stall has an owner, even when no one names it. Map the players: the champion (wants the deal), the economic buyer (owns the budget), the security reviewer (owns the gate) and procurement (owns the paperwork). Email each isn’t enough, get the champion or economic buyer on a call and ask, plainly, “What specifically is blocking the next step and who owns it?” The economic buyer almost always has more influence over the timeline than they admit.
The escalation conversation (script)
To the economic buyer: “We’re aligned on fit and value. The security review has been open three weeks and I want to help your team close it. Can we get the reviewer, you and me on 30 minutes so I can answer everything in one pass and we hit your timeline?” This collapses asynchronous cycles into one synchronous resolution and signals you take their process seriously.
The bridge artifacts that buy you 30 days
If the blocker is a missing SOC 2, offer a bridge: a recent penetration test, your security policies, a vCISO attestation, a customer reference who completed your review and a dated Type 2 commitment. Pair the bridge with a trust center link. This buys roughly 30 days, enough to keep momentum while you close the real gap.
When to walk away from the deal explicitly
If the gate is firm and the artifact is months away, say so: “We understand a current Type 2 is a hard requirement; we expect issuance by [date] and would value re-engaging then.” Walking away explicitly sometimes shakes the deal loose, counterintuitive, but I’ve watched buyers accelerate once the vendor stops chasing.
The next-deal pattern: don’t let this be three weeks again
Build the system so the next review takes days, not weeks: a standing trust center, a pre-populated questionnaire library and a one-page compliance roadmap your sales team attaches to every enterprise opportunity. The full sequence is in the stalled-deal playbook.
Where AttriEdge fits
If a deal is stuck right now, the diagnostic produces a recovery plan, what’s recoverable in 14 days, what isn’t and the exact artifacts to assemble. $999, 48-hour deliverable.
If this stays stuck
Then the blocker is structural, not a missing file.
A stall that outlasts a tactical fix usually means the India entity cannot prove a control the buyer needs, and no single artifact will fix it. That is what the 48-hour diagnostic is built to find and map.
Book the $999 diagnostic →Chain of custody. Drafted by H. Attri · Filed June 11, 2026 · One specimen of the evidence discipline AttriEdge operates for clients.