While strong strategy, insight and execution are certainly crucial to achieving these objectives, what is all too often overlooked are two especially important operational structures that are 100% necessary for consistent success:
You may be thinking, “Doug, you’re crazy. I haven’t overlooked a pipeline, it’s central to our CRM!” And while the vast majority of companies that I see do have stated deal/opportunity stages that define their pipeline; more than 90% of them aren’t worth the paper (or bytes) they’re written on. Not only do they fail to create any real value or insight, they are central to the problems that sales and demand generation organizations are working so hard to overcome.
This post will walk you through the key elements of designing an effective sales pipeline structure, as well as enabling you to diagnose some of the fundamental flaws that likely exist in your existing process.
The sales pipeline is an interesting business discipline. Nearly everyone agrees business must have them, and they’re often treated with reverence & fear. (“It’s time for the pipeline review everyone!”) Yet, few executives I talk with (and even fewer sales reps) feel they get much value from their pipeline efforts.
The purpose of documenting and tracking a pipeline is three-fold:
Stop for a moment and give your pipeline management a grade on these three criteria. If you’re like most of the companies whose processes I’ve reviewed (and I’ve reviewed thousands) the grade is not very good. The majority of pipeline management systems get a failing grade.
Why? Without a carefully constructed system, pipeline management often becomes about salespeople placating managers, managers attempting to show they’re on top of things to senior executives, and senior executives trying to pump up their perceived performance with their boards.
What’s missing, and I cannot emphasize this enough, is the crucial importance of a strong, clear and disciplined pipeline structure and tracking process. When pipeline/deal stages are clear and meaningful, it creates alignment, order and insight as it’s designed to do.
Over the last 20 years, I’ve found three mistakes that account for about 80% of the problem with pipeline structures. Be sure to avoid or address these:
Demo. Present. Propose. Close. These are not stages, these are activities. A series of activities is not an effective means for designing a sales strategy or your pipeline structure.
I credit Jeff Thull, author of Mastering the Complex Sale, with this observation. Complex sales is less about managing a sales process than it is about managing a decision process. This may sound counterintuitive, but if you’ve designed your customer acquisition or sales process to “close every sale,” you’ll be wasting time on clients who should be eliminated early on---which in turn means you won’t be prioritizing potential large accounts which are a good fit. Your pipeline should be oriented towards maximizing the probability of a good decision, in an efficient means that meets your economic model.
I’ve conducted more pipeline reviews in my lifetime than I care to think about. Through the advisory and coaching work I do for clients, I’m able to talk to sales reps, before and after the pipeline review, to get their take on opportunities and how they manage opportunity reporting. I can state unequivocally that the dominant stimulus that determines the stage a rep places a deal in the pipeline is what the rep thinks will minimize any negativity from their manager. It guides the frequency with which they actually update a deal stage and the stage they place them.
When you realize this, it’s no wonder that forecasting sales and revenue is such a mystery.
Managing a sales pipeline is a lot like navigating a journey on the high seas. There’s certainty in where you start (though I should add that in sales, the beginning of the process has lost a lot of its certainty) and where you want to end up. Everything else is subject to the conditions you encounter en route.
A strong pipeline structure is to a salesperson and/or sales executive what a navigational chart is to a sailor. Your pipeline is (or should be) a unique process to your business. (Don’t just take someone else’s you like.) Therefore, the manner of designing your pipeline is as unique as your business. That said, here are five steps that are common in all good approaches, and will get you to at least a good design.
The first thing to do is pull all of the information for 5 - 10 opportunities that recently concluded. If you’re a new business and don’t have 5 - 10 examples, create 5 - 7 user stories telling the fictional story of a completed sales process. Be sure you mix losses in with the wins.
You’ll want to document the following items:
With these interactions documented, it’s time to debrief and put together a comparative narrative. Here’s what you’ll want to do here:
* What worked?
* What didn’t work?
*What worked for both groups? What didn’t work for both groups?
Now create 3 - 5 user stories that describe common opportunities that present themselves. Using those stories as a guide, recreate the activities and path you’d follow to implement your discoveries from step two. Remember your goal is to enable both parties to make a good decision as early and effortlessly as possible.
This is the step where you actually create your deal/pipeline stages. Group the actions you’ll take together as you progress through the decision/sales process. As you group these activities together, you’ll see that they break into two categories:
For the activities you list, notate which activities/actions/decisions are crucial for success or which are nice to have.
Note, there are three meta stages a decision progresses through. You’ll want to align your stages with this path:
A common question I get (and see posted) is: how many deal stages is the right number? The answer to that question is as few (and as many) as necessary. Here are the two acid test questions to determine if a deal stage is necessary or should be combined with others:
When you’re able to answer “yes” to both questions for every stage, you’ve arrived at the right number of stages.
It’s been said that great communication is communicating so that you can’t be misunderstood, rather than communicating so that you can be understood. The same advice is true for pipeline design. Don’t just throw the stages into your CRM and call your work done. Be sure to define each stage clearly by ensuring these three elements are present for every stage.
People who know me well know that I’m a huge fan of the “jobs to be hired” approach to systems design. When I’m designing sales processes, I like to think about what I’m “hiring” each stage for. Define these three items for each stage:
Describing what’s happening at each stage is the next part of clearly communicating the process.
The toughest change in sales over the last decade is that today the buyer and seller are often totally out of synch. The Zero Moment of Truth (ZMOT) has created a parallel, do-it-yourself path for the buyer in even the most complex sales, and even when a buyer is actively engaged with a seller.
The mistake salespeople commonly make is that they determine where a prospect is in the buying journey by identifying the attribute that is closest to the end of the process. (There’s a psychological reason for this, but that’s a story for another blog post.) For example, if the prospect asks about pricing, terms or something similar, the seller naturally assumes the prospect is at the end of the process (after all, we talk price last) and treats them accordingly. This leads to steps, actions and decisions being skipped and not only decreases the predictability of the outcome, it also increases the decision reluctance felt by the buyer.
A strong pipeline process establishes exit criteria for each stage, and an opportunity can only move to a progressive stage when all exit criteria of a previous stage are met. This approach allows the salesperson to engage with a buyer in alignment with where they are, while also eliminating the likelihood that steps are skipped.
For example, let’s say we’re involved in a seven-stage sales process. The prospect shows a willingness to allocate the budget required for the sales (criteria typically associated in stage six in this mythical process), but we haven’t clearly defined the underlying problem that the buyer wants to solve (criteria typically associated with stage three). Most reps would mistakenly identify the opportunity as stage six and treat the prospect as though they’re about ready to make a decision. So, they’d rush to create a proposal, and then they’d confront myriad objections, hidden decision-makers, and more.
With strong exit criteria, this opportunity would be assigned to stage three and the rep would clearly see that they need to focus on defining the problem to keep the process moving forward.
Here’s an example of the overview page of our sales process to highlight what these three criteria look like.
Greater predictability and higher win rates are not only possible but probable when you spend the time upfront to clearly design and document your sales process. While this process can take days and even weeks, don’t be deterred; you’ll discover that your salespeople will be empowered to prioritize the prospective customers who are the best “fit.” Even better, each stage of the pipeline will be completed properly--no more rushing the process due to arbitrary requests! If you follow these guidelines, we feel confident that you’ll see a strong payoff in your sales pipeline results.