The Annual Sales Planning Reboot — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The annual sales plan is not a number — it is a 90-day forensic exercise that starts in early Q4. Build the plan from the bottom up (named-account capacity, rep ramp curves, historical cohort retention) and stress-test top down (board growth target, finance gross-margin floor, CAC payback).
Reconcile the two in a single room. Then write two communication tracks: a board-approved number with assumptions, and a rep-approved quota with attainment math that pays at least 60% of reps over plan at on-target effort. Below is the 60-minute training to run with sales leadership, RevOps, and your finance partner before the planning cycle opens.
MEETING AGENDA — 60 MINUTES
| Time | Block | Owner | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0:00-0:05 | Intro — why most plans miss | CRO | Frame the 90-day window |
| 0:05-0:20 | Teach — bottom-up vs top-down | RevOps Lead | Both models built |
| 0:20-0:30 | Named-account capacity check | Sales Mgrs | Coverage map signed |
| 0:30-0:40 | Historical-cohort math | Finance Partner | Renewal base locked |
| 0:40-0:55 | Reconciliation + comms drafting | All | Two-track narrative |
| 0:55-1:00 | Commitments + leave-behind | CRO | Owners + dates |
SECTION 1 — INTRO: THE 90-DAY PLAN-THE-PLAN WINDOW (0:00-0:05)
Coach Note
The plan starts the first Monday of October for a January 1 fiscal year. If you are still arguing about quotas in late December, you have already lost Q1.
Most plans miss not because the number is wrong but because the work to build the number is compressed into three weeks of December panic. McKinsey's *Sales Growth* research finds top-quartile commercial orgs spend 8-12 weeks on annual planning. Andris Zoltners (Wharton) calls this the "plan-the-plan" phase.
Three phases: Weeks 1-4 diagnose (cohort retention, win-rate by segment, rep ramp, named-account whitespace), Weeks 5-8 model (bottom-up build, top-down reconcile, +/-15% sensitivities), Weeks 9-12 commit (board approval, territory letters, comp plan release by December 15).
SECTION 2 — TEACH: BOTTOM-UP vs TOP-DOWN (0:05-0:20)
The two models must both be built — separately — then reconciled. Building only one is the most common failure mode.
Bottom-up starts with capacity. Per rep: (productive selling days) x (meetings/day) x (opp conversion) x (win rate) x (ACV). Jason Jordan's *Cracking the Sales Management Code* calls this the activity → objective → result chain. A fully-ramped AE at $25K-$500K ACV typically carries $900K-$1.4M quota at 4-5x quota-to-OTE.
Top-down starts with the board's net new ARR growth %. Subtract gross retention loss, add expansion — the remainder is new-logo ACV sales owes. Mark Roberge's *Sales Acceleration Formula* rule: top-down without bottom-up produces "hope quotas" reps cannot mathematically hit.
Reconciliation rule: if the gap between bottom-up capacity and top-down ask exceeds 25%, you do not have a plan — you have a wish. Hire more reps (accept ramp lag), narrow segments, or take the number back to the board with capacity math.
SECTION 3 — NAMED-ACCOUNT CAPACITY CHECK (0:20-0:30)
Quota without a named-account list is fiction. For each rep at $25K-$500K ACV, list the specific accounts — not a territory, an actual list of 40-80 logos.
The capacity test, per Jacco van der Kooij's *Blueprints for a SaaS Sales Organization*:
- Per-account ACV potential — addressable spend if fully penetrated
- Stage today — cold, engaged, opportunity, customer, churn-risk
- Realistic 12-month yield — what this rep can credibly close this year
- Coverage ratio — sum of yield should equal 3-4x the rep's quota
If the list yields under 3x quota, the rep cannot hit plan with perfect execution. Add accounts, raise yield assumptions (and defend them), or lower the quota. This is the highest-correlation predictor of attainment.
SECTION 4 — HISTORICAL-COHORT MATH (0:30-0:40)
Your renewal base is not "last year's revenue." It is a cohort table by customer vintage.
