The Sales Org Health Check Reboot — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
Audience: CRO, VP Sales, RevOps lead. Pre-read: four quarters of attainment, ramp, retention, pipeline coverage. Honest mediocre scores beat optimistic noise — Mark Roberge's rule applies: "you cannot fix what you will not measure."
Section 1 — Frame the Meta Training (0:00-0:05, 5 min)
Open with the premise: most sales orgs do not have a sales problem, they have a diagnostic problem. They roll out a methodology because the last conference said to, then a hiring sprint because attainment slipped, then a tool migration because the board asked. Each fix is fine in isolation; together they thrash the team.
Pavilion's 2025 CRO survey: the median B2B SaaS CRO runs 2.3 major sales initiatives per year with no formal diagnostic upstream. That is what we are fixing.
State the rule: diagnose first, prescribe second. Today is the diagnostic. The prescription is three to five other Pulse Trainings you run over the next two quarters, mapped to your lowest-scoring dimensions. Nothing else gets initiated until this rubric is scored.
Section 2 — The 12-Dimension Org Health Rubric (0:05-0:20, 15 min)
Walk the rubric together. Each dimension scores 0 (broken), 1 (inconsistent), 2 (working), 3 (best-in-class). Total /36. No half points. The room must agree on each score before moving on — disagreement itself is signal.
- Pipeline coverage — 3x-4x remaining-year quota at quarter start. Jason Jordan's CSO Insights benchmark from *Cracking the Sales Management Code* is the bar. 0 = under 2x or no visibility. 3 = 3.5x+ with stage-weighted forecast under 10% variance.
- Process discipline — Stage definitions, exit criteria, mandatory fields. 0 = reps freelance. 3 = every opp has MEDDPICC fields complete before stage advance, audited weekly.
- Methodology adoption — One methodology in the language of deal reviews (MEDDPICC, Command of the Message, Challenger, SPICED). 0 = nobody uses one. 3 = 80%+ rep-led use without prompting.
- Coaching cadence — Structured 1:1 coaching on deals and skills, not status. 0 = none or status-only. 3 = weekly 30-min skill coaching plus separate pipeline review, tracked.
- Tool usage — CRM hygiene, call recording, engagement adoption. 0 = CRM is graveyard. 3 = Gong/Chorus call review weekly, CRM data trustworthy enough to drive comp.
- Hiring quality — Structured interviews, calibrated scorecards. Trish Bertuzzi's *The Sales Development Playbook* is the bar. 0 = vibes-based. 3 = scorecard-driven loop, regretted-attrition under 10%.
- Ramp time — Start date to 80% of full quota. Bridge Group 2025 median: 5.3 months for AEs. 0 = over 9 months or untracked. 3 = under 4 months, documented plan.
- Attainment distribution — 60%+ of reps at quota with a fat middle. 0 = under 40% to quota or top 3 reps carry 70%+ of revenue. 3 = 60%+ at quota, no rep over 25% of total.
- Retention — Voluntary AE attrition trailing 12 months. SaaS healthy: under 18%. 0 = over 30%. 3 = under 12% with regretted-attrition under 8%.
- Comp competitiveness — OTE benchmarked to Pavilion or Radford for stage and ACV. 0 = below median, no plan. 3 = 60th percentile or higher with accelerators.
- Enablement maturity — Onboarding curriculum, ongoing skill bursts, content tied to stages. 0 = none. 3 = formal function with named owner, calendar, measured impact.
- Leadership bench — Could you promote a frontline manager to director next quarter? 0 = no successor for any role. 3 = named successor for every frontline role.
Section 3 — Score Your Own Org, Live (0:20-0:30, 10 min)
Each leader scores silently for four minutes. Then go around the table dimension by dimension. The cheapest insight in this hour is disagreement. If the CRO scores coaching at 2 and the RevOps lead scores it at 0, that gap is the real finding — someone is not seeing the field.
Jacco van der Kooij's Winning by Design coaching framework treats this as the executive blind spot to surface annually. Capture both scores on the whiteboard. The point of this section is exposure, not consensus.
Section 4 — Find the Bottom Three (0:30-0:40, 10 min)
Identify your three lowest-scoring dimensions. Resist attacking the lowest score if a slightly-higher score is more upstream. Process discipline at 1 is upstream of methodology adoption at 0 — fix process first or methodology will not stick. Force Management's command-of-the-message research finds methodology fails in orgs without stage discipline.
Sequencing rule: pipeline coverage and process discipline are foundational — if either is 0 or 1, they go first. Coaching cadence is the multiplier — if you cannot coach what you teach, do not teach anything new yet. Write the three targets on the board, upstream-first.
Section 5 — The Diagnose-to-Prescribe Map (0:40-0:55, 15 min)
Each dimension maps to specific Pulse Trainings already in the library. For each of your bottom three, commit to a training to run within 60 days. Put dates on the calendar before leaving the room — Topo/Gartner CSO research finds initiatives without named date and owner have sub-20% completion.
The mechanic for the year: one prescription training per month, one dimension per month, re-score the rubric quarterly. Anything not on the list waits. This is how you escape the 2.3-initiatives-per-year thrash.
Section 6 — Close and Commit (0:55-1:00, 5 min)
End with three commitments written on the wall, named owner, date. Re-score in 90 days using the same rubric. Same room, same people. Progress is dimension-level score lift, not initiative count. Adjourn.
FAQ
Q: We are a 12-person startup — worth running? A: Yes, but compressed. Same rubric, fewer prescriptions. Under 20 reps the bottleneck is almost always founder-led-sales transition (st236) and hiring quality (st203). Accept leadership bench will score 0 and move on.
Q: How honest will scores be in a room with the CRO? A: Less honest than they should be. Counter-move: have RevOps score silently first, then leaders score, then compare. The gap is the truth.
Q: Why 0-3 instead of 1-5 or 1-10? A: Four points force a decision and prevent the lazy "3 out of 5 = fine" mush. Borrowed from CMM-style maturity rubrics and Jason Jordan's sales management benchmarks. More granularity adds noise.
Q: What if every dimension scores 2? A: Total 24/36, the bottom of the tune-up band. Not broken, not winning. Push the three most-leveraged dimensions for your stage (usually coaching, process, pipeline) to 3 while holding the rest.
Q: How often should we run this? A: Annually in Q4 before planning, with a 90-day re-score on the bottom three. More often creates planning fatigue; less often lets dimensions drift.
Sources
- Roberge, Mark. *The Sales Acceleration Formula.* Wiley, 2015 — scoreboard-before-opinions discipline and ramp measurement.
- Jordan, Jason. *Cracking the Sales Management Code.* McGraw-Hill, 2011 — CSO Insights benchmarks for pipeline coverage and process discipline.
- Bertuzzi, Trish. *The Sales Development Playbook.* Moore-Lake, 2016 — structured-interview scorecards and ramp targets.
- Van der Kooij, Jacco. *Sales Blueprints* (Winning by Design), 2024 — SPICED methodology and executive coaching blind-spot framework.
- Pavilion. *2025 CRO Compensation & Operating Survey* — median 2.3 initiatives/year, OTE benchmarks by stage and ACV.
- Bridge Group. *2025 SaaS AE Metrics Report* — 5.3-month median AE ramp benchmark.
- Force Management. *Command of the Message* research notes — methodology-fails-without-process finding.
- Gartner (formerly Topo). *CSO Initiative Completion Study, 2024* — sub-20% completion rate for initiatives without named owner and date.