Accurate pipeline target forecasting is crucial to a team's success. Steal this failsafe waterfall model to establish more predictable pipeline goals.
0:00
Okay, hi everyone, my name's Mora Rivera.
0:03
I'm the CMO here at Qualified.
0:04
And today I am joined by Nani Schafer,
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CMO at Channel 99, Nani, welcome.
0:09
Thank you so much, excited to be here.
0:11
I'm excited to have you here.
0:12
So today we're gonna be talking about
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how to really build a predictable pipeline waterfall model
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so that you can kind of plan for quarters in years ahead
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about what pipeline coverage you need.
0:23
But before we dive in, can you tell me a little bit
0:25
about yourself, tell me about what you
0:27
and the team at Channel 99 are doing?
0:28
Yeah, yeah, of course.
0:30
So I'm CMO at Channel 99.
0:32
And the way I like to think about Channel 99
0:34
and kind of what gets me out of bed in the morning
0:37
is it's sort of the modern approach to attribution.
0:41
So the questions that we had or the concerns
0:43
that I think we've all sort of shared around
0:45
a more traditional approach to attribution
0:48
were aiming to sort of get past those stumbling blocks
0:51
that we've seen.
0:52
And so thinking about, for example, your digital channels
0:54
in particular, being able to make sure
0:56
that we're both accurately and precisely allocating
0:59
or understanding where the dollars that you're spending
1:01
on those are winding up in terms of engagement
1:05
and revenue ultimately.
1:06
So yeah, it's an exciting time to be thinking about that
1:11
and it plays really well into sort of the discussion
1:13
we're having today around how to build pipeline
1:15
and how to be predictable in your business.
1:18
And what a relevant product right now.
1:20
I feel like a big theme of our gathering today is
1:23
how do you prove the ROI of your marketing investment?
1:26
How do you focus on the right things
1:27
from a marketing perspective?
1:28
So channel 99 is really coming in to help solve
1:31
that problem.
1:32
So super excited to see what you guys are doing.
1:35
So Nani, as a CMO, what are some of the biggest challenges
1:39
when it comes to setting pipeline targets
1:42
and predicting pipeline?
1:43
I think we've all been in the room before,
1:45
myself included, where we write a huge number on the wall
1:48
and say, this is what we're gonna go after this quarter.
1:51
What are some of the challenges as a CMO
1:53
when you're kind of building out this framework?
1:55
Yeah, I mean, there are a couple of things that come to mind.
1:58
One is a little bit on the boring side,
2:00
which is just having the right data.
2:02
So understanding precisely how much pipeline
2:05
you have generated in the past is really critical
2:07
for understanding how much you're gonna be able
2:09
to generate in the future.
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And that seems like a really simple thing on the surface,
2:15
but you'd be surprised at how often different departments
2:18
within a given organization will have different answers
2:21
to that question.
2:22
And so being really clear around pure definitions,
2:26
what is pipeline?
2:27
How do we define pipeline?
2:29
How do we break up our pipeline into different segments?
2:32
What does it mean to be an enterprise pipeline opportunity
2:35
versus a mid-market one versus SMB, new business upsell?
2:38
So all of these sort of, again, kind of boring,
2:42
but really foundational definitions are important.
2:47
And the other challenge I would say comes up just around
2:50
like alignment and communication across teams.
2:53
So again, I think of especially sales, marketing,
2:56
and finances needing to be completely on the same page
3:00
about the goals that we're setting, how we arrived at them,
3:03
and how we wanna sort of approach meeting them.
3:05
And if those three parts of the org
3:08
are sort of off in their separate silos,
3:10
you end up with a problem from the start.
3:13
So those two things I think are important is the data
3:15
and the kind of communication,
3:16
and both of those could be bigger challenges
3:18
than you might expect.
3:19
And I think you oftentimes make assumptions.
3:22
Everybody's thinking about pipeline the same way.
3:23
I'm thinking about it.
3:24
Everybody's defining it the same way.
3:26
We are, but it's so important to have that conversation
3:29
and almost have a glossary of term, right?
3:31
And also be willing to maybe adjust it
3:33
as your business changed.
3:34
Exactly.
3:35
And the other thing I would add too is
3:37
you don't want any surprises, right?
3:39
So you never wanna walk into, let alone like a board meeting,
3:42
but even getting up in front of your CEO
3:44
and surprising your head of sales
3:46
with the, here's where we are with pipeline
3:48
and having them not agree with that, right?
3:50
So making sure you're really, really in tune
3:52
and on the same page when it comes to the measurement
3:55
of your own performance.
3:57
So let's get into the meat of it.
