Sales processes typically map to specific types of records that are often used with working with sales automation software. It is important to understand key terminology used in sales and with sales process automation software.
The list below provides definitions for commonly used sales terms and selling components:
Term |
Definition |
Account |
An account
represents a business or organization. Sometimes this organization is a
customer or a vendor. In some organizations, it might be a different
grouping, such as a family. Typically, an account will have related contact
records. |
Activities |
An activity
represents supporting records and customer interactions. By default, the
system will have activities such as email, appointment, and phone call
already configured. Other custom activities meet extra needs of the business. |
Contact |
A contact represents
a single individual. A contact will often have many related records such as
an account and activities. |
Customer |
A customer can be
either an account or a contact. Typically speaking, in a business-to-business
scenario, this is an account. In a business to consumer scenario, this is a
contact. |
Lead |
A lead represents
someone with an interest in what you are selling. A lead might be an existing
client, or someone that you have never done business with before. |
Opportunity |
Like a lead, an
opportunity is a potential sales transaction. Typically, an opportunity is a
more viable prospect than a lead, and it will contain more information and be
tracked for a longer period of time. |
Product Catalog |
A collection of
records that interact with opportunities, quotes, orders, and invoices to
facilitate management of products, price lists, discounts, and product
families for sales transactions. |
Quote |
A formal offer
for products or services, proposed at specific prices and related payment
terms to a customer. |
Order |
A confirmed
request for delivery of goods and services based on specified terms, or a
quote that has been accepted by a customer. |
Invoice |
An order or
record of a sale including details about products or services purchased that
has been billed to the customer. |
Sales Pipeline |
A sales pipeline
is a snapshot of where prospects are in the sales process. A typical pipeline would show
how many deals salespeople are expected to close in a given week, month, or
year, and how close a rep is to reaching
their sales quota. |
Competitors |
Competitors are
organizations that you are competing with to win deals. |
The image below shows an example what a sales lifecycle might look like from beginning to end:
In the image above, we can see a potential customer has contacted our organization expressing an interest in our products and services. They are captured and entered as a lead.
Qualify: An account executive reaches out to the lead to gather more information about them and determine if a relationship would be mutually beneficial.
If it is determined that it is not a good fit, the lead is disqualified and the sales cycle ends.
If it is determined that everyone is a good fit, the lead is qualified and converted to an opportunity.
Develop: The opportunity record is used to develop the details of the deal. Details such as the products and services they are interested in, estimated revenue, and time-lines are added to the opportunity.
Propose: Once the deal is ready, a quote is added to the opportunity that represents the formal proposal to the customer.
Close: When the customer agrees to the quote, an order is generated. The quote and opportunity associated with the order are closed.
Fulfill: After the order is fulfilled, an invoice is generated to bill the customer.
To help manage the sales lifecycle, organizations often use salesforce automation software. Modern sales automation software not only helps guide and automate the selling process, but they provide tools to enhance the digital selling experience and build long lasting relationships with customers.
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