Sales pipeline stages
What is a sales pipeline?
A sales pipeline is a visual representation of your active deals, organized by stage. It answers two critical questions: "What are we working on right now?" and "How much revenue can we expect to close?"
Each deal sits in a stage that reflects its current status — from brand-new lead to closed contract. The pipeline gives sales leaders a real-time view of capacity, velocity, and forecast accuracy. When configured well in your CRM, it turns a chaotic sales process into something measurable and improvable.
The critical discipline: stage definitions must be based on buyer actions (they completed a discovery call, they requested a proposal) — not on rep opinions ("they seemed interested"). Objective criteria prevent deals from sitting in stages they don't belong in, which is the #1 cause of inaccurate forecasts.
Standard B2B pipeline stages
Most B2B companies use a variation of these 6 stages. Customize the labels to match your language, but keep the entry criteria tight.
| Stage | Entry criteria | Exit action | Typical win probability |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. New Lead | Inbound form, chat, referral, or outbound response received | Initial fit assessed, lead accepted or disqualified | 5-10% |
| 2. Qualified | Confirmed fit via qualification framework (BANT, CHAMP, MEDDIC) | Discovery call scheduled | 15-25% |
| 3. Discovery | Discovery call completed; needs, timeline, and stakeholders documented | Solution mapped, proposal timeline agreed | 25-40% |
| 4. Proposal | Proposal or pricing sent with scope and terms | Buyer acknowledges and begins internal review | 40-60% |
| 5. Negotiation | Buyer actively discussing terms, legal involved | Terms agreed, contract ready for signature | 60-80% |
| 6. Closed | Contract signed (Won) or deal abandoned/lost (Lost) | Handoff to onboarding (Won) or loss analysis (Lost) | 100% / 0% |
Pipeline vs funnel: what's the difference?
These overlap but serve different purposes. You need both.
| Sales pipeline | Sales funnel | |
|---|---|---|
| View | Seller's process — what your team is doing | Buyer's journey — how prospects flow |
| Unit | Individual deals (each with a value) | Aggregate volume (how many at each stage) |
| Metrics | Deal count, total value, velocity, days-in-stage | Conversion rates, drop-off points, stage volume |
| Answers | "Will we hit our number this quarter?" | "Where are we losing the most prospects?" |
| Tool | CRM deal view | Analytics dashboard, funnel reports |
Think of it this way: the funnel diagnoses your conversion problem. The pipeline manages your revenue problem. The sales cycle connects them — it measures how long deals take from entry to exit.
Pipeline management essentials
A pipeline is only as good as the discipline around managing it. Four practices separate high-performing teams from the rest:
- Regular reviews: Weekly or bi-weekly pipeline reviews where reps walk through their active deals. Focus on deals that haven't moved stages — these are either stalled (fix them) or dead (remove them).
- Pipeline hygiene: Remove deals that haven't progressed in 2x your average sales cycle length. Dead deals inflate your forecast and hide real problems.
- Stage-based coaching: Coach reps on the specific stage where their deals stall most. If a rep's deals pile up at Proposal, the problem isn't prospecting — it's how they're positioning value.
- Coverage ratio: Maintain 3-4x pipeline coverage relative to your quota. If you need $100K in closed revenue, you need $300-400K in active pipeline. This accounts for natural loss rates through the stages.
AI and pipeline management in 2026
AI impacts the pipeline at three points:
- Pipeline entry (filling): AI SDRs and website chatbots qualify leads and push SQLs into the pipeline 24/7. This solves the most common pipeline problem: not enough qualified opportunities entering the top.
- Pipeline middle (moving): AI flags stalled deals, suggests next-best actions, and automates follow-up sequences that keep deals progressing through stages.
- Pipeline exit (forecasting): AI-powered forecasting analyzes deal behavior patterns — email response times, meeting cadence, stakeholder engagement — to predict close probability more accurately than rep-reported confidence levels.
The biggest operational impact is at the top. Most B2B pipelines are starved — not enough quality deals entering the system. AI qualification and sales automation increase pipeline generation velocity without adding headcount, which is the single most valuable lever for revenue growth.
FAQ
What are sales pipeline stages?
The sequential steps your team follows to work deals: New Lead, Qualified, Discovery, Proposal, Negotiation, and Closed. Each stage has specific entry criteria based on buyer actions.
What is the difference between a sales pipeline and a sales funnel?
The pipeline tracks your team's active deals and dollar values (seller's view). The funnel tracks how prospects flow from awareness to purchase (buyer's view). You need both for a complete picture.
How many pipeline stages should a B2B company have?
5-7 stages. Fewer makes it hard to diagnose bottlenecks. More creates overhead without insight. Match stage count to your sales cycle complexity.
How do you define pipeline stage entry criteria?
Base criteria on verifiable buyer actions: qualification call completed, discovery needs documented, proposal sent, terms discussed, contract signed. Avoid rep-opinion criteria like "seems interested."
What is pipeline management?
Tracking, analyzing, and optimizing active deals across all stages. Includes regular reviews, hygiene (removing stale deals), forecasting, and velocity analysis.
How does AI improve pipeline management?
AI fills the pipeline faster (auto-qualifying leads), keeps deals moving (flagging stalls, automating follow-up), and improves forecasting (behavior-based close probability vs. gut feel).
What are CRM pipeline stages?
The stages configured in your CRM that represent your sales process. Customize them to match how your team actually sells, with clear entry criteria, rather than using the CRM's defaults.