| name | stakeholder-map |
| description | Map stakeholders by power × interest (or influence × support), design a communication plan, and run the stakeholder-management discipline that prevents surprise objections. Use when launching a major initiative, navigating an enterprise deal, planning a re-org, or pre-empting political resistance to a roadmap change.
|
| license | MIT + Commons Clause |
| metadata | {"version":"1.0.0","author":"borghei","category":"project-management","domain":"execution","updated":"2026-05-27T00:00:00.000Z","python-tools":"stakeholder_analyzer.py","tech-stack":"stakeholder-mapping, power-interest, change-management"} |
Stakeholder Map
A 2x2 grid of stakeholders, plus a tactical engagement plan derived from
the map. Used to pre-empt resistance, route decisions correctly, and
match communication cadence to influence.
When to use this skill
- Major initiative launch (re-platform, pricing change, market expansion)
- Enterprise deal navigation (multiple buying-committee members)
- Org re-design / re-org planning
- Roadmap change affecting multiple stakeholders
- Pre-board / pre-exec strategic decisions
- Post-mortem stakeholder map (who didn't we engage that we should have?)
The 2x2: Power × Interest
| Low Power | High Power |
|---|
| High Interest | Keep informed | Manage closely |
| Low Interest | Monitor | Keep satisfied |
Quadrants
- Manage closely (HP/HI): key decisions; influence + engaged. Highest investment.
- Keep satisfied (HP/LI): authority but not engaged. Don't let them surprise you.
- Keep informed (LP/HI): advocates and detractors who care. Use them.
- Monitor (LP/LI): light touch.
Workflow
Step 1 — List all stakeholders
Brainstorm:
- Executive sponsors
- Decision-makers
- Influencers
- Implementers
- Users / customers
- Adjacent teams
- External parties (vendors, regulators, partners)
Don't filter yet. List broadly, prune later.
Step 2 — Rate Power + Interest (1-5)
For each:
- Power: can they kill or accelerate this? authority? budget? veto?
- Interest: how much do they care about the outcome?
Step 3 — Add Support (stance)
Each stakeholder is also somewhere on:
- Champion (actively supports)
- Supporter (positive but passive)
- Neutral
- Skeptic
- Blocker (actively opposes)
This complements Power×Interest with directionality.
Step 4 — Identify the matrix sweet spot
The critical stakeholders: high power + high interest + not-yet-supporters.
These are who you need to convert.
Step 5 — Design engagement plan per quadrant
| Quadrant | Engagement pattern |
|---|
| Manage closely | Weekly 1:1, deep involvement, co-author key docs |
| Keep satisfied | Monthly check-in, pre-brief major decisions |
| Keep informed | Email updates, FYI inclusion, surface their concerns publicly |
| Monitor | Quarterly newsletter; no proactive |
Step 6 — Address blockers explicitly
For each blocker:
- What's their objection?
- What evidence might change their view?
- Who do they listen to?
- Can we convert, neutralize, or out-vote?
Ignoring blockers = late surprise objection that derails the initiative.
Step 7 — Run stakeholder_analyzer.py
Audit for: missing key stakeholders by role, blockers without plans,
power-without-interest gaps, no engagement plan.
python3 project-management/execution/stakeholder-map/scripts/stakeholder_analyzer.py \
--input stakeholders.json --format markdown
Decision frameworks
Power dimensions (be specific)
- Hierarchical authority (CEO/board > VP > Director)
- Budget control (who allocates $)
- Veto power (legal, compliance, infosec)
- Domain expertise (the one person who actually understands X)
- Coalition power (who their faction follows)
- External legitimacy (analyst, customer reference, regulator)
A "low-hierarchy / high-veto" stakeholder (e.g., compliance lead) often
has more power than a "high-hierarchy / low-domain" one.
Interest dimensions
- Outcome impact (will this affect their world?)
- Personal stake (career, comp, ego)
- Resource impact (their team, their budget)
- Public visibility (their reputation tied to this)
Common engagement patterns
For executive sponsor (HP/HI):
- Weekly 1:1 (you bring updates + asks)
- Co-author the strategic narrative
- Defend at board level
- Veto power to be used selectively
For powerful skeptic (HP/HI, low support):
- Discover the actual objection (often different than stated)
- Find evidence that addresses it
- Pre-brief before big decisions
- Make their support visible to their peers
For powerless advocate (LP/HI, high support):
- Use them to influence others
- Amplify their voice publicly
- Don't burn them with surprise asks
For powerful absent leader (HP/LI):
- Don't let them tune in late and veto
- Pre-brief before key decisions
- Make engagement low-friction (5-min readouts)
When to escalate vs route around
- Escalate when: stakeholder's authority is structurally needed
- Route around when: stakeholder is tangential and adding friction
- Never route around: legal, security, compliance, finance approvers
Common engagements
"Help me build a stakeholder map for the launch"
- Brainstorm 20+ stakeholders.
- Rate Power, Interest, Support per stakeholder.
- Plot the 2x2.
- Identify the critical 5-10 (HP/HI).
- For each blocker, design conversion plan.
- Document engagement cadence per quadrant.
"Audit a recent failed launch"
- Map the stakeholders involved.
- Identify who derailed it (often a HP/LI we missed).
- Identify who could have helped but wasn't engaged.
- Update default stakeholder template for next launch.
"Navigate an enterprise deal with 8 buying-committee members"
- Map all 8 + 4-5 unofficial influencers.
- Identify economic buyer, technical buyer, user, executive sponsor.
- Engagement plan per role.
- Address blockers (legal, security) early; don't wait for procurement.
Anti-patterns to avoid
- No stakeholder map. Trust the org chart; surprised by lateral resistance.
- Map without engagement plan. Knowing isn't acting.
- Ignoring blockers. They surface at the worst moment.
- Treating power as just hierarchy. Vetoes matter; expertise matters.
- No HP/LI engagement. Sleeping authority becomes late veto.
- Static map. Power + stance shift; refresh per quarter / per phase.
- Mapping without input from someone politically savvy. Solo maps miss reality.
References
references/stakeholder-mapping-framework.md — power dimensions, support spectrum, engagement plans
references/stakeholder-anti-patterns.md — common failures + worked fixes
Related skills
project-management/execution/daci-framework — decision-rights model
project-management/execution/summarize-meeting — communication artifacts
c-level-advisor/ceo-advisor — executive context
c-level-advisor/general-counsel-advisor — legal stakeholder navigation
business-growth/sales-engineer — buying-committee mapping