I’ve written about this topic a lot over the years, but never before integrated my ideas into a single high-level piece that not only provides a solution to the problem, but also derives it from first principles. That’s what I’ll do today. If you’re new to this topic, I strongly recommend reading the articles I link to throughout the post.
Scene: you’re consistently having trouble hitting plan. Finance is blaming sales. Sales is blaming marketing. Marketing is blaming the macro environment. Everyone is blaming SDRs. Alliances is hiding in a foxhole hoping no one remembers to blame them. E-staff meetings resemble a cage fight from Beyond Thunderdome, but it’s a tag-team match with each C-level tapping in their heads of operations when they need a break. Numbers are flying everywhere. The shit is hitting the proverbial fan.
The question for CEOs: what do I do about this mess? Here’s my answer.
First:
- Avoid the blame game. That sounds much easier than it is because blame can vary from explicit to subtle and everyone’s blame sensitivity ears are set to eleven. Speak slowly, carefully, and factually when discussing the situation. You might wonder why everyone is pointing fingers, and the reason might well be you.
- Solve the problem. Keep everyone focused on solving the problem going forward. Use blameless statements of fact when discussing historical data. For example, say “when we start with less than 2.5x pipeline coverage, we almost always miss plan” as opposed to “when marketing fails on pipeline generation, we miss plan unless sales does their usual heroic job in pipeline conversion.”)
Then reset the pipeline discussion by constantly reminding everyone of these three facts:
- How do you make 16 quarters in a row? One at a time.
- How do you make one quarter? Start with sufficient pipeline coverage.
- And then convert it at your target conversion rate.
This reframes the problem into making one quarter — the right focus if you’ve missed three in a row.
- This will force a discussion of what “sufficient” means
- That is generally determined by inverting your historical week 3 pipeline conversion rates
- And adjusting them as required, for example, to account for the impacts of big deals or other one-time events
- This may in turn reveal a conversion rate problem, where actual conversion rates are either below targets and/or simply not viable to produce a sales model that hits the board’s target customer acquisition cost (CAC) ratio. For example, you generally can’t achieve a decent CAC ratio with a 20% conversion rate and 5x pipeline coverage requirement. In this case, you will need to balance your energy on improving both conversion rates and starting coverage. While conversion rates are largely a sales team issue, there is nevertheless plenty that marketing and alliances can do to help: marketing through targeting, tools, enablement, and training; alliances through delivering higher-quality opportunities that often convert at higher rates than either inbound or SDR outbound.
It also says you need to think about each and every quarter. This leads to three critical realizations:
- That you must also focus on future pipeline, but segmented into quarters, and not on some rolling basis
- That you need to forecast pipeline (e.g., for next quarter, if not also the one after that)
- That you need some mechanism for taking action when that forecast is below target
The last point should cause you to create some meeting or committee where the pipeline forecast is reviewed and the owners of each of the four to six pipeline sources (i.e., marketing, AE outbound, SDR outbound, alliances, community, PLG) can discuss and then take remedial measures.
- That body should be a team of senior people focused on a single goal: starting every quarter with sufficient pipeline coverage.
- It should be chaired by one person who must be seen as wearing two hats: one as their functional role (e.g., CMO) and the other as head of the pipeline task force. That person must be empowered to solve problems when they arise, even when they cross functions.
- Think: “OK, we’re forecasting 2.2x starting coverage for next quarter instead of 2.5x, which is a $2M gap. Who can do what to get us that $2M?”
- If that means shifting resources, they shift them (e.g., “I’ll defer hiring one SDR to free up $25K to spend on demandgen”).
- If that means asking for new resources, they ask (e.g., I’ll tell the CEO and CFO that if we can’t find $50K, then we think we’ve got no chance of hitting next quarter’s starting coverage goals).
- If that means rebalancing the go-to-market team, they do it. For example, “we’ve only got enough pipeline to support 8 AEs and we’ve got 12. If we cut two AEs, we can use that money to invest in marketing and SDRs to support the remaining 10.”
- Finally, if you need to focus on both pipeline coverage and conversion rates, then this same body, in part two of the meeting, can review progress on actions design to improve conversion.
Teamwork and alignment is not about behaving well in meetings or only politely backstabbing each other outside them. It’s about sitting down together to say, “well, we’re off plan, and what are we going to do about it?” And doing so without any sacred cows in the conversation. Just as no battle plan survives first contact with the enemy, no pipeline plan survives first contact with the market. That’s why you need this group and that’s what it means to align sales, marketing, alliances, and SDRs on pipeline goals. It’s the translation of the popular saying, “pipeline generation is a team sport.”
Notice that I never said to heavily focus on individual pipeline generation (“pipegen”) targets. Yes, you need them and you should set and track them, but we must remember the purpose of pipegen is to hit starting pipeline coverage goals. So just as we shouldn’t overly focus on other upstream metrics — from dials to alliances-meetings to MQLs — we shouldn’t overly focus on pipegen targets to the point where they become the end, not the means. While pipegen is certainly closer to starting coverage than MQLs or dials, it is nevertheless an enabler, in this case, one step removed.
Yes, tracking upstream metrics is important and for marketing I’d track both MQLs and pipegen (via oppty count, not dollars), but I’d neither pop champagne nor tie the CMO to the whipping post based on either MQLs or pipegen alone.
