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The Pipeline Generation Block — 60-Min Training

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The Pipeline Generation Block: Running a 60-Minute Team Working Session Where Every Rep Builds the Prospecting Math, Time-Block, and Weekly Action Plan That Guarantees They Self-Source Enough Pipeline to Hit Quota — a 60-Minute Sales Training

What This Session Fixes

Most reps do not have a pipeline problem in March. They have a prospecting problem in January that they could not see yet. By the time a quarter is visibly short, it is already too late — the deals that would have saved it were never started.

This session forces the math into the open: how much pipeline each rep actually needs, how far behind they already are, and the specific, time-blocked prospecting plan that closes the gap.

This is a working session, not a lecture. Every rep leaves with their own numbers on paper and a calendar they have personally committed to. The manager leaves with a coverage picture for the whole team and a list of who is at risk before the quarter — not after.

Who runs it: The frontline sales manager. Who attends: The full sales team — AEs and any reps responsible for sourcing their own pipeline. What every rep brings: Their current open pipeline number, their quota, their average deal size, their stage-by-stage win rates if available, and their actual calendar for the next two weeks.

What to have ready: A printed worksheet per rep (the Pipeline Math sheet below), a whiteboard, and the team's blended close rate.

flowchart TD A[Quota for the period] --> B[Divide by average deal size] B --> C[Deals needed to win] C --> D[Divide by close rate] D --> E[Qualified opportunities needed] E --> F[Subtract pipeline already open] F --> G[Coverage GAP] G --> H[Divide by activity-to-opp ratio] H --> I[Weekly prospecting activity target] I --> J[Time-block the calendar] J --> K[Commit + manager inspects weekly]

The 60-Minute Agenda

This agenda runs 0:00 to 1:00 and the blocks sum to exactly 60 minutes. Keep time hard — the value is in the doing, and the doing is at the end.

Block 1 — Frame the Real Problem (0:00–0:06, 6 minutes)

Open with the uncomfortable truth: pipeline shortfalls are invisible until they are unfixable. State the goal of the hour plainly — "By the end of this session every one of you will know your exact prospecting gap and will have a calendar block you have committed to in front of the team." No theory, no slides.

Tell them this is the meeting that decides next quarter, today.

Block 2 — Build the Pipeline Math, Together (0:06–0:21, 15 minutes)

Walk the whole team through the Pipeline Math worksheet on the whiteboard using one volunteer's real numbers, then have every rep fill in their own sheet in parallel. The chain is:

  1. Quota for the period.
  2. Average deal size → divide quota by it = deals needed to win.
  3. Close rate (qualified opp → closed-won) → divide deals needed by close rate = qualified opportunities needed.
  4. Pipeline already open that is genuinely qualified and dated inside the period.
  5. Coverage gap = opportunities needed minus pipeline already open.

Every rep writes their own gap number in a box at the bottom and circles it. This number is the entire point of the session. Do not move on until every sheet has a circled gap.

Block 3 — Convert the Gap Into Weekly Activity (0:21–0:33, 12 minutes)

A gap is not a plan until it is a weekly number. Have each rep take their circled gap and divide it across the weeks remaining in the period to get qualified opportunities needed per week. Then apply their personal activity-to-opportunity ratios — how many connects produce a meeting, how many meetings produce a qualified opportunity.

Work backward to a concrete weekly target: X calls, Y personalized emails, Z social touches, and the number of new conversations that must start each week. Reps who do not know their ratios use the team blended numbers and flag it as something to instrument.

Block 4 — Time-Block the Calendar Live (0:33–0:45, 12 minutes)

Now make it real. Every rep opens their actual calendar for the next two weeks and physically places prospecting blocks — protected, recurring, same time each day where possible. The rule of thumb: prospecting goes in first, before anything else can claim the slot, and it is treated as un-cancellable as a customer meeting.

Reps pair up to pressure-test each other's calendars: "Is that block big enough to hit your weekly number? What will you cancel when a deal tries to eat it?" The manager circulates and challenges any calendar that does not mathematically support the weekly target from Block 3.

Block 5 — Commitments and the Inspection Cadence (0:45–0:57, 12 minutes)

Go around the room. Each rep states out loud, to the team: their coverage gap, their weekly activity target, and the exact calendar blocks they have just committed to. Public commitment is the mechanism — a number said aloud to peers is kept far more often than a number kept private.

The manager then sets the inspection cadence: pipeline-generation results reviewed every week in the one-on-one, weekly activity target tracked against actuals, and the gap recalculated monthly so the plan stays honest as deals close and slip.

Block 6 — Close and First Action (0:57–1:00, 3 minutes)

Recap the one rule that matters: protected prospecting time is not negotiable. Assign the first action — every rep sends their committed calendar blocks and weekly target to the manager before end of day, and the first protected block happens tomorrow. End on time.

Agenda time check: 6 + 15 + 12 + 12 + 12 + 3 = 60 minutes.

The Pipeline Math Worksheet

Give every rep this worksheet on paper. It is the spine of Blocks 2 and 3.

LineFieldYour Number
AQuota for the period
BAverage deal size
CDeals needed to win (A ÷ B)
DClose rate (qualified opp → won)
EQualified opportunities needed (C ÷ D)
FQualified pipeline already open in-period
GCOVERAGE GAP (E − F)
HWeeks remaining in period
IQualified opps needed per week (G ÷ H)
JActivity-to-opp ratio (touches per opp)
KWeekly activity target (I × J)

Facilitator Notes

What Good Looks Like After This Session

Frequently Asked Questions

Why force the math when reps already have a quota? A quota is an outcome. This session converts the outcome into a controllable weekly input — activity — that a rep can actually manage day to day. Reps miss quota because they manage the outcome and ignore the input.

What if a rep does not know their activity-to-opportunity ratios? Use the team blended ratios for now and flag instrumentation as a follow-up. The plan is still directionally correct, and the rep gets a reason to start tracking.

How is this different from a normal pipeline review? A pipeline review inspects deals that already exist. This session is about manufacturing the deals that do not exist yet — it works forward from quota to the prospecting activity required, then time-blocks it.

How often should this run? Once per quarter as a full working session, with the weekly one-on-one carrying the inspection between sessions. Recalculate the gap monthly as deals close and slip.

What if a rep's calendar genuinely cannot fit the required blocks? That is a finding, not a failure. It means the rep's quota and their current commitments are mathematically incompatible — surface it now, with the manager, while there is still time to fix territory load, deal hygiene, or expectations.

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