Pull the last 8-12 quarters of new-logo ACV by cohort. Track: GRR at month 12, NRR at month 12 and 24, expansion rate, time-to-first-expansion. SaaS Capital and KeyBanc surveys peg median B2B SaaS at ~90% GRR / ~108% NRR; top quartile >95% GRR / >120% NRR.
Output: true new-logo ACV owed = board target minus net retention dollars. Teams carrying a quota that ignores retention are over-quota'd by 15-30% every year. Finance partner verifies the math — non-negotiable.
SECTION 5 — RECONCILIATION + TWO-TRACK COMMS (0:40-0:55)
You now have a bottom-up capacity number, a top-down board ask, and a true new-logo quota net of retention. Reconcile in one room, one afternoon — CRO, RevOps lead, Finance Partner, Head of Sales Ops.
Write two communication tracks:
- Board-Approved Comms — headline ARR, assumptions (hiring, ramp, retention, 3-4x pipeline coverage), -15% downside, +15% upside, and trigger points for a re-plan (e.g., Q1 coverage <3x by Feb 28).
- Rep-Approved Comms — individual quota letter, named-account list, comp plan, accelerators, and the attainment math showing 60%+ of reps land over 100% at on-target effort. Zoltners' research: plans where fewer than 50% of reps hit quota destroy next year's recruiting.
Verbatim opener for the rep quota letter:
"Your 2027 quota is $1,150,000 in new-logo ACV. Your named-account list (attached) carries $4.2M in realistic 12-month yield — a 3.6x coverage ratio. Your ramp credit is $95K for Q1.
Your OTE is $260,000 at 100%, with 2x accelerators above 100% and 3x above 120%. Comp plan is signed and final as of December 15. Questions to RevOps by December 22; territories lock January 2."
SECTION 6 — COMMITMENTS + LEAVE-BEHIND (0:55-1:00)
Three commitments before everyone leaves the room:
- CRO — board deck draft circulating by end of Week 8, final by Week 11
- RevOps Lead — named-account lists complete for 100% of reps by December 1
- Finance Partner — cohort retention model signed and locked by November 15
Leave-behind: one-page planning calendar with all milestones, the reconciliation worksheet template, and the rep-letter template.
FAQ
Q: We are a 20-rep team — is 90 days necessary? A: Yes. Work scales down per rep, but the diagnose-model-commit sequence does not compress safely below 8 weeks.
Q: Board number is non-negotiable and bottom-up cannot hit it? A: Document the gap in writing, propose hiring acceleration (accept ramp drag) or segment expansion with explicit assumptions, and surface the probability of miss to the board. Do not silently push it onto reps.
Q: Rep's named-account list doesn't yield 3x? A: In order: (1) add accounts from open territory, (2) raise yield with defended rationale, (3) lower quota and reallocate. Skipping is not an option.
Q: When should the comp plan be released? A: December 15 at the latest. January releases cost Q1 selling days and create a year-long credibility tax.
Q: How often should we re-plan? A: Hard re-plan only on trigger events (coverage breach, two-quarter miss, material market change). Quarterly reforecasts are normal; quarterly re-quotas destroy trust.
Sources
- Zoltners, A., Sinha, P., Lorimer, S. *Sales Force Design for Strategic Advantage* and *The Complete Guide to Sales Force Incentive Compensation* (Wharton).
- Jordan, J. *Cracking the Sales Management Code* (McGraw-Hill).
- Roberge, M. *The Sales Acceleration Formula* (Wiley).
- Van der Kooij, J. *Blueprints for a SaaS Sales Organization*.
- McKinsey & Company. *Sales Growth: Five Proven Strategies from the World's Sales Leaders.*
- KeyBanc Capital Markets. *Annual SaaS Survey* (GRR/NRR benchmarks).
- SaaS Capital. *Annual B2B SaaS Retention Study.*
- Harvard Business Review. "Motivating Salespeople: What Really Works" (Steenburgh & Ahearne).