predictable-revenue

Build a scalable outbound B2B sales process with specialized roles (SDR, AE, CSM). Use when the user mentions "outbound sales", "Cold Calling 2.0", "prospecting emails", "sales pipeline", "SDR process", or "B2B SaaS sales". Covers lead generation, qualification frameworks, and separating prospecting from closing. For offer design, see hundred-million-offers. For persuasion science, see influence-psychology.

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Install skill "predictable-revenue" with this command: npx skills add wondelai/skills/wondelai-skills-predictable-revenue

Predictable Revenue Framework

A systematic approach to building a scalable, predictable B2B sales machine. Pioneered the outbound prospecting system that helped Salesforce add $100M in recurring revenue.

Core Principle

Predictable lead generation drives predictable revenue. The biggest mistake in sales is having the same people prospect AND close. Specialization creates a repeatable, scalable machine.

The foundation: Cold calling is dead. Cold Calling 2.0 — mass, personalized cold emails that generate referrals to the right person — is the new outbound. Combined with sales role specialization, this creates predictable, scalable revenue.

Scoring

Goal: 10/10. When evaluating or building a sales process, rate 0-10 based on predictability, specialization, and process maturity. A 10/10 means clear role separation, repeatable prospecting process, and predictable pipeline generation; lower scores indicate ad-hoc sales or reliance on heroics. Always provide current score and improvements to reach 10/10.

The Three Types of Leads

Not all leads are created equal. Treat them differently.

TypeSourceConversionCostExample
SeedsWord of mouth, referrals, organicHighest (best quality)Lowest (takes time)Customer referral, NPS-driven
NetsMarketing campaigns, inboundMediumMediumContent marketing, SEO, webinars
SpearsOutbound prospectingLower (but predictable)Higher (people-intensive)Cold Calling 2.0, targeted outreach

Key insight: Most companies over-invest in nets (marketing) and under-invest in spears (outbound). Seeds are the best but can't be manufactured quickly. A balanced mix of all three creates predictable revenue.

Revenue mix:

  • Seeds: Invest in customer success, NPS, referral programs
  • Nets: Invest in content, SEO, paid acquisition
  • Spears: Invest in SDR team, Cold Calling 2.0

See: references/lead-types.md for lead source strategy and investment allocation.

Sales Role Specialization

The #1 principle: Separate prospecting from closing.

Traditional (broken) model:

  • AEs prospect AND close
  • Result: AEs hate prospecting, pipeline is feast-or-famine

Predictable Revenue model:

RoleFocusMetrics
SDR (Sales Development Rep)Outbound prospecting → qualified opportunitiesQualified meetings/month
MDR (Market Development Rep)Inbound lead qualificationQualified leads/month
AE (Account Executive)Close dealsRevenue closed, win rate
CSM (Customer Success Manager)Retain and grow accountsRetention rate, expansion revenue

SDR (Sales Development Rep)

Mission: Generate qualified pipeline through outbound prospecting.

Focus:

  • Research target accounts
  • Write personalized Cold Calling 2.0 emails
  • Get referred to the right person
  • Qualify opportunities (ANUM)
  • Pass qualified opportunities to AEs

Not their job:

  • Close deals
  • Handle inbound leads
  • Manage existing customers

Metrics:

  • Qualified opportunities generated per month
  • Response rate to outbound emails
  • Meetings booked per week
  • Pipeline value generated

SDR capacity: One SDR typically generates 10-20 qualified opportunities per month.

AE (Account Executive)

Mission: Close deals from qualified pipeline.

Focus:

  • Run discovery calls
  • Demo and present solutions
  • Negotiate and close
  • Hand off to CSM

Not their job:

  • Prospect for new leads (this is SDR's job)
  • Qualify inbound leads (this is MDR's job)
  • Manage post-sale relationships (CSM's job)

Metrics:

  • Revenue closed
  • Win rate
  • Average deal size
  • Sales cycle length

CSM (Customer Success Manager)

Mission: Retain customers and grow accounts.

