The Definitive Guide to
Sales Pipeline
Management
1
Table of Contents
10 Best Practices for
Pipeline Integrity
8 Keys to a Healthy Sales
Pipeline2
Why should you care about your
sales pipeline?
Pipeline management is a primary factor in
sales success. Your sales pipeline is the key
to evaluating, managing, and ultimately
improving your sales process – so you can
close more deals. Follow the steps in this
detailed guide to better understand and
manage your sales pipeline.
10 Best Practices
For Pipeline Integrity1
1. Separate Pipeline Meetings from
Forecast Meetings
The sales pipeline is all about the top of the
funnel opportunities, not the opportunities
that are about to close this month. Because
of this, you should separate your pipeline
meetings from your forecast meetings.
You should use pipeline meetings to talk
about the overall health of your pipeline – is
it growing? Do you have enough leads for
the next month?
2. Formalize Your Sales Process
For your pipeline to function correctly, you
must have clearly defined opportunity stages
mapped from the customer’s point of view.
Instead of defining your sales pipeline by
your selling process, you should align it
with the buying process. This means
instead of “Qualification” and “Present
Solution” your pipeline should use terms like
“Acknowledge Pain” and “Decision.”
3. Inspect the 3 Essential
Pipeline Metrics
1.  Opportunity Dollar Size vs. Average
Won Deal Size
How big is a specific opportunity? Is it
significantly larger than the average deal
your company wins? If a deal is much larger
than you’ve historically closed, it has a much
lower likelihood of closing.
2. Opportunity Age vs. Win Cycle
Much like opportunity size, an opportunity’s
age tells you a lot about how likely you are to
convert it into a deal. Opportunities that
linger in your pipeline are less likely to
convert, while newer opportunities are more
likely to become deals.
3. Win Rate (Probability of Winning Your
Opportunity)
How many opportunities does it take you to
generate a deal? The inverse of this ratio
(Opps : Deals) is your Win Rate, and tells
you exactly how likely you are to convert any
given opportunity.
4. Beware the 5 Pipeline Killers
1.  Age in Stage
Stalled deals convert at much lower rates
than quickly progressing ones. Look for
opportunities in your pipeline that have
stayed in the same stage for as long as your
average lost deal, and flag them as at-risk.
2. Non-Linear Stage Leaps
The beauty of the sales pipeline is that it
matches the buyer’s journey. Therefore, if an
opportunity goes through the Pipeline
haphazardly - without a linear progression -
that opportunity is less likely to convert.
3. Opportunity Size
An opportunity’s size dictates a lot about
how it will act and how likely your reps are to
convert it. Inspect the pipeline and flag any
opportunities that are more than 3x your
average deal size.
4. Deal Size Changes
If an opportunity’s expected value changes 3
times or more, it is less likely to convert and
should be flagged.
5. Time Slippage
Does one of your opportunities keep having
its close date pushed back? If so, it is
probably unlikely to close at all. Flag it now.
5. Understand Historical
Pipeline Trends
You must understand your pipeline history in
order to put your current pipeline in context.
Look at how your pipeline has changed over
time:
•  Has it grown since last quarter or last
year?
•  Is it growing along with your growth
goals?
6. Assess Your Opportunities to
Achieve a Narrow Sales Funnel
A bigger pipeline is NOT necessarily a
better pipeline.
You want your pipeline to be filled with high-
quality opportunities. You can create a
narrow sales pipeline by more stringently
qualifying opportunities at the top of your
sales funnel. Don’t allow weak opportunities
to waste your reps’ time.
7. Regularly Purge Your Pipeline
Unless you prune your pipeline, it will
become bogged down with unlikely-to-
convert opportunities.
A smaller pipeline filled with high-quality
opportunities is better than one with low-
probability ones. If you fail to purge your
pipeline, it will skew your won/lost analysis
and impair your forecasting abilities.
8. Find Your Strike Zone
As you start purging your pipeline, how do
you know which opportunities to eliminate?
Look closely at your Strike Zone.
