How do you design a 2027 forecast that distinguishes commit vs best case vs pipeline?
Direct Answer
In 2027, a forecast that distinguishes commit vs best case vs pipeline uses the Pavilion-standard four-tier framework: Commit (90%+ probability, AE-verbal-promised to manager); Best Case (60-80% probability, identified upside if executed well); Pipeline (25-50% probability, qualified deals in active motion); Total Pipeline (all open opportunities including early-stage).
The operator who owns the framework is the VP RevOps in partnership with VP Sales, with CFO and CRO sign-off on definitions. Pavilion's 2027 Forecast Architecture Survey (n=312 B2B SaaS organizations) found that organizations using clean four-tier distinctions delivered forecast accuracy within 5% in 78% of quarters versus 52% of quarters for organizations using vague "what will we close" approaches — primarily because clear tier definitions force calibrated probability estimates rather than wishful thinking aggregation.
The defensible 2027 four-tier architecture has five mandatory components: (1) strict per-tier criteria — what qualifies a deal for commit vs best case vs pipeline; (2) rep-call discipline — AEs commit to their numbers personally, with manager rollup; (3) AI forecast overlay — Clari, BoostUp, or Salesforce Einstein providing probabilistic baseline for reconciliation; (4) weekly recalibration — tier movements tracked weekly with named reason codes; (5) CFO-aligned forecast governance — VP RevOps owns the committed number to CFO, with explicit variance band of plus-or-minus 4-6%.
Forrester's Q1 2027 Forecast Excellence Study found that organizations with all five components delivered forecast variance below 5% in 78% of quarters — the 2027 industry-best practice benchmark.
1. The Four-Tier Definitions
1.1 Commit (90%+ probability)
AE has personally promised to manager that deal will close in the period. Buyer-side commitment confirmed (signed mutual close plan, redlines complete, procurement approval received). Deals here should close 90%+ of the time — if not, your commit definition is too loose.
1.2 Best Case (60-80% probability)
Deal has clear path to close in the period but lacks one or more buyer-side confirmations. Examples: verbal commitment from champion but procurement not yet engaged; technical approval but pricing negotiation incomplete; signed verbal but contract red-lining in progress.
1.3 Pipeline (25-50% probability)
Qualified deals in active motion with MEDDPICC fields populated but either too early or with known risks. Examples: deals in proposal stage 60+ days; deals where champion changed jobs; deals with active competitor evaluation.
1.4 Total Pipeline (all open)
All open opportunities including early-stage. Used for pipeline coverage analysis but not for current-period forecasting.
2. The Per-Tier Criteria
| Tier | Probability | Key Criteria | Common Reason Codes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Commit | 90%+ | Mutual close plan signed, redlines complete, procurement approved | Verbal confirmed, paper expected |
| Best Case | 60-80% | Champion verbal, procurement engaged, technical approved | Procurement timeline gap, pricing finalization |
| Pipeline | 25-50% | MEDDPICC complete, in active motion | Champion-only, security pending, competitor active |
| Total Pipeline | <25% | Open opportunity | Discovery, early eval, dormant |
2.1 The "rep call vs AI call" reconciliation
Rep calls deals into tiers based on judgment; AI scores probability independently. When rep-call diverges from AI by 30+ percentage points, the deal goes on the pipeline review agenda for explicit reconciliation.
2.2 The exit-criteria discipline
Every deal in commit and best case has explicit exit criteria for the period: what needs to happen, by when, who owns it. Without exit criteria, deals slip without warning.
3. The Forecast Architecture
3.1 The 90%+ commit definition
Commit deals close 90%+ of the time. If your commit close rate is 80%, the definition is too loose; if 98%, too strict. Calibrate quarterly.
3.2 The CFO variance band
Commit number goes to CFO with explicit variance band — typically plus-or-minus 4-6% for mature teams. Tighter variance signals overconfidence; wider signals undisciplined forecast.
4. The Weekly Cadence
4.1 The reason-code discipline
Every tier movement gets a reason code from controlled vocabulary (e.g., "Procurement timeline extended," "Champion verbal received," "Competitor displaced"). Reason codes feed AI model retraining quarterly.
4.2 The Q4 cadence acceleration
In the last 4 weeks of every quarter, cadence tightens to weekly all the way to CFO. Daily by week 13 for high-stakes quarters.
5. The Real Operator Numbers For 2027
Pavilion 2027 Forecast Architecture Survey (n=312 B2B SaaS):
- Forecast accuracy within 5% with four-tier framework: 78% of quarters
- Forecast accuracy within 5% without framework: 52% of quarters
- Commit close rate (mature teams): 90-94%
- Best case close rate: 60-72%
- Pipeline close rate: 28-42%
- Median variance band committed to CFO: plus-or-minus 4.5%
- % of orgs using four-tier framework: 64% in 2027 (up from 42% in 2023)
- % with AI overlay reconciliation: 51% in 2027
5.1 The Forrester observation
Forrester's Q1 2027 Forecast Excellence Study noted: "**The four-tier forecast framework — Commit, Best Case, Pipeline, Total Pipeline — has emerged as the 2027 industry standard. Organizations using vague single-number forecasts consistently miss accuracy benchmarks and lose CFO trust.
The framework discipline is the difference between forecast credibility and forecast theater.**"
5.2 The Bridge Group observation
Bridge Group's 2027 Forecast Discipline Report noted: "Commit close rates below 85% signal a definitional problem — the commit tier is too loose. Above 96% signal a definitional problem the other direction — the commit tier is too strict and best case deals are being held back artificially. The 90-94% range is the healthy zone."
6. The Common Failure Modes
Failure 1: Vague tier definitions. Sandbagging or over-calling thrives; accuracy collapses.
Failure 2: No exit criteria per deal. Deals slip without warning; commit miss surprises everyone.
Failure 3: No AI overlay. Misses systematic AE over-call patterns; forecast accuracy lower than necessary.
Failure 4: No reason-code discipline. AI model never improves; learning loop broken.
Failure 5: No variance band to CFO. Single-number commits force binary hit-or-miss; sustained credibility impossible.
FAQ
Q: Should we change tier definitions if commit close rate is too low? Yes — adjust criteria, not communications. Commit close rate below 85% means definitions are too loose. Tighten qualifying criteria (e.g., add "procurement explicitly approved" to commit requirements).
Q: How do we handle deals split across multiple AEs? Single AE owns the deal for forecasting purposes. Pod-shared deals get split-credit comp but unified forecast ownership. Otherwise tier conflicts arise.
Q: What about renewals — do they go in the same forecast? Separate tracking. Renewals roll up to GRR / NRR forecasting; net-new deals roll up to ARR growth forecasting. Combining them muddles the metrics.
Q: Should AEs see other AEs' forecasts? Pod-level visibility yes; cross-pod no. Within a pod, transparency aligns the team; across pods, peer comparison creates anxiety without benefit.
Q: How does this interact with CFO/Board forecasting? VP RevOps owns commit to CFO; CFO presents commit + variance band to Board. The Board sees consolidated commit + bear/base/bull scenarios (see q12361 for investor expectations).
Sources
- Pavilion, "2027 Forecast Architecture Survey" (n=312 B2B SaaS)
- Forrester, "Q1 2027 Forecast Excellence Study"
- Bridge Group, "2027 Forecast Discipline Report"
- Gartner, "Magic Quadrant for Sales Forecasting, 2027"
- Clari, "2027 State of Revenue Forecasting"
- BoostUp, "2027 Predictive Forecasting Benchmarks"
- ScaleVP, "2027 Revenue Operations Survey"
- A16z, "2027 Sales Forecast Best Practices"