3:58
I saw you gave this session a similar kind of talk track
4:01
at the Norwest CMO Summit a few months ago.
4:04
And I immediately left and was like,
4:06
we've gotta bring this to the masses.
4:08
Your session was one where every CMO around me
4:10
was taking out their notepads,
4:11
they were taking out their pens,
4:13
they were scratching things down.
4:14
I think a lot of folks having kind of mastered
4:17
this art of how you create a pipeline waterfall model.
4:22
So can you tell me kind of what is a pipeline waterfall model
4:25
and how does your team use this data?
4:27
- Yeah, yeah.
4:28
So just kind of the, at the beginning here,
4:30
when we think about what an actual pipeline waterfall is,
4:33
it's a combination of being able to understand
4:35
the pipeline that you're generating
4:37
and what you're expecting to have come out of that
4:39
when it comes to revenue.
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So in a given quarter, let's say,
4:44
you're gonna generate a certain amount of pipeline,
4:46
a certain number of pipeline opportunities,
4:48
and you wanna be able to be really predictable
4:50
about where that's gonna land
4:52
in terms of the closed one revenue
4:53
that's gonna come out of it.
4:54
And it depends on your business,
4:56
and it depends on even sub-segments of your business
4:58
for how that's gonna happen.
5:00
So you might, and we'll get into some of the more detail
5:03
on this, but you might expect some small percentage
5:06
of that pipeline to close within a single quarter,
5:09
that same quarter, right?
5:10
But much of it, you're really relying on for future quarters.
5:14
And so that's why it becomes especially critical
5:16
for businesses, because the pipeline
5:18
that we're generating for today,
5:20
sure, some of it's gonna close in the short term,
5:22
but it's really our building blocks for the future.
5:25
And so the more predictable we can be about that,
5:27
the better off we are, so that we can understand
5:29
whether to panic or not at where we are.
5:33
(laughs)
5:33
And I think sometimes as marketing leaders,
5:35
we think just about the pipeline we need to generate,
5:38
but we're not always spending enough time dissecting
5:41
the coverage that we have,
5:42
and how it will kind of curious
5:43
into future quarters.
5:45
Our CRO before I was talked about, like there's pipe gen,
5:47
and there's pipe when, like when it's gonna hit
5:49
and materialize, and I think that's an important lens
5:53
for everybody to kind of carry through to their planning.
5:56
It's pertinent, exactly.
5:58
You talked at the beginning about like some of the things
6:00
you kind of need to do early and often,
6:03
which is let's make sure we're all speaking the same language,
6:05
we have the same things to find.
6:07
But before you go into building the model,
6:09
you kind of have your six step framework.
6:11
There's some data you need to make sure
6:13
you have your hands on at the beginning.
6:14
So before you even start building this model,
6:17
what information should you pull in?
6:19
- Yeah, yeah, good question.
6:21
There are a couple of important things that you're gonna need.
6:23
One is as much historical data as you can get your hands on,
6:27
which kind of goes without saying,
6:29
and it depends on where you are
6:30
and how old your business is.
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Typically, if you've got about four quarters of data,
6:35
you're in a pretty good place, right?
6:36
Most pipeline is gonna resolve itself within a year
6:39
for true enterprise business.
6:43
That can be different.
6:44
It can be, we know that deals can take years,
6:46
but for the most part when you're talking about businesses,
6:49
you can get enough of a sort of cycle
6:51
and understanding where pipeline is gonna go
6:53
if you've got solid four plus quarters.
6:55
So historical data is really important.
6:58
And making sure that you're being,
6:59
this is where it's unsexy, but really important
7:03
is that your Salesforce data is clean, right?
7:06
Or your CRM data is clean.
7:08
And so looking at the deals that you're closing
7:10
and how much they're bringing in in terms of bookings,
7:13
understanding your close rates.
7:15
And we'll talk about kind of how we define close rates
7:17
'cause that's another really important term
7:22
that we talk about a lot.
7:23
And lots of people have lots of different definitions for us.
7:25
And we'll talk about what that means in a little bit,
7:26
but having a sort of standardized way
7:29
of looking at that over time.
7:30
And then building out and looking at your new targets,
7:34
what's coming up in the future.
7:35
And typically, that's gonna start
7:37
with your finance team, right?
7:38
Some all in number that says,
7:40
we need to bring that in this number of dollars
7:42
in this quarter and the following quarter
7:43
in the following quarter.
7:45
Now, how do we figure out how to get there?
7:47
And that's really the ultimate goal
7:48
of our discussion today is, okay, given,
7:51
we know we need to hit the number of dollars.