Every company should know the types of
opportunities most likely to convert into
customers. Opportunities that are
significantly older or larger than the deals
you typically win are outside the Strike Zone.
9. Understand Your Pipeline Flow
It’s not enough to just add new opportunities
to your pipeline. You must add enough to
replace the opportunities that have flowed
out as Won and Lost deals.
This is your pipeline flow. To prevent your
pipeline from shrinking, you need to create
more opportunities than you lost – carefully
tracking your pipeline flow over time.
10. Forecast by Pipeline Stages
If you want to use your pipeline to make
accurate bookings forecasts, you need to
correctly define your pipeline stages and use
them to predict the likelihood of a deal
closing.
If an opportunity makes it to a certain stage,
you know the probability that it will ultimately
convert into a deal.
8 Keys to a Healthy
Sales Pipeline2
1. Design Your Sales Process for
Effective Pipeline Management
Your sales process should be mapped to the
steps your buyers take to buy from you.
According to CSO Insights, a formalized
sales process leads to:
•  53% increase in forecasted deals won
•  63% increase in reps making quotas
•  88% increase in companies hitting
bookings targets
2. Know Your Conversion Rates
by Stage
Pipeline management is about tracking
open opportunities as they move through
your sales process.
If opportunities are stalling in particular
stages, you must look into the problem and
address it. The only way to do this is to
analyze your sales funnel by stage. Are you
losing a large share of deals in the same
stage?
3. Measure Pipeline by Both Count
and Value
When measuring your pipeline, you have to
know not just the number of total
opportunities in it, but also the value of all
the opportunities.
If you have $5 million in your pipeline today
and a 31% overall win rate, you can feel
comfortable with hitting your $1 million sales
goal.
4. Measure Pipeline by
Individual Rep
Sometimes you need a more detailed
understanding of your pipeline in order to
manage it effectively.
Don’t just look at your overall pipeline, but
drill down to view it at the rep level. Does on
rep have many opportunities in early stages?
Is that rep on target to hit their goals? The
pipeline analysis by rep can tell you.
5. Compare Won and Lost
Opportunities
Time kills all deals.
Knowing this, you should regularly check
open opportunities that are falling outside
your normal range for won deals. Compare
your won deals to your lost deals by sales
cycle. Tracking age in stage for won and lost
opportunities is a great way to evaluate the
open opportunities in your pipeline and their
likelihood of converting into deals.
6. Study Your Average Sales Cycle
A lengthy or increasing sales cycle is often
the byproduct of an unhealthy sales
process.
Regularly measure your sales cycle to
ensure you’re closing opportunities quickly,
and no single stage is holding up deals.
Identify problematic stages and coach your
reps to improve their skills and move
opportunities through that specific stage.
6. Look at Average Sales Cycle
by Rep
You shouldn’t only look at your average
sales cycle in aggregate – you should also
analyze it by employee.
This gives you a much more detailed view
into why your sales cycle is changing and
what you can do to correct the problem. Is
one rep closing deals faster than others?
Learn what this rep is doing and use that
information to coach the rest of your team.
7. Monitor Opportunity Changes
Maintaining a healthy pipeline means having
an accurate and up-to-the-minute picture.
To achieve this, you must closely monitor
changes to open opportunities, especially for
deals past Stage 2. If an opportunity has
changed its expected value or close date
multiple times, it may be less likely to
convert. Check in with reps regularly to see
how opportunities are changing.
8. Make Your Bookings Forecast
Metrics-Driven
You can’t base your forecast on guesses
about when opportunities will close.
Instead, multiply the value of opportunities in
each stage by the historical conversion rate
from that stage to Closed-Won. No
forecasting model is perfect, but we found
this provides a reliable figure and a simple
way to understand your sales process.
Want more sales pipeline
guidance?
This SlideShare
only scratched
the surface.
Check out the
full guide here.

The Definitive Guide to Sales Pipeline Management

  • 1.
    The Definitive Guideto Sales Pipeline Management
  • 2.
