Marketing runs its funnel. Sales runs its pipeline. On paper they connect; in practice there's a gap between them where leads cool, ownership blurs, and revenue quietly slips. A shared revenue pipeline closes that gap by giving both teams one view of how a deal moves from first touch to closed won. This guide covers why separate pipelines leak, how a shared one fixes it, and how to design and build it so both teams actually use it.
When each team runs its own pipeline, predictable problems follow.
Challenge 1: The Handoff Gap
Leads fall between marketing's last stage and sales' first, where nobody owns the contact. Warm interest goes cold waiting to be picked up.
Challenge 2: Two Versions of the Truth
Marketing reports leads, sales reports deals, and the numbers never reconcile. Leadership can't tell which view to trust, and every pipeline review turns into a data argument.
Challenge 3: Misaligned Definitions of Progress
Progress means engagement to one team and deal movement to the other, so a lead can look advanced in one system and stalled in the other. Forecasting becomes guesswork.
Challenge 4: No Shared Accountability
When a deal stalls, each team blames the other, because there's no joint owner for the full journey. Improvement stalls because nobody owns the whole.
Challenge 5: Disconnected Data
Marketing activity lives in one tool and deals in another, so you can't trace a closed deal back to what created it. The full revenue picture never comes together.
One pipeline, owned by both teams, removes the gap and the guesswork.
Solution 1: One Set of Stages
A single pipeline runs from first touch to closed won, with stages both teams recognize and agree on.
Solution 2: One Source of Data
Marketing activity and sales deals live in the same system, so everyone reports from the same numbers.
Solution 3: A Clear Handoff With No Gap
The point where marketing hands to sales is a defined stage transition, not a void – with an agreed trigger and owner.
Solution 4: Shared Metrics
Both teams measure the same conversion rates and pipeline health, so success means the same thing to everyone.
Solution 5: Joint Accountability
When the whole pipeline is shared, both teams own the outcome together, and improvement becomes a joint effort. This is the practical core of sales and marketing alignment.
Design the pipeline as one team, then make your systems reflect it.
Step 1: Map the Full Journey Together
Marketing and sales map every stage from first touch to closed deal in one sitting.
Step 2: Define Each Stage and Its Exit Criteria
Agree what has to be true for a deal to move from one stage to the next.
Step 3: Build the Pipeline in One System
Configure a single pipeline in your CRM so both teams work the same stages from the same data. A connected platform like HubSpot keeps marketing activity and sales deals in one place by design.
Step 4: Set the Handoff Trigger and Owner
Define exactly what moves a contact into sales' hands and who owns it from there.
Step 5: Agree Shared Metrics and an SLA
Decide the conversion rates you'll both watch and the response times you'll both commit to.
A shared B2B pipeline usually runs through these stages.
Stage 1: New Lead
A contact has entered the funnel through a marketing touch and awaits qualification.
Stage 2: Qualified
The lead meets the agreed fit and interest criteria and is ready for sales.
Stage 3: Engaged
Sales has made contact and confirmed there's a real conversation to have.
Stage 4: Opportunity
A confirmed need, budget, and decision path turn the conversation into a deal.
Stage 5: Closed Won (or Lost)
The deal resolves, and the outcome feeds back into how both teams target and qualify.
Scenario 1: One view, one number. Marketing runs a campaign that generates 40 qualified leads. Because both teams work from the same pipeline, sales sees each lead the moment it qualifies, with full context, and the shared dashboard shows exactly how many became opportunities and how much pipeline they produced. When leadership asks what the campaign returned, there's a single answer both teams stand behind.
Scenario 2: Catching a leak together. In the monthly review, the dashboard shows MQLs piling up while sales acceptance drops. Instead of blaming each other, both teams look at the same data, find that follow-up has slipped past the SLA window, and fix the routing rule. The next month, acceptance recovers. The shared pipeline turned a finger-pointing problem into a five-minute fix.
Both teams watch the same numbers so success means one thing:
Map the full journey with both teams in the room. Agree the exit criteria for every stage, and decide the shared metrics up front.
Build one pipeline in one system, not two that you reconcile later. Define the handoff trigger and owner clearly, and write a joint SLA.
Review the pipeline together rather than in separate meetings. Fix the stages where deals consistently leak, and keep both teams reporting from the same data.
Two pipelines create a gap, and revenue leaks into it. One shared pipeline – with agreed stages, shared data, and joint accountability – turns marketing and sales into a single revenue engine that leadership can actually forecast. Design it together first, build it into one system, and review it as one team. That's how the handoff stops being a cliff and becomes a connected path.
We build one pipeline both teams trust, which starts with one shared goal and one set of data:
That coordinated, single-goal approach is how we delivered 1,200+ high-quality applications for Beyond Codes, a B2B sales-intelligence firm, by aligning every part of the campaign to one clear outcome. See the Beyond Codes case study.