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Quarterly Goal Cascading: From Quota to Daily Activity Breakdown

Kory White, Chief Revenue OfficerCurated by Chief Revenue Officer Kory White · CRO Syndicate · 📄 1-Page Resume
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Quarterly goal cascading is the structured process of translating a quarterly revenue quota into daily, measurable activities that sales reps can execute consistently. This training provides a ready-to-run meeting template using MEDDPICC qualification, Salesforce reporting, and Clari forecasting to ensure every rep knows exactly what to do each day to hit their number.

By the end of this session, your team will have a documented daily activity plan tied to pipeline generation and deal progression, not just output metrics.

1. Warm-Up (10 min)

Objective: Align on the gap between current performance and quarterly quota.

Script for facilitator: "Let’s start with a quick reality check. Open your Salesforce dashboard for this quarter. Each of you, write down three numbers: your total quota, your current closed-won revenue, and your remaining gap.

For example, if your quota is $250K and you’ve closed $80K, your gap is $170K. Now, divide that gap by your average deal size—say $50K—that’s 3.4 deals you need to close. But here’s the kicker: based on your historical close rate (check Clari or your own CRM), how many opportunities do you need to create to get those 3.4 wins?

If your close rate is 25%, you need 14 new qualified opportunities. That’s your starting point."

Interactive exercise:

2. The Cascading Framework: Quota → Pipeline → Activity (15 min)

Objective: Teach the mathematical cascade from quota to daily tasks using a Gartner-validated conversion model.

Script for facilitator: "Here’s the formula we’ll use, based on Winning by Design’s pipeline math. Let’s assume your quarterly quota is $300K, average deal size $60K, close rate 20%, and average sales cycle 60 days. You need 5 wins ($300K ÷ $60K).

At 20% close rate, you need 25 qualified opportunities (5 ÷ 0.20). But only 40% of your pipeline converts to qualified opportunities (a common Gartner benchmark), so you need 62.5 initial leads (25 ÷ 0.40). Now, if your outbound conversion from cold call to lead is 5%, you need 1,250 dials per quarter (62.5 ÷ 0.05).

That’s 21 dials per day (assuming 60 working days in a quarter). But wait—Gong data shows top reps spend 40% of their time on discovery calls, not just dials. So adjust: 21 dials + 2 discovery calls per day = your daily activity target."

Diagram 1: Quota-to-Activity Cascade

graph TD A[Quarterly Quota: $300K] --> B[Wins Needed: 5] B --> C[Qualified Opps Needed: 25] C --> D[Initial Leads Needed: 62.5] D --> E[Outbound Dials Needed: 1,250] E --> F[Daily Dials: 21] E --> G[Daily Discovery Calls: 2] F --> H[Daily Activity Plan] G --> H

Key takeaway: This cascade is your non-negotiable math. Salesloft sequences can automate the dials, but the numbers must be personalized.

3. Building the Daily Activity Breakdown (20 min)

Objective: Create a specific, time-blocked daily schedule using Outreach or Salesloft data.

Script for facilitator: "Now, take your personal numbers from the warm-up. I’ll walk through an example for a rep with a $200K quota, $50K average deal, 25% close rate, and 50-day cycle. That’s 4 wins needed ($200K ÷ $50K).

At 25% close rate, 16 qualified opps (4 ÷ 0.25). With a 50% lead-to-opp conversion, 32 leads needed (16 ÷ 0.50). At 10% outbound conversion, 320 dials per quarter = 6 dials per day.

But Challenger sales methodology says you need 2 discovery calls per day to qualify deeply. So daily plan: 6 dials (9:00-9:30 AM), 2 discovery calls (10:00-11:00 AM), 1 hour of proposal follow-up (1:00-2:00 PM), 30 minutes of CRM updates in Salesforce (4:30-5:00 PM). Write your own version now."

Group work (10 min):

Example output for one rep:

4. Tracking and Adjusting Mid-Quarter (15 min)

Objective: Use Clari and Salesforce dashboards to course-correct weekly.

Script for facilitator: "Your daily plan is a hypothesis. Mid-quarter, you must check actuals versus plan. Open Clari’s weekly snapshot.

