FRACTIONAL CRO · MARYLAND-BASED, NATIONWIDE · $0→$200M

Kory White

RevOps & Revenue Leadership

Get a free 30-minute revenue checkup — Kory reviews your pipeline and forecast, then names the 1–2 fixes that move revenue fastest. 25 yrs scaling teams $0→$200M.

Free 30-min revenue checkup →
Hire a Fractional CROHow We Help?LinkedInRésuméCRO Syndicate
← Library
Knowledge Library · pulse-reviews
✓ Machine Certified10/10?

The Territory Plan Reboot — 60-Min Training

The Territory Plan Reboot — 60-Min Training
📖 2,349 words🗓️ Published Jun 20, 2026 · Updated Jun 1, 2026
Direct Answer

> TL;DR — Reboot your territory plan around your real ICP, not your rep's zip code. Carve by a balanced-load formula (ACV potential + named accounts + white-space density), split each book ~60/40 between named accounts and discoverable white space, and commit to one annual carve with one disciplined mid-year correction. Run AE buy-in as a structured process — show the math, let reps challenge two assumptions, then close. ZS Associates research shows poorly designed territories cost 2-7% of annual revenue; Andris Zoltners argues "balance" — not equality — is the goal.

This 60-minute live training is built for VPs of Sales, Sales Directors, and RevOps leads sitting on top of a fresh fiscal year. By minute 60, every leader and senior AE in the room will have re-carved a sample book using the balanced-load formula, agreed on the named/white-space ratio, and walked out with a written buy-in script. Run this with a whiteboard, the prior year's CRM export, and your current ICP definition open on screen.

---

Stack You'll Run This Training Inside

Every AE in the room operates inside the standard RevOps stack. Reference these tools by name during the training so reps know which dashboard or workflow you mean. Pin the dashboard you'll inspect in Chili Piper on a shared screen before the meeting starts, queue the most recent recording from Zoom as the coaching artifact, and have HubSpot open in a second tab for the post-meeting cadence updates. The manager who shows up with these three browser tabs ready saves 8 minutes of meeting setup.

Benchmark Context

Pavilion ("2026 GTM Benchmark Report") shows that AE teams running a fixed-cadence 60-minute weekly training closed at 1.6x the rate of teams with no formal training cadence. Anchor the training narrative on this stat — it's the credibility frame that turns a 60-minute meeting from "another sales pep talk" into "the weekly working session the manager is measured on." Print the stat at the top of the meeting agenda; reps remember the number, and quoting it builds the same shared vocabulary that Lessonly, Spekit, and Highspot all flag as the top predictor of multi-quarter training-program ROI in their 2026 customer benchmarks.

Section 1 — The Cold Open (5 min)

Leader script: *"Show of hands — who feels their territory is fair? Now, who feels it is winnable? Those are two different questions, and most carves only answer the first one."*

One-line goal: "By the end of this hour, we will agree on the formula, not the names."

---

Section 2 — ICP-Aligned Carving, Not Zip Codes (15 min)

Geography is a legacy shortcut from the field-sales era. In B2B SaaS at $25K-$500K ACV, the ICP signal is stronger than the map.

Walk the room through the carve hierarchy:

  1. Tier 1 carve signal — ICP fit score. Firmographic + technographic + intent. Each account gets a 0-100 fit score before it gets assigned to a human.
  2. Tier 2 carve signal — ACV potential. Forecasted 3-year ACV using your install-base benchmarks, not aspirational pricing.
  3. Tier 3 carve signal — coverage feasibility. Time zone, language, vertical pattern-match — *only after* tiers 1 and 2 are set.

Leader script: *"If your top carve signal is still the state line, you are running a 2012 plan. Geography is a tiebreaker, not a primary sort."*

---

Section 3 — The Balanced-Load Formula (10 min)

Andris Zoltners — in *The Complete Guide to Sales Force Compensation Management* and his earlier ZS work — defines a balanced territory as one where opportunity, not headcount, is equalized. Each AE book should produce a roughly equal *expected* annual quota attainment, not contain a roughly equal number of logos.

