How Does TPG Build Sales Buy-In for Scoring Models?
TPG builds sales buy-in for scoring models by making scoring useful, explainable, and accountable—not theoretical. We align scoring to the outcomes sales cares about (e.g., meetings held and pipeline created), prove lift with a pilot, and operationalize the model through routing, SLAs, and coaching so reps feel the benefits in their daily workflow.
Sales teams reject scoring when it feels like a black box or creates more work than it saves. Buy-in happens when reps consistently see that “higher score” means better conversations, managers can coach to a shared definition of priority, and RevOps can tune the system without breaking trust. TPG’s approach balances field credibility with operational rigor.
The Buy-In Levers That Make Scoring Stick
A Practical Playbook to Earn Sales Trust in Scoring
Use this sequence to move from “RevOps built it” to “Sales depends on it.”
Align → Design → Prove → Deploy → Coach → Tune
- Align on outcomes and ownership: Define the north-star outcome (e.g., meetings held), name a sales sponsor, and document what “good” looks like for each segment (SMB, mid-market, enterprise).
- Design the model with sales-language inputs: Choose signals reps understand: ICP fit, recent intent, conversion events, and time-based recency. Separate fit and intent where possible so the score tells a story.
- Prove lift with a pilot: Pilot scoring with one team or region, compare against a control group, and publish results: conversion rate, contact rate, meetings, and speed-to-first-touch.
- Deploy into daily workflow: Add score bands to list views, queues, and assignment rules. Ensure “Hot” leads route fast, and ensure reps don’t need extra clicks to understand the “why.”
- Coach with score-based talk tracks: Equip managers with 2–3 coaching prompts per band (e.g., “Hot intent, low fit” vs. “High fit, warming intent”) so reps build consistent messaging patterns.
- Tune with change control: Review false positives/negatives monthly, update weights/thresholds deliberately, and communicate changes like product releases to preserve trust and adoption.
Sales Buy-In Maturity Matrix for Scoring Models
| Dimension | Stage 1 — Low Trust | Stage 2 — Emerging Adoption | Stage 3 — High Buy-In |
|---|---|---|---|
| Credibility | Reps ignore scores; “hot” feels random. | Some reps follow scores; doubts remain. | Scores reliably correlate with better conversations and pipeline. |
| Explainability | Score is a number with no story. | Some drivers are visible; inconsistent. | Top drivers + recency + fit/intent context are clear on the record. |
| Process Integration | Scoring exists only in reports. | Partial routing/queues; inconsistent execution. | Routing, SLAs, sequences, and coaching are aligned to score bands. |
| Enablement | No training; reps invent their own interpretation. | Initial training; limited reinforcement. | Managers coach with score-based talk tracks and playbooks weekly. |
| Feedback & Iteration | No mechanism to improve false positives. | Ad hoc tuning without clear communication. | Monthly review + change control + transparent updates maintain trust. |
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do sales teams push back on scoring models?
Pushback usually comes from three issues: the score is hard to explain, it doesn’t match the rep’s lived experience, or it doesn’t change daily execution (routing, SLAs, and coaching). Buy-in improves when scoring becomes predictable and operational.
What’s the fastest way to build trust in scoring?
Run a short pilot with a control group, publish results, and show reps the “why” behind top scores. A transparent pilot creates credibility faster than debating weights in meetings.
Should scoring prioritize fit or intent?
Both matter, but they answer different questions. Fit means “right account,” and intent means “right time.” Separating them (or clearly surfacing both) improves SDR clarity and reduces misalignment.
How does TPG prevent scoring from becoming a black box?
We focus on explainability (visible drivers), score bands (clear actions), and change control (documented updates). The model stays trustworthy because the field can understand and validate it.
Turn Scoring into a System Sales Actually Uses
Build buy-in by connecting scoring to CRM execution: routing, SLAs, coaching, and measurable lift. When the score drives better conversations, adoption follows.
