The problem this solves
The pipeline says one thing, the quarter ends saying another. Stages mean different things to different reps, close dates roll forward month after month, and dead deals sit open because nobody wants to be the one who closes them lost. Managers compensate by building shadow forecasts in spreadsheets, which means the company pays for a CRM and still forecasts by feel.
How we work
We start by tightening the definitions, because discipline cannot form around ambiguity. Together with your sales leadership we pin down what each stage means in evidence, not in optimism: what must be true for a deal to enter it, and what moves it out. Then we train the team on those definitions using their own open deals, which is where the honest conversations happen.
The second half is cadence. We design and rehearse the weekly pipeline review: what gets looked at, in what order, from which HubSpot view, and what a rep is expected to have updated before it. Managers practice running the meeting from the CRM, including the uncomfortable parts, like aging deals and slipped close dates. Forecast categories and roll-ups get configured so the number leadership sees is assembled from deal-level evidence rather than gut feel.
The engagement ends with the discipline documented: stage definitions, hygiene rules, and the review cadence in writing, so the standard survives personnel changes.
Deliverables
- Stage definitions with entry and exit criteria, agreed with sales leadership
- Deal hygiene rules: close date policy, aging thresholds, lost-reason discipline
- Weekly pipeline review format rehearsed with managers, run from HubSpot views
- Forecast configuration and roll-up aligned to your sales motion
- Written revenue discipline playbook for future hires
- Recorded sessions and a follow-up checkpoint after the first review cycles