Focus:

  • Onboard new customers
  • Drive adoption and engagement
  • Identify expansion opportunities
  • Prevent churn

Metrics:

  • Net revenue retention
  • Churn rate
  • Expansion revenue
  • NPS / CSAT

The virtuous cycle:

SDR generates pipeline → AE closes → CSM retains/grows → Happy customer refers (Seeds)

See: references/roles.md for role definitions, career paths, and hiring profiles.

Cold Calling 2.0

The outbound prospecting methodology that replaces traditional cold calling.

Why traditional cold calling fails:

  • Gatekeepers block calls
  • Decision makers don't answer phones
  • 1-3% connection rate
  • Damages brand
  • Not scalable

Cold Calling 2.0 process:

1. Build list → 2. Send mass email → 3. Get referral → 4. Call the referral → 5. Qualify

Step 1: Build Target Account List

Ideal Customer Profile (ICP):

  • Company size (employees, revenue)
  • Industry
  • Technology stack
  • Geography
  • Pain points

Build list using:

  • LinkedIn Sales Navigator
  • ZoomInfo / Apollo / Clearbit
  • Company websites
  • Industry directories

Target: 200-500 accounts per SDR per quarter

Step 2: The Referral Email

The core innovation: Don't email the decision maker directly. Email above them and ask for a referral down.

Why it works:

  • Senior people are helpful (they forward emails)
  • Referrals have 3-5x higher response rate
  • Creates warm introduction from within the company

The email template:

Subject: Quick question

Body:

Hi [Name],

I'm not sure if you're the right person to speak to about [specific topic] at [Company], but I was hoping you could point me to the right person.

We help [companies like theirs] with [specific value prop].

Would you mind pointing me to the right person to talk to?

Thanks, [Your name]

Key elements:

  • Short (< 100 words)
  • No pitch, no attachments, no links
  • Asks for referral, not a meeting
  • Specific about what you do
  • Easy to forward

Response rate: 9-15% (vs. 1-3% for traditional cold emails)

Step 3: Follow Up

Follow-up sequence:

DayAction
Day 1Send referral email
Day 3Follow up if no response
Day 7Second follow up (different angle)
Day 14Break-up email ("Should I close your file?")
Day 30Re-engage (new trigger event or content)

Break-up email example:

Hi [Name],

I haven't heard back from you. I don't want to be a pest.

Should I close your file, or would it make sense to chat?

[Your name]

Why break-up emails work: People respond to the threat of losing access/opportunity (scarcity principle).

Step 4: Qualify with ANUM

ANUM qualification framework:

CriteriaQuestionStrong SignalWeak Signal
AuthorityCan this person decide?Decision maker or strong influencerNo buying power
NeedDo they have the problem you solve?Active pain, looking for solutions"Nice to have"
UrgencyWhen do they need to solve it?This quarter, budget allocated"Someday"
MoneyCan they afford it?Budget exists, within rangeNo budget, too expensive

Qualification call structure:

  1. Build rapport (2 min)
  2. Set agenda ("I want to understand your situation and see if there's a fit")
  3. Discovery questions (10-15 min)
  4. ANUM qualification (built into discovery)
  5. Next steps (if qualified → schedule AE demo)

Step 5: Hand Off to AE

The handoff must include:

  • Account background and ICP match
  • Contact details and role
  • Pain points discovered
  • ANUM qualification notes
  • Agreed next steps
  • Any competitive intel

Handoff meeting: SDR introduces AE on a brief 3-way call or email, then drops off.

See: references/cold-calling-2.md for email templates, sequences, and scripts.

Pipeline Math

The math of predictable revenue:

Revenue Goal ÷ Average Deal Size = Deals Needed
Deals Needed ÷ Win Rate = Opportunities Needed
Opportunities Needed ÷ SDR Conversion = Prospects Needed
Prospects Needed ÷ Response Rate = Emails Needed

Example:

  • Revenue goal: $1M ARR
  • Average deal: $20K ARR
  • Deals needed: 50
  • Win rate: 25%
  • Opportunities needed: 200
  • SDR conversion: 10% of responses become qualified
  • Response rate: 10% of emails get responses
  • Emails needed: 20,000
  • SDRs needed: ~2-3 (each sends 300-500 emails/month)

Capacity planning:

MetricBenchmarkYour Number
Emails per SDR per day50-100
Response rate9-15%
Qualified opportunities per SDR per month10-20
AE demo-to-close rate20-30%
Average sales cycle30-90 days

See: references/pipeline-math.md for revenue modeling templates.

