What is a forecasting model?
A forecasting model is a statistical tool designed to help businesses predict future outcomes, like revenue, bookings, usage, and product demand, based on the likelihood of closing deals and when that money will be received. Sales forecasting starts with the end in mind: Businesses decide on a goal, then define and measure key metrics to gauge whether they’re on track.
Any forecast model has at least three common triangulation principles to consider:
1. Time. Your sales cycle horizon is represented by accurate close dates.
2. Customer buying readiness: This is the sales stage, and shows where you are in the process.
3. Probability: How you meet or miss the customer's need to be selected.
You can run the most basic forecast without historicals if you have reliable data with these principles.
Sales forecasts are data-driven estimates of revenue generated over a specific period, with models relying on historical data patterns to project what is likely to occur in upcoming periods. Key factors include past performance, seasonality, customer behavior, and market conditions. Organizations use forecasts to improve sales planning, anticipate revenue, manage resources, and guide decision-making.