Install
openclaw skills install @deciqai/customer-relationship-ladderActivate when: a key account renewal is at risk and the team can't explain why the customer values them; someone asks 'how do we become a strategic partner?'; a CSM needs to know where a relationship actually stands; the team claims to be strategic but has no proactive insight delivery this quarter; a deal was lost on relationship despite having the best product. Do NOT activate when: the customer base is transactional high-volume with ACV under $500 (Rung 3–5 is structurally impossible); the customer explicitly prefers arms-length vendor relationships.
openclaw skills install @deciqai/customer-relationship-ladderMost B2B teams treat relationship deepening as an attitude problem — be friendlier, schedule more QBRs. The Ladder reframes it as structural: each rung requires a fundamentally different operating model, and you cannot skip rungs.
| Rung | Name | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Partial Fulfillment | Vendor meets stated need only; customer keeps alternatives warm |
| 2 | Basic Fulfillment | Vendor reliably delivers; customer stops shopping around |
| 3 | Deep Understanding | Vendor understands unstated needs; proactive insight delivery |
| 4 | Trusted Strategic Partner | Customer shares roadmap; joint planning occurs |
| 5 | Driver / Pioneer | Vendor shapes customer's strategy; co-creation; high switching cost |
Cross-skill composition: After jobs-to-be-done (surfaces jobs per rung). Before demand-leadership (Ladder = supply-side account; Demand Leadership = demand-side category). Alongside principal-agent to audit incentive alignment before Rung 4–5 joint planning.
Trigger: Key account renewal at risk; team claims "strategic partner" but can't name one unstated need addressed this quarter; new CSM needs rapid diagnostic; deal lost on relationship despite best product; board asks "how do we become indispensable to top accounts?"
When NOT to use: Transactional/high-volume (<$500 ACV); customer prefers arms-length; fewer than 10 customers (use lean-startup first).
Engine mode: concrete account → run The Process. Coach mode: unfamiliar → guide step by step. In Coach mode, respond one step at a time. Each [WAIT] is a hard stop — output only that step's question, then stop.
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
[WAIT — do not advance until user responds]
3D-T Framework: Diagnose → Design → Deploy, anchored by Trust
Step 1 — Diagnose: Collect across 4 dimensions: information flow, vendor substitutability, problem source, meeting cadence. Stop-rule: Can't answer "what specific unstated need did we address this quarter?" → capped at Rung 2.
Step 2 — Design: 1→2: Reliability (operational). 2→3: Embedded knowledge — assign someone to learn their business from inside. 3→4: Shared stakes — joint initiative, both parties commit resources. 4→5: Co-creation via proprietary data, methodology, or talent.
Step 3 — Deploy: Define specific action / observable success evidence / timeline (1–4 quarters) / trust dependency.
Step 4 — Trust Audit (quarterly): Competence (do they believe you can deliver?), Integrity (do they think you act in their interest?), Benevolence (do they share bad news with you?). Audit each separately.
Account: ___________ Date: ___________ Owner: ___________
CURRENT RUNG: [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Evidence: 1.___ 2.___ 3.___
TARGET RUNG: ___ Rung-up requirement: ___________
Action: ___________ Owner: ___________ Due: ___________
Success evidence (observable behavior): ___________
Trust: Competence[ ] Integrity[ ] Benevolence[ ] Primary constraint: ___________
Stop-rule: "What unstated need did we address this quarter?" → blank = cap at Rung 2
→ Method in Action: IBM's Transformation from Hardware Vendor to Strategic Partner (1993–2001)
SaaS: 2→3 CSE attends customer's internal product planning. 3→4 co-develop custom integration (switching cost). 4→5 customer joins product advisory board. Professional Services: 2→3 unsolicited benchmarking report. 3→4 retained advisory fixed fee. 4→5 client introduces you to board and portfolio companies. Manufacturing: 2→3 demand-side forecasting using your data. 3→4 joint capacity planning, multi-year. 4→5 customer designs product lines with your constraints as primary input.
→ Primary sources: references/sources.md
[D] = designed upfront | [O] = observed in real use. [O] entries are more valuable.
| Fake move | Reality |
|---|---|
| [D] "They always take our calls — great relationship." | Accessibility is Rung 2 at best. Strategic partners call you proactively. |
| [D] "We've been their vendor for 10 years — clearly strategic." | Tenure without information asymmetry is Rung 2 with inertia. Duration ≠ depth. |
| [D] "QBR rated us 9/10." | Satisfaction scores measure Rung 1–2 delivery. High CSAT at Rung 1 is still Rung 1. |
| [D] "We sent them a proactive industry trends report." | Generic content = Rung 2. Rung 3 needs insight specific to their situation from inside knowledge. |
| [D] "We gave a discount and they stayed." | Price-based retention = Rung 1. You haven't differentiated on insight or co-investment. |
| [D] "We're working on a joint case study." | Marketing activity. Rung 4 = joint planning with shared P&L exposure. |
| [D] "They said they couldn't imagine switching." | Verbal loyalty ≠ Rung 5. True lock-in = customer designing systems around your constraints. |
| → Add [O] entries here after each real use — paste the actual failure pattern | What went wrong and why |
Verification checklist:
Part of deciqAI Knowledge Skills — open-source thinking skills that make rigor executable for AI agents. Built by deciqAI · https://deciqai.com · Contributions welcome — see the template at the repo root.