7:53
How much pipeline do we need to generate today
7:54
based on what we already have
7:56
and what we expect to build in the future?
7:57
- Okay.
7:58
And what, when are you usually thinking about building this?
8:00
So here we are, it's April.
8:02
We're all kind of in the throes of our fiscal year.
8:05
You know, we're in Q1.
8:06
And we're just starting Q2.
8:08
Is this an exercise you usually do in the fall?
8:11
Is you plan for the next fiscal?
8:13
Is this something you're constantly pressure testing?
8:15
Like, how do you think about kind of the cadence
8:16
and timing of this exercise?
8:18
- Really, any and all of the above.
8:19
So I would say typically the formal, you know,
8:24
pipeline goal setting for the year
8:27
starts in the sort of September timeframe,
8:29
depending on your fiscal, right?
8:30
In the fall, a quarter before you start your new fiscal.
8:33
That's typically when finance is starting
8:35
to get a better idea of what we want
8:36
in terms of our revenue and booking schools
8:38
for the following year.
8:40
That being said, it's incredibly important
8:44
that these waterfalls and the outcome of them,
8:46
the sort of output in terms of pipeline goals.
8:48
That's something you're gonna look at every day,
8:49
every week, right?
8:51
And then you're also gonna be, as you say,
8:53
pressure testing these as each quarter closes,
8:56
typically is another good timeframe
8:58
where you wanna review and say,
8:59
okay, these are the assumptions we put into the model.
9:02
Are we seeing those same assumptions hold true
9:04
in real life and if not, how do we adjust?
9:07
So it's really a kind of all the time exercise,
9:11
but like I say, sort of an annual planning thing
9:13
and then a quarterly checkup and then weekly daily
9:16
where you're basically looking
9:18
at your own performance against goals.
9:20
- Yeah, it's living, breathing, just like all our things.
9:22
- All our things are.
9:23
- Exactly.
9:24
- No, what are as you kind of say, you get this set up,
9:27
you know, it's Q1, you're keeping an eye on the data.
9:29
What are some of those things you should look out for
9:32
that like to kind of traps or gotchas
9:34
that might show you that like you might need
9:36
to adjust some things?
9:37
- Yeah, yeah.
9:38
I mean, I think, a, if you're way off, right?
9:42
And if you're as, you know, as we get into sort of building
9:46
out the model itself, one of the first thing that's,
9:49
it sounds again so silly, but that's important to do
9:51
is a sort of sniff test.
9:53
So if in a given quarter, let's say it's Q3
9:56
and you as a team had needed to generate 250 opportunities
10:01
and suddenly your model is spitting out something
10:03
that says you need to generate 4800, right?
10:06
There's no way you're gonna do that
10:08
absent a miracle, right?
10:09
So making sure that the model that you're building
10:11
is giving you a reasonable set of expectations,
10:14
kind of an important thing to be thinking about.
10:17
But other things that can factor in happen
10:19
all the time in businesses, right?
10:21
You launch a new product, you reorganize your sales team,
10:25
you focus on a different area in the market, right?
10:27
All of those can have an impact
10:29
on what you're expecting in terms of the input of the model.
10:32
And I keep saying like the inputs to the model,
10:34
there's really at least three things
10:36
that are gonna impact the number of pipeline opportunities
10:38
you need to generate.
10:39
One is the close rate, we talked about one is the deal
10:42
velocity and one is the deal size, right?
10:44
Those are the only things that really factor
10:47
into how much pipeline you're gonna need to generate.
10:49
So anything that might impact any of those three
10:52
might change, might warrant readjusting your model.
10:55
- Okay, great.
10:56
Well, let's dive into it.
10:57
You kind of have the six step framework.
10:58
So, why don't you show it to us?
11:00
- Yeah, yeah.
11:01
So, and apologies in advance,
11:02
'cause this is, we're gonna get into some actual numbers
11:04
and really make this as practical as we can.
11:07
But I thought it would be useful
11:08
to kind of look at real life examples.
11:11
So the first step is just looking at
11:13
what has been closed one by each pipeline cohort.
11:17
So if you're looking at the chart here
11:20
across the left side, you're gonna see each quarter.
11:24
And the number of pipeline opportunities
11:26
that have been generated within that given quarter,
11:28
across the top, you see those same quarters,
11:30
but now we're looking at closed one deals, right?
11:32
So if, for example, you see 125 pipeline opportunities
11:36
generated in Q1, we see that 16 of those of that cohort
11:41
closed in that same quarter,
11:42
and then we see nine closed, the following quarter,
11:44
six, three, one, right?
