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A pipeline is not a list of deals. It is a model of future revenue, and like any model, it is only useful if it reflects reality. Pipeline management is the discipline of keeping that model accurate, actionable, and predictive.
Each stage has an entry condition (what makes a deal move in) and an exit criterion (a specific buyer action that confirms progression). Stage advancement based on seller activity rather than buyer action creates false pipeline.
Entry: Account identified as fitting ICP. Contact identified. Exit criterion: Buyer has agreed to an initial conversation. Probability: 5–10%
Entry: First call booked and held. Exit criterion: Pain confirmed and quantified. Buyer has agreed to continue. Probability: 20%
Entry: MEDDIC gaps identified and a plan to close them. Exit criterion: Economic buyer identified and a path to meeting them confirmed. Probability: 35%
Entry: Demo or proposal scoped and scheduled. Exit criterion: Buyer has confirmed solution addresses their pain. Stakeholders mapped. Probability: 50%
Entry: Commercial proposal submitted. Exit criterion: Buyer has reviewed and provided feedback. No pending showstoppers. Probability: 65%
Entry: Buyer has indicated intent to proceed. Commercial terms under discussion. Exit criterion: Commercial agreement in principle. Legal/procurement engaged. Probability: 80%
Entry: Decision made. Won: Signed contract or PO received. Lost: Decision to not proceed confirmed. Loss reason recorded.
A deal must be removed or downgraded when:
Stale deals inflate forecast and delay honest assessment. Review and cull weekly.
Run weekly or bi-weekly. Focus on movement, not status.
Questions per deal:
Review by stage, not by rep. Look at the whole funnel shape:
The single most useful pipeline metric:
Sales Velocity = (Number of Opportunities × Win Rate × Average Deal Value) ÷ Sales Cycle Length
Use it to model the impact of improvements:
Optimising the right lever depends on where the bottleneck is.
Coverage ratio = Total pipeline value ÷ Quota
Industry standard targets:
Coverage ratio by stage matters more than total coverage. A 4× pipeline that is 80% in Stage 2 is not a healthy pipeline.