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Salespeople often focus on keeping their pipeline full, which leads them to chase bad opportunities. The most effective process involves qualifying prospects quickly and rigorously. This allows you to spend more focused time with fewer, high-intent prospects, ultimately leading to more and better deals closed.

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Contrary to the 'always be closing' mindset, the goal of early-stage qualification should be disqualification. Advancing deals based on mere 'interest' rather than true 'intent' leads to bloated pipelines and low win rates. Getting to 'no' quickly is more efficient than chasing unqualified leads.

Encourage sales and BDR teams to disqualify leads and close-loss deals quickly. This 'fail fast' approach cleans the pipeline, focuses effort on viable opportunities, and provides a rapid, clear feedback loop to marketing on lead quality and campaign effectiveness.

After learning to disqualify prospects without demand during sales calls, the next evolution is to stop talking to them altogether. This insight forces a re-evaluation of upstream activities like marketing messaging, ad targeting, and outbound criteria to ensure the pipeline is pre-qualified for customer "pull."

Many salespeople fill pipelines with leads showing mere interest. Elite performers differentiate this from true buyer intent—the willingness to buy now. They actively disqualify prospects who lack intent, allowing them to focus on fewer, more qualified opportunities and avoid wasting time on conversations that won't convert.

Instead of maximizing the volume of prospects at the top of the funnel, strategically narrow your focus to fewer, high-potential accounts. This 'martini glass' approach prioritizes depth and engagement over sheer productivity, leading to better quality opportunities.

Adding qualification steps to a sales funnel weeds out bad-fit leads. This increases cost-per-lead but lowers overall customer acquisition cost (CAC) and boosts morale by letting salespeople focus only on high-intent, closable deals.

Time is a finite resource in sales. Every minute spent on a prospect outside your ideal customer profile (ICP) is a minute you cannot spend on a more qualified lead. This reframes prospecting as a strategic allocation of your most valuable asset: time.

One company discovered that while MQLs were plentiful, they took 130 days to convert. In contrast, "hand-raiser" leads converted in just 12 days at a much higher rate. Focusing on conversion velocity reveals where to allocate resources for efficient growth.

The future of sales requires more authentic, time-intensive conversations to build the trust needed to win. This means salespeople must focus on a smaller number of high-propensity prospects, leading to a thinner but more valuable pipeline. The emphasis shifts from the volume of leads to the quality and depth of engagement.

Average reps find security in a pipeline packed with low-quality leads (a "sewer pipe"). Top performers prioritize quality over quantity, resulting in a leaner but more potent pipeline (a "water tap"). They are comfortable with fewer opportunities because they know what's in there is highly qualified and likely to close.

A Highly Qualified, Smaller Pipeline Outperforms a Full but Unqualified One | RiffOn