Illustration of a sales pipeline with sales targets being met.

What is a Sales Pipeline? And How Do You Build One?

Learn the stages of a sales pipeline how to build one for your business, and what tools you need.

7 Stages of the Sales Pipeline: Prospecting, Lead qualification, Sales call or demo, Proposal, Negotiation, Contract signing, Post-purchase

Sales Pipeline FAQs

A sales pipeline is the term commonly used to refer to the seller's view of deals they're actively working on and the stages of the sales process where deals reside at any given time. The sales funnel, however, is used to refer to the buyer's journey — how they navigate through discovery of a product, consideration of that product, and ultimately, a purchase.

Effective sales pipeline management requires reps (alongside automation tools) to keep deal records updated with the latest information about customer need, engagement, and interest. This dictates where the deal falls in the sales process and what sellers need to do next to keep deals moving forward.

It's important to use a real-time analytics tool to track the status of deals so you know where deals are stalling out and what's causing the delays. A robust CRM, like Sales Cloud, with built-in tracking, automation, and analysis tools, is an efficient way of managing your pipeline without investing a lot of time in manual updates.

A sales pipeline gives reps clear visibility into how many deals they have in flight and how those deals are progressing. If well-maintained, it can be used to determine bottlenecks, opportunities for upsells / cross-sells, the length of a typical sales cycle, pipeline coverage (how many deals need to be pursued in order to hit sales targets), and general sales performance for reps.

The typical sales pipeline has seven stages, often adjusted to meet unique business or industry needs: prospecting or lead generation, lead qualification, sales call, formal proposal, objection-handling and negotiation, close, and post-purchase follow-up.

A sales pipeline allows reps — alongside managers — to track and analyze sales opportunities from early-stage contact to close. This helps businesses make data-driven decisions about the types of deals to pursue, how many leads need to be generated to hit sales targets, and what deals are likeliest to close. It also helps leaders forecast likely revenue.