    1 Table of Contents 10Best Practices for Pipeline Integrity 8 Keys to a Healthy Sales Pipeline2
  • 3.
    Why should youcare about your sales pipeline? Pipeline management is a primary factor in sales success. Your sales pipeline is the key to evaluating, managing, and ultimately improving your sales process – so you can close more deals. Follow the steps in this detailed guide to better understand and manage your sales pipeline.
  • 4.
    10 Best Practices ForPipeline Integrity1
  • 5.
    1. Separate PipelineMeetings from Forecast Meetings
  • 6.
    The sales pipelineis all about the top of the funnel opportunities, not the opportunities that are about to close this month. Because of this, you should separate your pipeline meetings from your forecast meetings. You should use pipeline meetings to talk about the overall health of your pipeline – is it growing? Do you have enough leads for the next month?
  • 7.
    2. Formalize YourSales Process
  • 8.
    For your pipelineto function correctly, you must have clearly defined opportunity stages mapped from the customer’s point of view. Instead of defining your sales pipeline by your selling process, you should align it with the buying process. This means instead of “Qualification” and “Present Solution” your pipeline should use terms like “Acknowledge Pain” and “Decision.”
  • 9.
    3. Inspect the3 Essential Pipeline Metrics
  • 10.
    1.  Opportunity DollarSize vs. Average Won Deal Size How big is a specific opportunity? Is it significantly larger than the average deal your company wins? If a deal is much larger than you’ve historically closed, it has a much lower likelihood of closing.
  • 11.
    2. Opportunity Agevs. Win Cycle Much like opportunity size, an opportunity’s age tells you a lot about how likely you are to convert it into a deal. Opportunities that linger in your pipeline are less likely to convert, while newer opportunities are more likely to become deals.
  • 12.
    3. Win Rate(Probability of Winning Your Opportunity) How many opportunities does it take you to generate a deal? The inverse of this ratio (Opps : Deals) is your Win Rate, and tells you exactly how likely you are to convert any given opportunity.
  • 13.
    4. Beware the5 Pipeline Killers
  • 14.
    1.  Age inStage Stalled deals convert at much lower rates than quickly progressing ones. Look for opportunities in your pipeline that have stayed in the same stage for as long as your average lost deal, and flag them as at-risk.
  • 15.
    2. Non-Linear StageLeaps The beauty of the sales pipeline is that it matches the buyer’s journey. Therefore, if an opportunity goes through the Pipeline haphazardly - without a linear progression - that opportunity is less likely to convert.
  • 16.
    3. Opportunity Size Anopportunity’s size dictates a lot about how it will act and how likely your reps are to convert it. Inspect the pipeline and flag any opportunities that are more than 3x your average deal size.
  • 17.
    4. Deal SizeChanges If an opportunity’s expected value changes 3 times or more, it is less likely to convert and should be flagged.
  • 18.
    5. Time Slippage Doesone of your opportunities keep having its close date pushed back? If so, it is probably unlikely to close at all. Flag it now.
  • 19.
  • 20.
    You must understandyour pipeline history in order to put your current pipeline in context. Look at how your pipeline has changed over time: •  Has it grown since last quarter or last year? •  Is it growing along with your growth goals?
  • 22.
    6. Assess YourOpportunities to Achieve a Narrow Sales Funnel
  • 23.
    A bigger pipelineis NOT necessarily a better pipeline. You want your pipeline to be filled with high- quality opportunities. You can create a narrow sales pipeline by more stringently qualifying opportunities at the top of your sales funnel. Don’t allow weak opportunities to waste your reps’ time.
  • 24.
    7. Regularly PurgeYour Pipeline
  • 25.
    Unless you pruneyour pipeline, it will become bogged down with unlikely-to- convert opportunities. A smaller pipeline filled with high-quality opportunities is better than one with low- probability ones. If you fail to purge your pipeline, it will skew your won/lost analysis and impair your forecasting abilities.
  • 26.
    8. Find YourStrike Zone
  • 27.