Don’t get me wrong — if your model’s correct, it should be impossible to consistently hit starting pipeline coverage targets while consistently failing on pipegen goals. But in any given quarter, maybe the AEs are short and marketing covers or marketing’s short and alliances covers. The point is that if the company hits the starting coverage goal, we’re happy with the pipeline machine and if we don’t, we’re not. Regardless of whether individual pipeline source X or Y hit their pipegen goals in a quarter. Ultimately, this point of view drives better teamwork because there’s no shame in forecasting a light result against target or shame in asking for help to cover it.
Finally, I’d note an odd situation I sometimes see that looks like this:
- Sales consistently achieves bookings targets, but just by a hair
- Marketing consistently underachieves pipeline targets
For example, sales consistently converts pipeline at 25% off 4x coverage and that 25% conversion rate is just enough to hit plan. But, because the CRO likes cushion, he forces the CMO to sign up for 5x coverage. Marketing then consistently fails to deliver that 5x coverage, delivering 4x coverage instead.
This is an unhealthy situation because sales is consistently succeeding while marketing is consistently failing. If you believe, as I do, that if sales is consistently hitting plan then, definitionally marketing has provided everything it needs to (from pipeline to messaging to enablement), then you can see how pathological this situation is. Sales is simply looking out for itself at the expense of marketing. That’s good for the company in the short term because you’re consistently hitting plan, but bad in the long term because there will be high turnover in the marketing department that should impede their ability to deliver sufficient pipeline in the future.
For more on this topic, please listen to our podcast episode of SaaS Talk with the Metrics Brothers entitled: Top-Down GTM Troubleshooting, Dave’s Method.


Apologies for the long response. I am sure if I was a better writer, I could have made it shorter.
There is one other thing that I have done that makes a lot of difference. When first making the change, it went against everything I had believed in for 20 years, but it made a fundamental difference on many levels, most importantly on the results. Starting with some context, because if I put myself in your shoes, as you read my suggestion, you will be creating the same objections that I went through, so I will address them head on. It was an enterprise software company. We had long sales cycles, we closed large seven-figure deals with large corporations, our largest market was the US, but we had sales across the world from the US to New Zealand to Beijing to Berlin.
The change was to stop measuring, thinking, and acting in quarters. We stopped at every level, other than the CFO, who had to pull that part of the plan together for the BOD. We started thinking, working, and delivering in a monthly cadence. The first few months, it felt so uncomfortable I thought I was going to work wearing a thong for someone half my size. Every part of it felt wrong. We made the change because we were not delivering and decided to focus on the smallest meaningful increment, but the unexpected consequences and benefits became so material we stuck with it.
The over-riding benefit was we started to make our numbers and continued to make our numbers. I know I will forget some, but the benefits came in many other areas as well.
Marketing and Sales started working more closely together. We would monitor pipeline on a weekly basis and work together to adjust. If one week was down, sales would try to help build the pipeline, but when we were down for a month, we treated it like an all-hands-to-the-pump action. When we previously measured in quarters, we just didn’t have the same urgency. We had time to course correct when we were going in the wrong direction.
Close cycles within the quarter went from back-end loaded—too often at 5:55pm on the last day of the quarter, which gave me ulcers—to smoothing across the quarter. We started to do more business in the first and second months of the quarter, eventually ending up with a position where sometimes the biggest month in any given quarter was the first or second. This not only reduced emotional stress, but it also reduced stress on the organization, from on-boarding, to legal, finance, sales. All had more time to spend with more customers earlier in the month.
We became more customer-focused. While it may suit customers’ purchasing departments to take advantage of sales organizations focusing on a quarter end—as we created our own internal compelling event for the customer to take advantage of—we were not aligned with the customer buying centre who just want a solution to their problem when they are ready to buy it, not when our quarter dictates.
We stood out against our competition. Having removed salespeople’s quarterly bonuses, we looked like we meant it when we said what we cared about was solving their problems. When sales start asking the buyer if they think they will be able to get the contract completed by the 30th September, it is clear to the customer we prioritize our needs, what we want is not what they want. The change is easy to make from a customer perspective as it is aligned with their needs.
Every quarter we would exhaust our team and the customers’ teams. We would fall over the end of the quarter like a marathon runner crossing the finish line—fatigued, bruised, worn out. The first month of the next quarter we were easing our aching muscles, then the second warming up, until we did it all over again.
The hardest part of the change, other than letting go myself, was selling the approach internally. The CEO and CFO were resistant, with the arguments you would expect: “We are measured quarterly, the sales team need to be held to account,” “It’s your job to make sure they do what they need to, you’re letting them off the hook,” and many more. The first time I had to go with a “trust me” approach and the evidence meant we maintained it, subsequently I was able to go with an “I did this before and these were the results.”
It is a daunting change, it feels counter-intuitive, and there is an innate muscle memory wanting to pull back to quarterly focus as soon as there are a couple of bad months. However, I suggest trying it. It makes a material difference to the organization, to the customers, and to the results.
Hey Mike,
As always great to hear from you, thanks for reading, and thanks for setting a new comment record at 808 words.
When I started reading you post, I was worried you were headed from “we stopped doing everything in quarters” to we started doing everything in years. And FWIW, I do think founders (and only founders) should think in years. CROs should think in quarters — or as your surprise case took me — to even shorter periods of time, not longer.
One nice thing for me working with a diverse set of SaaS companies is that I do work with both more traditional, enterprise/quarterly cadence companies and more velocity/monthly cadence companies.
FWIW, I do think running on monthly cadence is better but I’d question if it has to come at the expense of quarters and it does seem in your case that the CFO/CEO took on the mission of reporting to the board quarterly while sales was running monthly.
Great story, glad to see how deeply you believe in it, and thanks for sharing.