Sales-marketing misalignment isn't a culture problem — it's a systems problem. Different definitions, different metrics, different incentives, and no shared accountability for revenue. This playbook builds the shared infrastructure that turns two competing teams into one revenue engine.
Lead definitions are a fiction both teams ignore
Marketing counts MQLs. Sales wants SQLs. Neither team agrees on what qualifies a lead as ready for sales. Marketing passes volume to hit their number; sales ignores most of it and blames marketing quality. The root cause is that nobody defined — in measurable, observable terms — what makes a lead worth a sales rep's time. Without shared definitions, the handoff is a game of hot potato.
Metrics incentivize the wrong behavior
Marketing is measured on leads generated and pipeline influenced. Sales is measured on deals closed and revenue. Neither is measured on the quality of the handoff or the conversion rate between stages. Marketing optimizes for volume because that's what their dashboard shows. Sales optimizes for closing because that's what their commission structure rewards. The gap between lead generation and deal closing is an accountability vacuum.
No shared operating cadence creates information silos
Marketing and sales meet separately, review different dashboards, and make decisions without input from the other team. Marketing launches campaigns without telling sales what to expect. Sales modifies their ICP without telling marketing to adjust targeting. By the time misalignment becomes visible in pipeline metrics, months of resources have been wasted on mismatched efforts.
Technology stacks are disconnected
Marketing uses their automation platform. Sales uses their CRM. Data flows one direction (if it flows at all), attribution is unclear, and neither team trusts the other's numbers. When leadership asks 'what's working?' they get two different answers from two different systems. Without a unified data model, alignment is impossible because the teams can't even agree on what happened.
We start with a joint diagnostic — interviewing both marketing and sales leadership separately, then together. We need to understand what each team believes is broken, where their data conflicts, and what incentives are driving current behavior. The diagnostic reveals the specific alignment gaps your organization has, not the generic 'sales and marketing need to work together' advice.
Shared definitions are the foundation. We facilitate the definition of every stage in the lead-to-revenue process — from first touch through closed deal — with observable, measurable criteria. What specific behaviors qualify an MQL? What data must be present for an SAL? What confirmed signals convert an SAL to SQL? These definitions become the shared language both teams operate on. No ambiguity. No arguments.
Unified metrics create shared accountability. We design a revenue metrics framework that measures both teams on shared outcomes — not just their individual outputs. Pipeline velocity, stage conversion rates, and revenue per lead source are metrics both teams own. We build the dashboard that gives leadership a single source of truth, replacing the dueling spreadsheets.
Operating cadence builds the habit of collaboration. We design the meeting structure, reporting rhythm, and communication protocols that keep sales and marketing in sync: weekly pipeline reviews, monthly campaign-to-close analysis, and quarterly strategy alignment sessions. Each meeting has a defined agenda, required attendees, and expected outcomes.
Technology integration connects the systems. We design the data flow between marketing automation and CRM, implement attribution models, and build the reporting infrastructure that both teams trust. The goal is one set of numbers that everyone references — eliminating the 'our data says something different' excuse.
Sales-marketing alignment isn't about making people like each other. It's about building shared systems — definitions, metrics, cadence, and data — that make misalignment structurally impossible. Fix the systems and the culture follows.
Our 90-day alignment sprint starts with diagnosis. Days 1-30 focus on separate and joint team interviews, process mapping, data audit, and gap identification. We document the current lead-to-revenue process as both teams describe it (they're different) and identify the specific points where alignment breaks down.
Days 30-60 are design and build. We develop shared stage definitions, build the unified metrics framework, design the operating cadence, and configure the technology integration. We facilitate alignment sessions where both teams agree on definitions and metrics — these conversations are where the real alignment happens.
Days 60-90 are implementation and calibration. We launch the new operating cadence, deploy the unified dashboard, and run the first cycle of shared reviews. We calibrate definitions based on real data — adjusting MQL criteria, SAL thresholds, and SQL requirements as the teams begin operating under shared frameworks.
The first month is discovery. We interview marketing leadership, sales leadership, and the reps and marketers who operate at the handoff point. We audit CRM and marketing automation data, map the current process, and identify where definitions diverge, where data breaks, and where accountability disappears. This phase produces a diagnostic report that names the specific alignment failures, not generic observations.
Month two is design and alignment. We build the shared frameworks — definitions, metrics, cadence, and technology requirements. We facilitate working sessions where both teams agree on the new operating model. These sessions are often uncomfortable because they surface real disagreements that have been avoided. That's where alignment actually starts.
Month three is launch and calibration. We deploy the new systems, run the first cadence cycle, and adjust based on real-world performance. Most alignment engagements include quarterly check-ins for 6-12 months to refine the operating model as both teams build the habit of shared accountability.
If your general company needs playbook leadership, we should talk.
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Alignment engagements typically range from $15K-$30K per month for 3-month projects with quarterly follow-up. The investment covers diagnostic, framework development, facilitation, technology integration, and calibration. The ROI is measurable within 90 days — companies typically see improvement in pipeline velocity and conversion rates that far exceed the engagement cost.
Shared definitions and operating cadence produce immediate behavior change — you'll see improved handoff quality and communication within weeks. Pipeline velocity improvements typically materialize within 60-90 days as better-qualified leads move through the funnel faster. Revenue impact usually appears within one full sales cycle, which varies by your average deal timeline.
We bring an external perspective that neither team can dismiss as biased. Our diagnostic is data-driven, not opinion-driven — we show both teams where their processes break down with evidence, not finger-pointing. The framework sessions are designed to focus on systems and processes rather than blaming individuals. Most leaders are relieved to have someone facilitate the conversation they've been avoiding.
RevOps consultants focus on systems and technology. We focus on the human and process elements that technology alone can't fix. The best CRM in the world doesn't help if teams disagree on what an MQL means. We combine process design, facilitation, and technology integration into a single engagement — because alignment requires all three working together.
We track stage conversion rates (MQL-to-SQL, SQL-to-opportunity, opportunity-to-close), pipeline velocity (time through each stage), marketing-sourced pipeline acceptance rate (what percentage of marketing leads does sales actually work), and revenue forecast accuracy. We also measure qualitative indicators — meeting attendance, cross-team communication frequency, and shared language adoption.
Companies with 5-50 sales reps and a marketing team of 3-15 people — large enough to have specialization and handoffs, small enough that alignment changes can be implemented quickly. If your marketing team and sales team use different systems, report different numbers, and blame each other for pipeline problems, you need this engagement. Companies doing $5M-$100M in revenue are the sweet spot.
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