11:45
So it's taken about five quarters,
11:47
so let's call it resolve those pipeline opportunities.
11:52
So you can kind of kind of sense of over time,
11:55
the velocity of these different pipeline opportunity
11:58
and the pipeline cohort that you're looking at.
12:00
So that's the sort of level set.
12:01
This is all historical data that we talked about beforehand,
12:04
so you can access this hopefully any time,
12:07
and this is just sort of the basis
12:09
for the inputs of the model.
12:11
So from there, you're gonna enter
12:13
in your goals going forward, right?
12:16
So in terms of the total bookings that you need to generate,
12:20
and then dividing by the average deal size
12:22
that you've got how many actual opportunities
12:25
need to be closed one, right?
12:26
So you can see along the bottom here,
12:28
for example, in this upcoming Q1, right?
12:31
Maybe I need to close 36 opportunities.
12:33
That's the ideas I need to hit 36 opportunities
12:36
and how am I gonna get there?
12:37
So now we move on to the sort of third step,
12:40
which is, well, what is this like velocity
12:43
that we're talking about here?
12:45
What can I expect for any of these different cohorts?
12:47
So instead of looking at hard numbers,
12:49
we swap it over to percentages.
12:51
So back to that Q1 example, right?
12:53
Of the 125, 13% closed in one quarter,
12:56
7% closed in two quarters, 5%, 2%, 1%.
13:00
You can see this sort of declining as we like
13:03
finish up that particular cohort.
13:06
And that helps us because as you look down
13:08
sort of diagonally in that waterfall,
13:11
you start to get a sense of this average,
13:13
we'll call it average one quarter close rate,
13:15
average two quarter close rate.
13:16
So on average, right, well, I don't know what the average is,
13:19
but you can see, you know, 13%, 9%, 8%, 9%, right?
13:22
Somewhere in that range is what we might expect
13:24
to see in any cohort's first quarter out the gate.
13:28
And that enables us then to build out
13:31
what we might expect in the future
13:33
if we literally generated no more pipeline, right?
13:35
So out of only the pipeline that we've generated
13:38
in the past to date, what's still left to ring out, right?
13:41
'Cause we generated pipeline yesterday, right?
13:44
Hopefully we had a good day.
13:46
And so what is that?
13:47
What might be expected in the future
13:49
if we did nothing else, right?
13:50
So you can see again, for example,
13:52
if we closed out Q4, you know,
13:55
we had 184 pipeline opportunities that we generated,
13:58
16 of them closed in that first quarter.
14:01
Hey, this upcoming quarter, we're expecting 10-ish more
14:04
deals to come just from that cohort, right?
14:06
And from two quarters ago,
14:07
we're gonna get another six deals.
14:09
So you can kind of see, even with doing nothing
14:12
for my upcoming quarter, I'm gonna get 18, 19 opportunities
14:16
that will be closed wide.
14:18
So now we just have to fill it down.
14:19
So right, so we talk 18, 19, we need to get 36.
14:22
How do we do that?
14:23
We add 17.4 in this case, which we know is impossible,
14:27
but we're talking about average here.
14:30
So I need to generate 17 more opportunities
14:33
in order to fill that delta from the pipeline
14:36
I'm gonna generate this very quarter,
14:37
'cause that's all I have left.
14:38
I've already incorporated in all the expectation
14:41
for previous pipeline.
14:43
So given that, how much pipeline do I need
14:47
to generate this quarter?
14:48
So we go back to that sort of input,
14:50
the expectation that around, let's call it 8%
14:53
of my pipeline generated in a given quarter
14:56
is gonna close that same quarter.
14:58
And I wind up with figuring out I need,
14:59
in this case, 217 opportunities
15:03
in order to close 17 of them,
15:05
this particular quarter and close that gap.
15:08
So that's sort of like the ultimate answer
15:10
to the question that we had.
15:11
How much pipeline do we need to generate?
15:12
And you just fill in the rest of the model from there.
15:16
And that, in a nutshell, in a quick few minutes,
15:19
is kind of how you generate that waterfall model.
15:21
When you look at sources, right,
15:23
we all are not immune to the sales versus marketing debate
15:27
or tension.
15:29
How do you think, do you ever factor that into this model?
15:32
Is that two in the weeds and does that get too messy?
15:35
Like how do you kind of think about
15:37
dividing and conquering who's doing what?
15:38
Yeah, so it's a great question.
15:40
I am of a mind that dividing up a sort of funnel
15:44
or a pipeline number between sales and marketing
15:46
is a useless waste of time.