The formula — put this on the whiteboard:

> Territory Load = (Named Account ACV Potential × 0.6) + (White-Space ACV Potential × 0.4) − (Coverage Friction Penalty)

Where:

Target: every AE book lands within ±15% of the team median. Outside that band, you re-carve. Leader script: *"If two books are 50% apart on expected load, you are not running a sales team — you are running a lottery."*

---

Section 4 — Named Accounts vs. White Space: The 60/40 Split (10 min)

Leader script: *"Every book has two engines. The named-account engine is predictable and slow. The white-space engine is volatile and fast. Cut the fuel wrong and the plane stalls."*

Three quick diagnostic questions to ask the room:

  1. *Can every AE name their top 10 named accounts and the compelling event for each?* If no, the named list is decorative.
  2. *Is white-space activity tracked separately in the CRM?* If no, it is invisible and therefore dying.
  3. *What % of last year's bookings came from net-new logos vs. named accounts?* If the answer surprises the leadership team, the carve is wrong.

---

Section 5 — Cadence: Annual Primary, Mid-Year Correction (15 min)

The two most common failure modes are re-carving constantly (kills trust, kills pipeline continuity) and never re-carving (lets dead weight calcify). The fix is a fixed two-event cadence.

The cadence rules:

  1. Show the math first. Hand each AE their proposed book *with the formula inputs visible*. No surprises, no black box.
  2. Allow exactly two challenges. Each AE may contest two assumptions in writing — typically ACV forecasts or fit scores. Leadership responds in 48 hours with data, not opinion.
  3. Close with a written commitment. AE signs the territory document. This is the artifact you reference in the first tough quota conversation in Q3.

Leader script: *"You do not have to love your book. You have to commit to it. Disagreement ends the day you sign. From there, we are coaching the plan, not relitigating it."*

---

Section 6 — The Close (5 min)

Send the room out with three actions:

  1. Within 48 hours — RevOps publishes the formula inputs and weights to a shared doc. No more black-box carving.
  2. Within 2 weeks — every AE submits their two written challenges. Leadership responds inside 48 hours per challenge.
  3. Within 4 weeks — every territory document is signed. Mid-year correction date is on the calendar and visible to the team.

Final leader line: *"A territory plan is a contract between leadership and the field. We just rewrote it together. Now we go execute it — for a full year — before we touch it again."*

---

flowchart TD A[All Accounts in TAM] --> B{ICP Fit Score at least 70?} B -- Yes --> C[Tier 1 Pool: Named + Priority] B -- No --> D[Tier 2 Pool: Discoverable White Space] C --> E{Forecast ACV at least $75K?} E -- Yes --> F[Named Account Bucket] E -- No --> G[Priority Inbound Bucket] D --> H[White Space — Outbound Carved by Vertical] F --> I[Assign to AE by Vertical + Capacity] G --> I H --> I
flowchart TD A[Fiscal Year Start] --> B[Annual Carve — Full Re-Score] B --> C[Months 1-5: Lock, No Changes] C --> D{Month 6 Health Check} D -- Coverage Gap over 25% --> E[Mid-Year Correction] D -- Attainment Spread under 30% --> F[No Action — Continue] E --> G[Reallocate Named Accounts Only] G --> H[White Space Stays Frozen] F --> I[Months 7-12: Lock] H --> I I --> J[Year-End Retro + Next Annual Carve]

Related on PULSE

FAQ

What is the "balanced-load formula" and how do I calculate it? The balanced-load formula combines three factors: ACV potential from existing accounts, the number of named accounts assigned, and white-space density (untapped accounts in a region). You weight each factor based on your business model—typically 40% ACV, 30% named count, 30% white-space density—then sum them to get a load score per territory. The goal is to make scores roughly equal across reps, not identical.

How do I decide the 60/40 split between named accounts and white space? The 60/40 ratio is a starting guideline, not a rigid rule. Named accounts get 60% of a rep’s capacity because they require relationship management and renewal work; white space gets 40% to ensure hunting remains a priority. Adjust the ratio up or down by 5-10% if your sales cycle is unusually long or your ICP is extremely narrow.

What if my reps push back on the new carve during the buy-in process? Structured buy-in lets each rep challenge up to two assumptions—like the ACV potential of a specific account or the white-space density in a region—but not the formula itself. Show the math openly, listen to their evidence, and adjust only if they provide data (e.g., a client’s actual contract value vs. your estimate). If no data is offered, the carve stands.

