---
name: sales-leader-alignment
version: 1.0.0
description: |
  AUTO-TRIGGER: Apply this skill when the user is navigating a difficult
  or adversarial relationship with a sales leader, VP of Sales, or CRO.
  Trigger phrases include: "sales doesn't trust marketing," "VP of Sales
  thinks our leads are bad," "sales leader is skeptical," "how do I get
  sales on my side," "sales is blaming marketing," "I can't get a seat
  at the pipeline review," "CRO doesn't value marketing," "sales thinks
  we're a cost center," or any situation where the marketing or RevOps
  leader needs to shift the dynamic with a sales leader who is resistant,
  skeptical, or actively undermining marketing's contribution.

  Also trigger when the user is starting a new role and wants to build
  the sales relationship proactively before friction develops.

  Do NOT trigger for general SLA design or MQL definition work. Use the
  sales-marketing-sla skill for those. This skill is specifically about
  the human relationship and organizational dynamic between the marketing
  or RevOps leader and the sales leader, not the systems and processes
  that govern lead handoff.
allowed-tools:
  - Read
  - Write
  - Edit
---

# Sales Leader Alignment: Shifting a Skeptical or Adversarial Relationship

This skill addresses the most common and most politically damaging
situation a demand gen or RevOps leader faces: a sales leader who
does not believe marketing is adding value, will not prioritize
marketing-sourced leads, and either actively undermines or passively
ignores the programs marketing is building.

This is not a process problem. It is a trust problem that predates
most of the operational issues it produces. The MQL definition is
contested because the relationship is contested. The pipeline
attribution is disputed because the relationship is disputed. Fixing
the systems without fixing the relationship produces better-documented
friction, not alignment.

This skill does not assume the sales leader is wrong. In many cases
the skepticism is earned. Marketing at many B2B SaaS companies has
historically generated high-volume, low-quality leads and measured
activity rather than pipeline. A sales leader who has been burned
by that is not being irrational. The path to alignment starts with
acknowledging that, not defending the prior regime.

---

## HOW TO SET UP THIS SKILL

Provide:

- What the sales leader has said or done that indicates the problem
- How long the dynamic has existed
- Whether you are new to the role or have been in it for some time
- What you have already tried
- Whether the sales leader reports to the same person you do, or
  is a peer versus a senior stakeholder
- The specific business context: stage of company, whether there
  is a shared revenue target, and whether leadership above both
  of you sees the problem

---

## Diagnosing the Type of Misalignment

The approach differs based on what is actually driving the friction.
Most sales-marketing misalignment falls into one of four types.

---

### Type 1: Earned skepticism from prior marketing performance

The sales leader has legitimate reasons to distrust marketing based
on historical experience. High lead volume with low conversion.
Programs that generated activity metrics but no pipeline. Marketing
that could not answer basic questions about pipeline contribution
with data.

The signal: the sales leader can cite specific examples. They
remember the webinar that generated 200 leads and zero opportunities.
They remember the content campaign that produced a surge in
newsletter subscribers and nothing else.

The approach: do not defend the prior record. Acknowledge it
directly. The most disarming thing a new marketing leader can say
to a skeptical sales leader is "I have seen the pipeline data and
I understand why you do not trust the MQL number right now. I would
not either. Here is what I am going to do differently and here is
how we will know if it is working."

What not to do: argue that the prior program was misattributed or
that sales did not follow up correctly. Both may be true. Neither
is the right first move.

---

### Type 2: Structural misalignment where sales and marketing have different targets

Marketing is measured on MQL volume. Sales is measured on closed
revenue. There is no shared metric that creates common ground. Each
function is rationally optimizing for its own number, which produces
behavior that looks like conflict.

The signal: both sides have data that supports their position.
Marketing has MQL volume. Sales has low conversion rates on
marketing leads. Neither is wrong. They are measuring different
things.

The approach: propose a shared pipeline metric. Marketing pipeline
contribution as a percentage of total pipeline, tracked jointly,
with a shared definition of what counts. This is not possible to
implement without executive support, but proposing it to the sales
leader as a concept often shifts the conversation from blame to
alignment. "What if we both owned the same pipeline number?" is
a more productive conversation than "our leads are better than
you think."

---

### Type 3: Political misalignment where the sales leader sees marketing as competition for resources or credit

The sales leader believes that when marketing claims pipeline
contribution, it reduces the credit that sales receives for
generating revenue. Attribution is a zero-sum political contest,
not a measurement exercise.

The signal: the disagreement about lead quality is unusually
sharp even when the data is relatively clear. The sales leader
pushes back on attribution methodology rather than the outcomes.

The approach: make attribution generous to sales in the short term.
Give sales credit wherever there is ambiguity. The goal is not to
maximize marketing's pipeline attribution number. The goal is to
build a working relationship. Once the relationship exists, the
attribution conversation can be had with less friction.

What not to do: win the attribution argument. A marketing leader
who is technically right about attribution and politically isolated
as a result has won nothing.

---

### Type 4: Personality misalignment or a sales leader who is categorically opposed to marketing functions

Some sales leaders have built their careers in outbound-dominated
organizations and genuinely believe that marketing is not required
to generate revenue. The skepticism is not about this marketing
team's performance. It is philosophical.

The signal: the skepticism predates any data about this marketing
program's performance. The sales leader makes statements like
"sales doesn't need marketing to hit its number" or dismisses
the function categorically.

The approach: this type requires executive alignment before
operational alignment is possible. If the CEO or CRO does not
believe marketing is a required function, the marketing leader
cannot fix that relationship by building better programs or
having better conversations with the sales leader. The first
move is to get clarity from leadership about what marketing is
expected to contribute and what the consequences are for the
sales leader who does not engage with the program. Without that
clarity, the relationship cannot improve through marketing's
effort alone.

