Large, complex sales require a long sales cycle. High performers strategically initiate these "big game" hunts in the first quarter, giving them the necessary runway to close within the fiscal year. Waiting until later quarters means these deals won't contribute to the current year's results.
Failing to prospect during the holidays creates an empty January pipeline. Given a typical 60-90 day sales cycle, this deficit directly causes poor performance in February and March, effectively sabotaging the entire first quarter before it even begins.
It's tempting to push late-stage deals into January, but this is a dangerous trap. Once the holiday break occurs, momentum is lost and priorities shift, meaning these deals rarely close. Leaders must create urgency to close before year-end, as rollovers are effectively lost opportunities.
Sales teams often coast during the holidays, causing a slow Q1 start. The "30-day rule" posits that prospecting efforts in one month directly impact the pipeline for the next 90 days. Halting activity in December is the direct cause of a predictable January and February slump.
Instead of aiming for their quota, elite salespeople plan to significantly exceed it. This 'overplanning' builds a necessary buffer or cushion for the inevitable deals that fall through or get delayed, ensuring they still hit their target at minimum.
Combat the tendency for teams to ease into the new year by anchoring them around what must be completed in the first month. This creates a "fast start," builds early conviction in the annual plan, and prevents playing catch-up in February and March.
AE prospecting fails when given a watered-down SDR activity quota. Instead, have AEs build a strategic plan to land three deals at 2x average contract value from a target list of just 10 accounts per quarter. This focuses their limited prospecting time on high-impact activities.
Prospects use the new year as an excuse to delay decisions. During this idle time, priorities change, budgets are reallocated, and competitors gain access. Salespeople should abandon delusional optimism and treat these opportunities as dead, focusing instead on closing deals now.
For large, complex deals, effective sales sequences should be designed for the long haul—sometimes a year or more—with less frequent touchpoints. This strategy prioritizes staying top-of-mind for future opportunities over the quick, intense cadences used for short-cycle sales.
Have reps spend the first week of each quarter identifying 10 high-value accounts (double the average contract value) with a strong business case. This 'big rock' approach focuses efforts on deals that can cover 50% of their quarterly pipeline needs.
Most salespeople wait until the new year to plan their first quarter. In contrast, elite performers use November to set Q1 revenue goals, calculate the required pipeline, and map out their initial actions, ensuring they start January already in full motion.