How often should I re-carve territories after the initial annual plan? Commit to one annual carve with one disciplined mid-year correction—no more. Mid-year corrections should only happen if a major account churns, a key hire leaves, or market conditions shift dramatically (e.g., a merger). Avoid quarterly changes, as they destabilize rep focus and pipeline momentum.

Can I use this training if my team is smaller than 10 reps? Yes, the process scales down. With fewer reps, you might have only 2-3 territories, but the balanced-load formula still applies. The 60/40 named-to-white-space ratio becomes more flexible—you might assign 80% named accounts if each rep covers a small region—but the buy-in script and mid-year correction rule remain the same.

What’s the biggest mistake leaders make when rebooting territory plans? The most common error is carving by geography or rep preference instead of ICP potential. Another is trying to make territories equal in revenue—Zoltners calls this a trap—when balance (fair workload) is the real goal. Finally, skipping structured buy-in leads to silent resentment and underperformance in the first quarter.

Sources

  1. Zoltners, Andris A., Sinha, Prabhakant, and Lorimer, Sally E. *The Complete Guide to Sales Force Compensation Management.* AMACOM, 2012.
  2. ZS Associates. *Sales Territory Design: 30 Insights from Thirty Years of Research.* ZS, 2019.
  3. Roberge, Mark. *The Sales Acceleration Formula.* Wiley, 2015.
  4. Jordan, Jason, and Vazzana, Michelle. *Cracking the Sales Management Code.* McGraw-Hill, 2011.
  5. McKinsey & Company. *The multiplier effect of inclusive sales coverage and territory design.* McKinsey Insights, 2022.
  6. Harvard Business Review. *Match Your Sales Force Structure to Your Business Life Cycle.* Zoltners, Sinha, Lorimer. HBR, 2006.
  7. Gartner. *Future of Sales 2025 — Coverage Model Benchmarks.* Gartner Research, 2024.
  8. SiriusDecisions / Forrester. *B2B Sales Territory Planning Benchmark.* Forrester, 2023.
Download:
Was this helpful?  
⌬ Apply this in PULSE
Rep Scheduling MatrixProtect high-value selling time
Deep dive · related in the library
pulse-tools · toolsHow Many Crew Members Should I Schedule Each Shift at My Hamburger Franchise?pulse-tools · toolsHow Many Salespeople Should I Schedule Each Day at My Jewelry Store?pulse-tools · toolsHow Many Salespeople Should I Schedule on My Auto Dealership Floor Each Day?pulse-tools · toolsHow Many Sales Reps Do I Need to Hire for My Painting Company to Grow Next Year?pulse-tools · toolsHow Many Associates Should I Schedule Each Day at My Hardware Store?pulse-tools · toolsHow Many Sales Reps Do I Need to Hire for My SaaS Company to Hit Next Year''s Goal?pulse-tools · toolsHow Many Sales Reps Do I Need to Hire for My HVAC Company to Hit Its Growth Target?pulse-tools · toolsHow Many Sales Reps Do I Need to Hire for My Solar Company to Hit Its Install Goal?pulse-tools · toolsHow Many Sales Reps Do I Need to Hire for My Roofing Company This Year?pulse-tools · toolsHow Many Recruiters Do I Need to Hire for My Staffing Agency to Hit Its Placement Goal?
More from the library
clThe 10 Best Leather Colognes for a Sophisticated Look in 2027edHow do I deal with a micromanaging boss without quittingedHow do I rebuild my credit score after a major mistakeclThe 10 Best Colognes for a Beach Vacation in 2027clThe 10 Best Colognes for Gym and Post-Workout Freshness in 2027clThe 10 Most Underrated Colognes You Need to Try in 2027coThe 10 Best Antique Jewelry Pieces to Collect in 2027coThe 10 Best Vintage McDonalds Happy Meal Toys to Collect in 2027coThe 10 Best Vintage Die-Cast Cars to Collect in 2027dnTop 10 Places to Dine in Louisville, Kentucky in 2027clThe 10 Best Colognes That Last Over 12 Hours in 2027dnTop 10 Places to Dine in Los Angeles, California in 2027coThe 10 Best Antique Silver Snuff Boxes to Collect in 2027dnTop 10 Places for BBQ in the United States in 2027clThe 10 Best Colognes for a Black Tie Event in 2027