15:48
My general practice is that marketing should take
15:53
on the full number,
15:55
knowing that, of course, we're not generating,
15:58
from the beginning all of these,
15:59
but to be honest, we're probably at least touching
16:02
nearly all of them, right?
16:04
It's a rare opportunity that's gonna close
16:06
with no one coming to your website ever,
16:07
like poor research on their end.
16:09
So what I prefer to do is say marketing and sales, right?
16:13
And particularly sort of like the SDR function often, right?
16:15
We're gonna take on the same pipeline number together
16:18
so that we're all looking at the same numbers
16:22
and approaching the same goal,
16:23
and neither one of us can ever reach the goal
16:25
without the other one reaching the goal.
16:27
Then on top of that, we might layer
16:29
in additional information about, okay,
16:31
it was helpful for us to understand
16:33
that some portion of this was influenced by a webinar
16:37
or was influenced by an event that we went to
16:39
or a dinner that we hosted or whatever it might be.
16:42
But I don't like to sort of say,
16:44
I'm gonna appeal this apart and pretend
16:46
that there is a world in which marketing
16:49
was the only reason that a pipeline opportunity
16:50
was generated or sales was the only reason
16:52
a pipeline opportunity was generated.
16:55
It's just too complicated in the B and B world to do that.
16:59
So when you are breaking down,
17:00
that isn't to say you're not gonna have
17:02
multiple waterfalls, but it's gonna be
17:04
mid-market enterprise or new business upsell.
17:06
It's not gonna be, I wouldn't recommend marketing sales.
17:10
I mean, in today's world, you have to work together.
17:13
You have to go towards one target
17:15
or else it's bigger pointy chaos.
17:16
All the way, it's clear chaos.
17:18
And hopefully all of those channels
17:19
are working in concert.
17:20
They're seeing an advertisement.
17:21
They're coming to it.
17:22
- Exactly.
17:23
- We outbound to them, we warm them up,
17:24
like that everybody's working exactly.
17:27
- Exactly.
17:28
- So this waterfall model that you just built,
17:31
how do you kind of put it into practice?
17:33
How do you break it beyond, you know,
17:35
it's great that we have this spreadsheet
17:36
and we have a source of truth and we have all the numbers,
17:38
but how do you find yourself leveraging it
17:40
throughout your organization?
17:41
- Yeah, yeah.
17:42
It's a great question.
17:44
Honestly, one of my very favorite ways of leveraging it
17:46
is in a weekly meeting that actually was started
17:51
at my own company, demand based, lots of companies do this,
17:53
but we called it our funnel working group
17:55
where the sales, marketing and operations,
17:57
leadership teams would come together every week
17:59
and review these numbers and you would sync.
18:02
Okay, we could just update the dashboard.
18:05
Like we can all refresh that together,
18:06
but it was such a healthy conversation
18:08
to get that group of people in the room
18:10
to start with pipeline as our basis,
18:12
to say how are we performing in a granular way,
18:15
this week against our goal?
18:17
And if we're ahead of target, what do we attribute that to?
18:21
And if we're behind our target,
18:22
what do we attribute that to and how do we fix that?
18:24
And it enabled us to, again, importantly stay in alignment,
18:28
but also to sort of approach things as a team together
18:31
and never let anything suddenly get way out of hand.
18:34
You don't want to end up at the end of the quarter
18:35
and be like, what happened?
18:37
We completely whiffed, right?
18:38
It has to be something more frequent than that.
18:40
So that's just one example, lots of different ways,
18:42
but I think some way of keeping it sort of alive
18:44
and in focus all the time.
18:45
The funnel working group,
18:46
I haven't heard that, we call it our pipeline council,
18:48
but that's a great name too.
18:50
So week over week, how are we trending?
18:51
What are our gap plans?
18:52
How are we gonna hit it?
18:53
It's coming into market from sales and marketing.
18:55
And it's a really good alignment exercise
18:58
and so important.
18:59
And even if people are just to fly on the wall
19:01
to kind of wrap their heads around the data,
19:03
it's critical.
19:05
So thank you, Nani, this was so fun.
19:07
And I'm super excited because we're making this model
19:10
that you built available to everybody.
19:11
So we have a guide where everybody can really get
19:14
the waterfall wisdom that Nani just dropped on us
19:17
and we also are gonna have kind of a blank template
19:20
that you can use to plug in your own numbers
19:22
and adjust it and use it to apply to your own business.
19:25
I think every CMO could benefit from this
19:28
and also RevOps leaders, demand gen leaders.
19:31
So thank you for imparting your waterfall wisdom.
19:34
Anytime.
19:35
- Honestly, still that. - Thanks for having me.