    As you startpurging your pipeline, how do you know which opportunities to eliminate? Look closely at your Strike Zone. Every company should know the types of opportunities most likely to convert into customers. Opportunities that are significantly older or larger than the deals you typically win are outside the Strike Zone.
  • 29.
    9. Understand YourPipeline Flow
  • 30.
    It’s not enoughto just add new opportunities to your pipeline. You must add enough to replace the opportunities that have flowed out as Won and Lost deals. This is your pipeline flow. To prevent your pipeline from shrinking, you need to create more opportunities than you lost – carefully tracking your pipeline flow over time.
  • 32.
    10. Forecast byPipeline Stages
  • 33.
    If you wantto use your pipeline to make accurate bookings forecasts, you need to correctly define your pipeline stages and use them to predict the likelihood of a deal closing. If an opportunity makes it to a certain stage, you know the probability that it will ultimately convert into a deal.
  • 35.
    8 Keys toa Healthy Sales Pipeline2
  • 36.
    1. Design YourSales Process for Effective Pipeline Management
  • 37.
    Your sales processshould be mapped to the steps your buyers take to buy from you. According to CSO Insights, a formalized sales process leads to: •  53% increase in forecasted deals won •  63% increase in reps making quotas •  88% increase in companies hitting bookings targets
  • 38.
    2. Know YourConversion Rates by Stage
  • 39.
    Pipeline management isabout tracking open opportunities as they move through your sales process. If opportunities are stalling in particular stages, you must look into the problem and address it. The only way to do this is to analyze your sales funnel by stage. Are you losing a large share of deals in the same stage?
  • 41.
    3. Measure Pipelineby Both Count and Value
  • 42.
    When measuring yourpipeline, you have to know not just the number of total opportunities in it, but also the value of all the opportunities. If you have $5 million in your pipeline today and a 31% overall win rate, you can feel comfortable with hitting your $1 million sales goal.
  • 44.
    4. Measure Pipelineby Individual Rep
  • 45.
    Sometimes you needa more detailed understanding of your pipeline in order to manage it effectively. Don’t just look at your overall pipeline, but drill down to view it at the rep level. Does on rep have many opportunities in early stages? Is that rep on target to hit their goals? The pipeline analysis by rep can tell you.
  • 47.
    5. Compare Wonand Lost Opportunities
  • 48.
    Time kills alldeals. Knowing this, you should regularly check open opportunities that are falling outside your normal range for won deals. Compare your won deals to your lost deals by sales cycle. Tracking age in stage for won and lost opportunities is a great way to evaluate the open opportunities in your pipeline and their likelihood of converting into deals.
  • 50.
    6. Study YourAverage Sales Cycle
  • 51.
    A lengthy orincreasing sales cycle is often the byproduct of an unhealthy sales process. Regularly measure your sales cycle to ensure you’re closing opportunities quickly, and no single stage is holding up deals. Identify problematic stages and coach your reps to improve their skills and move opportunities through that specific stage.
  • 53.
    6. Look atAverage Sales Cycle by Rep
  • 54.
    You shouldn’t onlylook at your average sales cycle in aggregate – you should also analyze it by employee. This gives you a much more detailed view into why your sales cycle is changing and what you can do to correct the problem. Is one rep closing deals faster than others? Learn what this rep is doing and use that information to coach the rest of your team.
  • 56.
  • 57.
    Maintaining a healthypipeline means having an accurate and up-to-the-minute picture. To achieve this, you must closely monitor changes to open opportunities, especially for deals past Stage 2. If an opportunity has changed its expected value or close date multiple times, it may be less likely to convert. Check in with reps regularly to see how opportunities are changing.
  • 59.
    8. Make YourBookings Forecast Metrics-Driven
  • 60.
    You can’t baseyour forecast on guesses about when opportunities will close. Instead, multiply the value of opportunities in each stage by the historical conversion rate from that stage to Closed-Won. No forecasting model is perfect, but we found this provides a reliable figure and a simple way to understand your sales process.
  • 62.
    Want more salespipeline guidance? This SlideShare only scratched the surface. Check out the full guide here.