Pipeline
Your pipeline is the list of deals your sales team is actively working — every potential customer who has shown interest and hasn't yet said yes or no. A healthy pipeline has enough deals at the right stages to make your revenue target realistic. An unhealthy one is full of deals that have been "almost closed" for three months.
Why it matters: If you can't describe the health of your pipeline in under a minute, you're flying blind on your own revenue.
Forecast
A forecast is a prediction of how much revenue you'll actually close in a given period — based on your pipeline data, close rates, and deal timing. A real forecast is built from numbers, not optimism. Most small companies don't have one. They have a hope.
Why it matters: Without a real forecast, you can't plan hiring, expenses, or growth with any confidence.
CRM
CRM stands for Customer Relationship Management — it's the software your sales team uses to track prospects, customers, and deals. Think of it as the single place where everything about a customer relationship lives: who talked to them, when, what was discussed, and what happens next. A CRM only works if your team actually uses it correctly.
Why it matters: Without a CRM, your customer knowledge lives in people's heads and email inboxes — and walks out the door when they do.
Quota
Quota is the sales target assigned to an individual rep or team for a given period — usually a quarter or a year. A good quota is achievable but not automatic. It should reflect the rep's territory, the quality of their pipeline, and what the business actually needs from them.
Why it matters: Quotas set without data tend to be either demoralizing (too high) or meaningless (too low). Either way, the business loses.
Win Rate
Win rate is the percentage of sales opportunities your team closes. If you have 20 qualified deals and close 5 of them, your win rate is 25%. Win rates can be tracked by rep, by product, by territory, or by deal size — and the differences almost always reveal something important.
Why it matters: A low win rate usually isn't a people problem. It's a process problem — and it's fixable once you can see where deals are actually dying.
ICP
ICP stands for Ideal Customer Profile — a description of the type of company most likely to buy from you, stay with you, and refer others. It may be determined by the company's size, industry, the type of challenges faced, budget, or a host of other company's attributes. Most small companies have a gut sense of this but have never written it down. That's expensive.
Why it matters: When your sellers don't know who they're hunting for, they chase everything — and close very little.
Sales Velocity
Sales velocity measures how fast your deals move through the pipeline — from first contact to closed won. A deal that takes 90 days to close has lower sales velocity than one that takes 30 days. Companies with faster velocity can generate more revenue without adding headcount.
Why it matters: Slow deals aren't just annoying — they tie up your sellers' time and inflate your cost of sale.
Churn
Churn is the rate at which customers stop doing business with you. In subscription or recurring revenue businesses, churn is measured monthly or annually as a percentage of your customer base. High churn means you're filling a leaky bucket — new customers come in while existing ones quietly slip out.
Why it matters: Keeping an existing customer costs far less than finding a new one. Churn is often the most expensive number that nobody tracks.
Sales Ops
Sales operations — or sales ops — is the function that keeps your sales team running efficiently. CRM management, data reporting, process design, quota setting, territory planning, and forecasting all fall under sales ops. Think of it as the engine room behind your sales team. Most growing companies need it long before they hire for it.
Why it matters: Without sales ops, your best sellers spend their time on administrative work instead of selling.
RevOps
RevOps — short for Revenue Operations — is the broader practice of aligning your sales, marketing, and customer success teams around a single set of data, processes, and goals. In practice, most small and mid-size companies don't actually need RevOps yet. They need solid sales ops first. Anyone who leads with RevOps for a 30-person company is likely overcomplicating things.
Why it matters: Good to know the term. But don't let anyone sell you RevOps when what you actually need is a working CRM and a real forecast.
Territory
A sales territory is the defined set of accounts, geographies, or market segments assigned to a specific rep or team. Good territory design means each rep has enough opportunity to hit their quota — and that no two reps are fighting over the same customer. Bad territory design is one of the most common and most fixable causes of sales team frustration.
Why it matters: When territories aren't clearly defined, your best reps spend energy protecting turf instead of finding new business.
GTM
GTM stands for Go-to-Market — it's the strategy for how you bring a product or service to customers. Who you're selling to, how you find them, how you sell to them, and how you deliver value after the sale. It sounds strategic and large. In practice, for most small companies it just means: do we know who we're selling to, and does our whole team know how to do it consistently?
Why it matters: A lot of consulting jargon lives in this term. Ask anyone who uses it to describe exactly what it means for your business specifically.