How do you build a pipeline generation (pipegen) plan that hits quota every quarter?
Direct Answer
A pipeline generation plan is the quarterly commitment from marketing, SDRs, AEs, and channel on how many opportunities will be created, by which source, at which stage, by when — backed by capacity math. The formula every CRO should know is Quota times Coverage Multiplier divided by Win Rate equals Required Top-of-Funnel Pipeline.
The plan only hits quota when each source is owned by a named function, the volume math is checked against rep capacity, and the document is locked three weeks before the quarter starts and reviewed weekly.
TL;DR
- A pipegen plan is a source-by-source commitment to opportunity creation, not an MQL target — volume does not equal pipeline.
- The math is non-negotiable: Quota times Coverage Multiplier divided by Win Rate equals the Required New Pipeline you must create.
- Five sources carry the load — Inbound, Outbound SDR, AE Outbound, Channel, and Expansion/Referral — each with a different owner and conversion rate.
- Most plans fail in four predictable ways — MQLs instead of opps, outbound math that exceeds dial capacity, channel numbers without partner buy-in, and missing segment-level math.
- Build it three weeks before the quarter, lock it one week before, then run weekly tracking against the plan as the operating contract.
The Pipegen Math (with worked example)
Pipegen planning starts with arithmetic that every CRO and head of RevOps should be able to do on a whiteboard. Take the quarterly bookings quota. Multiply it by a pipeline coverage multiplier, which is typically 3x for a healthy mid-market SaaS business and as high as 4x or 5x for enterprise motions with long cycles.
That product is the pipeline value you need to have in the quarter. Then divide it by win rate to get the Top-of-Funnel opportunity dollar amount you must create.
A worked example makes the discipline visible. A $30M ARR Series C with a $4M quarterly net-new quota and a 3x coverage assumption needs $12M of in-stage pipeline that quarter. With a 25 percent win rate on those opps, you must create $48M of new opportunity value at the top of the funnel to feed it.
That is the number the entire revenue org plans against. If marketing only commits to $14M of inbound opps, and SDRs commit to $12M, and channel to $4M, you are at $30M committed against $48M required — a $18M hole the plan exposes before the quarter even begins. The math is what forces the conversation.
Without it, every function commits to "doing more" with no shared definition of how much more.
Two refinements matter. First, segment-level math is mandatory: SMB and enterprise have radically different conversion rates, so a single blended win rate masks where you are short. Second, time-to-close gating matters — opps created in week 11 of the quarter rarely close in-quarter, so the plan should also commit to a creation curve, not just a total.
The 5 Sources + Typical Mix at $20M ARR
The five canonical pipegen sources show up at almost every B2B SaaS company, but the mix varies dramatically based on motion. Below is the typical distribution at $20M ARR, with the owner and the rough conversion rate from opp-created to closed-won. These ranges are drawn from Pavilion's 2024 Pipegen Survey, ICONIQ's Operating Metrics benchmark, and Bessemer's State of the Cloud.
| Source | Percent of Opps | Who Owns It | Typical Opp-to-Won Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inbound (forms, demos, trials) | 30 to 50 percent | Marketing (demand gen) | 25 to 35 percent |
| Outbound SDR (cold prospecting) | 25 to 40 percent | SDR leadership | 15 to 22 percent |
| AE Outbound (named accounts) | 10 to 20 percent | Sales leadership | 28 to 40 percent |
| Channel and Partners | 5 to 25 percent | Partner team | 20 to 30 percent |
| Expansion and Referral | 10 to 25 percent | CS or Sales | 35 to 55 percent |
Two patterns repeat across mature plans. AE-sourced and customer-referred opps convert at roughly twice the rate of SDR-sourced opps, which is why over-investing in SDR volume without raising AE outbound creates inflated pipeline that does not close. And channel deserves the most scrutiny — the variance from plan to actual is the widest of any source.
The 4 Planning Failure Modes That Create Fake Numbers
Most missed quarters trace back to one of four planning errors made before the quarter began. First, marketing commits MQL volume but not opportunity volume. Ten thousand MQLs at a 4 percent MQL-to-opp rate is 400 opps; if last quarter's conversion was 3 percent it is 300, and you are 25 percent short before sales touches the funnel.
The plan must commit to opps, with MQL targets as the input math, not the deliverable.
Second, SDR and AE outbound expectations exceed what dial and email capacity can produce. The Bridge Group SDR Metrics report puts realistic outbound capacity at 80 to 150 dials per day per SDR and 30 to 60 personalized emails, yielding roughly 1.0 to 1.8 meetings booked per SDR per day at strong programs.
Plans that assume 3 meetings per SDR per day are creating a fictional ceiling.
Third, channel pipeline gets planned without partner buy-in. A common failure pattern: the partner team commits 25 percent of pipegen, and partners deliver 8 percent, because no partner-by-partner commitment exists. The fix is a signed joint pipegen number with each top partner, not a top-down estimate.
Fourth, no segment-level math. A blended plan that ignores the SMB versus mid-market versus enterprise split hides where the gap is. SMB opps may convert at 32 percent and enterprise at 18 percent — a plan that mixes them as a single 25 percent assumption will miss in one direction or the other every single quarter.
A real example: a $30M ARR Series C that built quarterly pipegen plans with explicit source-mix targets and weekly tracking moved attainment from 67 percent to 84 percent over four quarters. The single biggest driver was identifying that channel had been over-counted — partners had been committed at 25 percent of pipegen and were delivering 8 percent.
Cutting the channel number and reallocating the gap to SDR outbound capacity closed the structural shortfall.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do you treat reopened opps in the pipegen number? Most mature plans exclude reopens from new-logo pipegen and track them as a separate "recycled pipeline" metric. Counting them inflates the new-source number and lets marketing or SDRs hide a real shortfall behind churn from the prior quarter.
Channel pipegen — how much can you trust the partner-committed number? Apply a historical realization rate per partner. If a partner has delivered 35 percent of their commit over the last four quarters, plan against 35 percent of what they pledge for next quarter — not 100 percent. Update the realization rate quarterly.
Do you re-plan mid-quarter if you are off? Yes, but only the source allocation, not the target. The total required pipegen does not move because quota does not move. What moves is reallocation — if inbound is 20 percent behind by week 5, you reforecast and add SDR capacity, channel pushes, or paid-media spend to recover the gap before week 8.
Sources
- Pavilion. *2024 Pipeline Generation Survey: Source Mix and Quota Attainment Benchmarks.* 2024.
- Bessemer Venture Partners. *State of the Cloud 2024: Go-to-Market Efficiency.* 2024.
- ICONIQ Capital. *Topline Growth and Operational Excellence: SaaS Operating Metrics.* 2024.
- Force Management. *Building a Predictable Pipeline: The Command of the Plan Framework.* 2023.
- The Bridge Group. *2023 SDR Metrics and Compensation Report.* 2023.
- OpenView Partners. *SaaS Benchmarks Report: Pipeline Coverage and Win Rates.* 2024.
- Gartner. *Sales Pipeline Management Best Practices for B2B Revenue Leaders.* 2024.
- Salesforce. *State of Sales Report: Pipeline Generation Trends.* 2024.