Sales Velocity Calculator
Enter your number of opportunities, average deal value, win rate, and sales cycle length to instantly calculate Sales Velocity — how much revenue your pipeline generates per day. Also shows a sensitivity analysis for each of the four levers.
Sensitivity analysis example (20 opportunities, $50,000 average deal value, 20% win rate, 30-day sales cycle)
The table below shows how Sales Velocity (per day) changes when each of the four levers is moved by ±10% from the baseline above. Enter your own numbers into the calculator to see your actual figures.
| Lever | -10% change | Baseline | +10% change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Opportunities (20 → 18 / 22) | $6,000 | $6,667 | $7,333 |
| Average deal value ($50,000 → $45,000 / $55,000) | $6,000 | $6,667 | $7,333 |
| Win rate (20% → 18% / 22%) | $6,000 | $6,667 | $7,333 |
| Sales cycle length (30 days → 27 / 33 days) | $7,407 | $6,667 | $6,061 |
* The first three levers increase velocity as their value grows, but sales cycle length works the opposite way — velocity increases when the cycle gets shorter.
Tips
- Start with whichever lever your team can improve most easily. Use the sensitivity analysis to compare the impact and set priorities.
- Shortening the sales cycle by 10% has almost the same effect as improving the other three levers by 10% (in fact, a slightly larger effect). Reducing deal stagnation tends to be a high-ROI initiative.
- Win rate reflects the quality of your pipeline (how well-targeted your prospects are). Improving deal quality, not just adding more opportunities, also boosts velocity.
- Tracking Sales Velocity monthly or quarterly lets you visualize the trend in your entire sales organization's productivity over time.
Frequently asked questions
Side Note — Describing sales team productivity with a single number
When discussing sales team productivity, most teams tend to look at individual numbers in isolation — "deals closed this month," "total pipeline value," and so on. But those numbers alone do not reveal which factor is actually driving revenue: is it deal volume, deal size, win rate, or speed?
Sales Velocity combines these four factors — number of opportunities, average deal value, win rate, and sales cycle length — into a single formula, condensing them into one number: how much revenue the pipeline generates per day. RevOps (Revenue Operations) teams at SaaS companies adopt this metric as a quarterly productivity benchmark because it lets them compare very different initiatives — more marketing spend, higher deal sizes, win-rate training, or process efficiency — on the same yardstick.
While money.business.weighted_pipeline (the sum of each deal's expected value) shows a static snapshot of "how much is the pipeline worth right now," Sales Velocity adds a time dimension: "how fast can that value be turned into revenue?" Combining both lets you evaluate a sales organization from the size of the pipeline and the speed at which it converts into revenue.