If your pipeline coverage ratio (pipeline value ÷ remaining quota) drops below 3x, you need to increase dials by 20% immediately. For example, if your quota gap is $100K and pipeline is $250K, that’s 2.5x—below the Gartner benchmark of 3x. Action: add 5 more dials per day and 1 extra discovery call per week.

Use Salesforce reports to track activity completion—if you logged only 12 dials instead of 21, that’s a red flag. Bold: ‘No activity log = no pipeline growth. Period.’"

Real scenario: "Rep A had 18 dials per day planned but only executed 10. Pipeline dropped 15% in week 4. Using Clari’s predictive analytics, we flagged the risk. Solution: added a Salesloft cadence with automated follow-ups and reduced non-selling admin time by 30 minutes. By week 8, dials hit 20/day, pipeline recovered."

Diagram 2: Mid-Quarter Adjustment Logic

graph LR A[Weekly Check: Clari Pipeline Coverage] --> B{Below 3x?} B -->|Yes| C[Increase Dials by 20%] B -->|No| D[Maintain Plan] C --> E[Add 1 Extra Discovery Call/Week] E --> F[Re-check in 2 Weeks] F --> A

5. Role-Play: Defending Your Daily Plan (15 min)

Objective: Practice justifying activity changes to a manager using data.

Script for facilitator: "Pair up. One person is the rep, the other is the manager. The rep presents their daily plan from Section 3.

The manager challenges: ‘Why only 6 dials? Your close rate dropped last month.’ The rep must defend using MEDDPICC logic: ‘I increased discovery call time because my deal has a complex decision process with 3 stakeholders. Gong data shows my discovery calls convert at 30% vs 15% for dials.

So I prioritize quality over quantity.’ Switch roles after 5 minutes."

Bold rule for managers: "If the rep cannot articulate the math behind their activity count, send them back to Section 2 to recalculate."

Debrief:

6. Action Plan and Commitments (10 min)

Objective: Each rep leaves with a signed weekly activity tracker.

Script for facilitator: "Take 5 minutes to write your final daily activity breakdown on this template. Include: quota, gap, required dials, required discovery calls, and your weekly check-in day with your manager. Sign it.

I’ll collect copies. For example: ‘I, Rep X, commit to 21 dials and 2 discovery calls daily, with a Salesforce dashboard review every Friday at 3 PM.’ Bold: ‘This is your contract for the quarter.’"

Template (handout or digital):

Closing: "Next week, we’ll review your Clari pipeline coverage. If you’re off by more than 10%, we adjust immediately."

FAQ

Q: What if my average deal size changes mid-quarter? A: Recalculate your cascade using the new deal size in Salesforce. Example: if deal size drops from $60K to $40K, you need 7.5 wins (round up to 8) instead of 5. Increase dials accordingly.

Q: How do I handle weeks with holidays or PTO? A: Multiply your daily dials by the number of working days you have. If you’re out for 5 days, add 5 days’ worth of dials to the remaining weeks. Use Outreach to schedule sequences in advance.

Q: My close rate is 10%, not 20%. What now? A: Double your required opportunities. For a $300K quota with $60K deals, you need 10 wins, which requires 100 qualified opps (vs 50). That means 200 leads and 4,000 dials per quarter—67 dials per day. Consider adding a Salesloft cadence to scale.

Q: Can I use this for inbound leads too? A: Yes. Replace outbound dials with inbound lead response time. Gong research shows responding within 5 minutes increases conversion by 100x. Your daily activity becomes: respond to all inbound leads within 1 hour, then allocate remaining time to outbound.

Q: What if my manager doesn’t use Clari? A: Use Salesforce pipeline reports instead. Create a custom report showing pipeline value by stage and compare to quota gap. The math is the same.

Q: How do I track activities without a tool like Outreach? A: Manually log in Salesforce using a custom activity object. Create a daily checklist in a spreadsheet and import weekly. But bold: manual tracking adds 15 minutes per day—automate with Salesloft or Outreach to save time.

Q: What if my pipeline is full but deals are stuck? A: Shift daily activities from prospecting to deal progression. Use MEDDPICC to identify the bottleneck (e.g., no economic buyer identified). Spend 1 hour per day on stakeholder mapping and 30 minutes on executive outreach.

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