Building the Sales Development Team

Hiring SDRs

Ideal SDR profile:

  • Coachable (most important trait)
  • Curious and intelligent
  • Strong writing skills
  • Resilient (handles rejection)
  • Organized and process-oriented
  • Not necessarily experienced

Where to hire:

  • Recent graduates
  • Career changers
  • Internal transfers
  • SDR-to-AE career path candidates

SDR career path:

SDR (6-18 months) → Senior SDR → AE or SDR Manager

SDR Ramp Time

PhaseTimelineExpectations
TrainingWeeks 1-2Product knowledge, tools, process
ShadowingWeeks 3-4Observe experienced SDRs, practice
RampingMonths 2-350% of full quota
Full quotaMonth 4+100% of quota

Full ramp: Expect 3-4 months to full productivity.

SDR Compensation

Structure: Base salary + variable (commission on qualified opportunities)

Typical split: 60/40 or 70/30 (base/variable)

Variable triggers:

  • Per qualified opportunity generated
  • Bonus for opportunities that close
  • Bonus for hitting/exceeding quota

See: references/team-building.md for hiring, onboarding, and compensation.

Metrics and Dashboards

Key metrics to track:

Leading Indicators (Predictive)

  • Emails sent per SDR per day
  • Response rate
  • Meetings booked per week
  • Qualified opportunities per month
  • Pipeline value generated

Lagging Indicators (Results)

  • Revenue closed
  • Win rate
  • Average deal size
  • Sales cycle length
  • Customer acquisition cost (CAC)

Efficiency Metrics

  • Cost per qualified opportunity
  • SDR:AE ratio (typically 2-3 SDRs per AE)
  • LTV:CAC ratio (target >3:1)
  • Payback period

Dashboard cadence:

  • Daily: Activity metrics (emails, calls, responses)
  • Weekly: Pipeline metrics (opportunities, meetings)
  • Monthly: Revenue metrics (closed, win rate, cycle)
  • Quarterly: Efficiency metrics (CAC, LTV, ratios)

See: references/metrics.md for dashboard templates.

Common Mistakes

MistakeWhy It FailsFix
AEs prospectingFeast-or-famine pipelineHire dedicated SDRs
Long, pitchy emailsLow response rateShort, referral-focused emails
No ICP definitionWasted effort on wrong accountsDefine ICP before hiring SDRs
Too few SDRsCan't generate enough pipelinePipeline math: work backward from revenue goal
No hand-off processLeads fall through cracksStandardize SDR→AE handoff
Measuring activity, not resultsBusy but not productiveTrack qualified opportunities, not just emails

Quick Diagnostic

Audit any B2B sales process:

QuestionIf NoAction
Are prospecting and closing separated?SDRs doing both = bottleneckCreate dedicated SDR role
Is there a defined outbound process?Ad-hoc prospectingImplement Cold Calling 2.0
Can you predict pipeline 3 months out?Revenue is unpredictableBuild pipeline math model
Do you know your lead type mix?Over-reliance on one sourceBalance seeds, nets, spears
Is SDR→AE handoff standardized?Leads lost in transitionCreate handoff checklist

Reference Files

Further Reading

This skill is based on Aaron Ross's Predictable Revenue methodology. For the complete system:

About the Author

Aaron Ross built the outbound sales process at Salesforce.com that added $100M+ in recurring revenue. His Cold Calling 2.0 methodology became the standard for B2B outbound prospecting and is used by thousands of companies worldwide. Predictable Revenue is known as "The Bible of Outbound Sales" and has influenced an entire generation of SaaS sales organizations. Ross is also co-founder of Predictable Revenue Inc., which helps companies build outbound sales machines.

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