Calculate your sales velocity to measure how quickly your team generates revenue by combining opportunities, deal size, win rate, and cycle length.
The Sales Velocity Calculator measures how fast your sales team generates revenue by combining four key pipeline metrics: number of opportunities, average deal size, win rate, and sales cycle length. This unified metric reveals daily revenue throughput and helps identify which lever will have the greatest impact on accelerating growth.
Sales velocity is expressed as revenue generated per day (or per other time unit), giving leadership a single number that encapsulates the entire sales engine's performance. Unlike individual metrics that can be misleading in isolation, velocity captures the interplay between volume, value, efficiency, and speed. A team can have a high win rate but low velocity if they're working too few deals. They can have many opportunities but low velocity if deal sizes are small and cycles are long.
By decomposing velocity into its four components, you can immediately identify the most impactful improvement area. Increasing any numerator factor (opportunities, deal size, or win rate) or decreasing the denominator (cycle length) improves velocity. This calculator shows you the exact impact of changing each lever so you can prioritize resources effectively.
Sales velocity provides the only holistic view of your revenue engine. Individual metrics like win rate or average deal size tell part of the story, but velocity combines them into a single actionable number. It enables apples-to-apples comparison between teams, reps, and time periods, and directly supports capacity planning. If you know your velocity is $5,000/day per rep and you need $50M annually, you can calculate you need approximately 27 reps.
Sales Velocity = (Opportunities × Average Deal Size × Win Rate) ÷ Sales Cycle Length Result is expressed in dollars per day (or chosen time unit). Monthly Revenue = Velocity × 30 Quarterly Revenue = Velocity × 90
Result: $13,889/day sales velocity
With 200 opportunities, $25,000 average deal, 25% win rate, and 90-day cycle: ($200 × $25,000 × 0.25) ÷ 90 = $13,889 per day. That projects to $416,667/month and $1,250,000/quarter. If the win rate improved to 30%, velocity would jump to $16,667/day — a 20% increase.
Sales velocity combines the four most important pipeline metrics into a single actionable number. The formula — (Opportunities × Average Deal Size × Win Rate) / Cycle Length — captures volume, value, effectiveness, and speed simultaneously. This makes it the most comprehensive single metric for evaluating a sales engine's health and trajectory.
The four-lever framework makes improvement strategies tangible. Want more velocity? You can increase opportunities (generate more pipeline), increase deal size (sell bigger deals or expand scope), increase win rate (close more of what you work), or decrease cycle length (close faster). Each lever has different costs and timelines. Generating more pipeline requires marketing investment. Improving win rate requires training and enablement. Reducing cycle length requires process optimization. The right choice depends on where your biggest gap is.
Velocity-based forecasting projects revenue by multiplying daily velocity by the number of selling days in the forecast period. This approach is more dynamic than static pipeline forecasting because it accounts for the ongoing generation and closure of deals. It's particularly useful for high-velocity sales motions where pipeline turns over quickly.
Forward-thinking organizations use velocity as a input to compensation design. Reps with high velocity are generally more valuable than reps who close large deals slowly, because velocity compounds. Compensation plans that reward all four velocity components — not just closing — create better-aligned incentives for sustainable growth.
There's no universal benchmark because velocity depends on deal size, industry, and selling model. The value of this metric is in tracking your own trend and comparing across your team segments. Improving velocity quarter-over-quarter is the goal.
It depends on your current bottleneck. Cycle length is in the denominator, so reducing it has a compounding effect. However, if your pipeline has few opportunities, increasing deal volume may be the fastest path. Run the sensitivity analysis for each lever to determine your best option.
Revenue is a backward-looking result. Velocity is a forward-looking rate — how fast you're generating revenue right now. Velocity can increase even if revenue is flat if you're building a healthier, faster pipeline. It's a leading indicator of future revenue trajectory.
Both. Team velocity gives a macro view for capacity planning and forecasting. Per-rep velocity identifies coaching opportunities and sets performance benchmarks. The best-performing rep's velocity indicates what's achievable with the right process and skills.
Calculate monthly using trailing data (last 3–6 months for the inputs). Update quarterly for strategic planning. Avoid weekly calculations as the inputs (especially win rate and cycle length) need enough data points to be statistically meaningful.
Yes. Compare velocity across territories to identify which regions or segments are generating revenue most efficiently. Low-velocity territories may need more pipeline investment, better rep assignment, or may signal a market fit problem.
Higher velocity means faster revenue generation and therefore faster CAC payback. If your sales velocity doubles, each new customer's revenue is recovered in half the time (assuming consistent margins). This connects sales efficiency to financial sustainability.
Marketing directly influences the "Opportunities" lever and indirectly affects deal size (through targeting the right segment) and cycle length (through nurturing and education). Aligning marketing efforts to velocity levers creates shared accountability for revenue growth.