---

## The Conversations That Shift the Dynamic

---

### The transparency conversation

Request a one-on-one with the sales leader. Not a sync. Not a
pipeline review. A direct conversation with the explicit agenda:
"I want to understand what marketing needs to do differently for
you to trust the leads we send."

Let the sales leader talk. Take notes. Do not defend. Do not
explain. Ask follow-up questions that go deeper: "When you say
the leads are not ready, what specifically is missing when a rep
gets on a first call?" and "What would a good marketing-sourced
lead look like compared to what you are seeing now?"

The goal of this conversation is not to agree on a solution. It
is to demonstrate that you are willing to hear the critique and
act on it. Most marketing leaders skip this conversation because
it is uncomfortable. The ones who have it first get the
relationship advantages that make every subsequent operational
conversation easier.

---

### The shared problem conversation

After the transparency conversation, come back with one specific
change based on what the sales leader said. Not a full program
redesign. One thing. Present it as "here is what I heard from you
and here is what I am changing because of it."

This establishes the pattern that the feedback loop works. The
sales leader says something, marketing responds to it. That pattern
is more valuable than any individual program change because it
creates a foundation for future feedback that does not require
escalation.

---

### The seat at the pipeline review

Most demand gen and RevOps leaders are not in the weekly pipeline
review. That absence is both a symptom and a cause of misalignment.
Marketing cannot diagnose why leads are not converting if it is
not in the room where deals are discussed.

Ask directly for a standing invitation to the pipeline review as
an observer. Frame it as: "I want to understand what is happening
with the deals marketing sourced so I can improve the quality of
what we send you." Do not frame it as accountability or oversight.
Frame it as learning.

Once in the room, do not use the time to defend marketing. Use it
to understand what sales is seeing and to flag patterns that might
indicate a qualification issue upstream. The credibility from being
useful in that room compounds quickly.

---

### The win together conversation

When a marketing-sourced deal closes, make it visible in a way
that gives sales the credit. "The BuyerForesight deal that closed
this week started as a LinkedIn ABM lead, but it closed because
of how [rep name] ran the discovery." Marketing sourced it. Sales
closed it. Both are true. Leading with the sales contribution
builds the relationship.

Most marketing leaders do the opposite: they claim the win for
marketing attribution. That is the right move for reporting. It
is the wrong move for relationship building.

---

## What Not to Do

These are the most common mistakes demand gen and RevOps leaders
make when trying to repair a sales relationship. Each one makes
the problem worse.

**Going over the sales leader's head first:** Escalating to the
CEO or CRO before having a direct conversation with the sales
leader almost always backfires. Even if leadership sides with
marketing, the sales leader knows what happened and the
relationship gets harder. Use escalation only after direct
conversation has failed and only to clarify shared expectations,
not to win an argument.

**Sending data to prove marketing is right:** A slide deck with
pipeline attribution data sent to a skeptical sales leader is
not alignment. It is a provocation. Data is useful after trust
exists. Before trust exists, data is received as argument.

**Making the MQL definition change without sales input:** Updating
the MQL definition to produce better leads without involving sales
in the definition conversation produces better-documented conflict.
Sales did not agree to the new definition and will not prioritize
leads under it any more than the old one.

**Committing to a number without understanding the context:**
Promising a pipeline contribution number to the sales leader or
CEO before you know what the current programs can actually produce
creates a credibility problem that takes months to recover from.
Commit to a process and a timeline before committing to a number.

---

## Deliver the Alignment Plan

Output in this format:

```
SALES LEADER ALIGNMENT PLAN
Misalignment type: [one of the four types, or a combination]
Urgency: [how quickly this needs to move based on the situation]
Built: [today's date]

SITUATION ASSESSMENT
[What is driving the friction based on what the user described. Be
direct. If the sales leader has legitimate reasons for skepticism,
say so. If the problem is structural, name the structure. If it is
political, name the politics.]

THE FIRST CONVERSATION
When: [as soon as possible / after X happens first]
Who should be in the room: [one on one or with others present]
How to open it: [specific opening, not generic advice]
What to listen for: [the specific signals that indicate which type
of misalignment is driving the dynamic]
What not to say: [the specific thing the user is probably tempted
to say that would make the situation worse]

THE FIRST CHANGE TO MAKE
[The single most visible, concrete thing to do in the next 30 days
that directly responds to what the sales leader has said or shown
you. Not a program redesign. One thing.]

THE SEAT TO GET
[Whether to seek access to the pipeline review, how to request it,
and what to do when in the room]

ESCALATION TRIGGER
[The specific condition under which going to the CEO or CRO becomes
the right move. Not a timeline. A specific observable event that
indicates direct conversation has failed.]

WHAT WILL NOT WORK IN THIS SITUATION
[Based on the type and context, the one or two things the user is
probably considering that will make the relationship worse, not
better.]
```

---

## Output Rules

- Do not assume the sales leader is wrong. Diagnose the type of
  misalignment before prescribing the approach.
- Be direct about situations where marketing has earned the
  skepticism. Telling a user their program is the problem is more
  useful than validating a grievance that is partly their own making.
- Escalation is a last resort. Do not recommend going to the CEO
  or CRO unless the direct conversation has clearly failed and the
  business impact justifies the political cost.
- The goal is a working relationship that produces shared pipeline.
  The goal is not for marketing to be vindicated. If those two
  objectives conflict, prioritize the relationship.
- No em dashes. Use commas or periods.
