How your customer learns, and how they buy.

Get the motion wrong and you build the wrong company.

Sales motion design answers two questions that decide your entire cost structure: how does a customer discover you (outbound, inbound, referral) and how do they actually buy (sales-led, product-led, or partner-led). Pick the wrong motion for your ACV and buyer, and every hire, tool, and comp plan downstream is built on a broken foundation.

WHY THIS MATTERS TO A CEO

Your motion is a company-design decision, not a sales tactic

The motion you choose dictates who you hire, how you pay them, what you spend on tooling, and how long it takes to get paid. A PLG motion needs product and growth engineers; a sales-led motion needs AEs and SDRs; a partner-led motion needs channel managers. These are completely different companies with completely different cost structures.

Most founders never choose a motion, they inherit one by accident. It worked once at a smaller scale, so it stuck. Then ACV grows, the buying committee expands, and the inherited motion quietly stops fitting. CAC climbs, cycles stretch, and nobody can name the cause because the motion was never a deliberate decision in the first place. In one audit we found 52% of sales effort going to a segment that produced just 18% of revenue, while the segment with the highest retention got 13% of the attention. The team wasn't lazy. They were aimed at the wrong accounts. The fix isn't a prettier slide. It's an ICP built from data, validated against wins and losses, and wired into the systems your team works in every day.

WHERE IT SITS IN THE STRATEGY

Motion design is step two, and everything downstream depends on it

It comes right after you know who you sell to, and before you can sensibly design pricing, process, team, or comp. Skip it, and every later decision is a guess.

If you design pricing or hire reps before you've fixed the motion, you're committing budget to a structure you haven't decided on yet. Motion first - then everything it determines.

BEFORE

ICP

Who you sell to

YOU ARE HERE

Sales Motion Design

How they learn + how they buy

Pricing & Packaging

Pricing model follows the motion

Sales Process

Process maps to how they buy

Quota & Comp · Team

Team & comp depend on the motion

WHAT MOTION DESIGN ACTUALLY DEFINES

Two questions. Every motion is an answer to both

1. How does the customer learn about you?

The acquisition channel – how demand reaches you or how you reach it. Three families: outbound, inbound, and referral. Most companies run a mix; the question is which one carries the load and whether that fits your economics.

2. How does the customer buy – and from whom?

The buying motion – who closes the deal. Sales-led (a human closes), product-led (the product closes itself), or partner-led (someone else closes on your behalf). This decides your team, your tooling, and your unit economics.

QUESTION 1 - HOW THEY LEARN

Three acquisition channels

Each has a different cost curve, speed, and ceiling. The right mix depends on your ICP, ACV, and how your buyers actually research.

Outbound

Calls · social · email

You reach out first. Fast to start, fully controllable, scales with effort or automation. Best when your ICP is narrow and identifiable. Cost: rising as inboxes saturate – survives only with sharp targeting.

Inbound

SEO · PPC · SMM

Buyers find you. Slow to build, compounding over time, lower cost per lead at scale. Best when there’s existing search demand for your category. Cost: high upfront, low marginal once it works.

Referral

Word of mouth · partnerships

Customers and partners send you business. Highest trust, highest conversion, lowest cost – but hardest to control and scale. The channel most IT and SaaS teams underinvest in despite it being their best.

Channel economics – a typical pattern

What we repeatedly see in audits: outbound gets the most effort, referral produces the best economics and gets the least investment.

Illustrative benchmark

Share of effort vs share of pipeline

Outbound
55% effort
22% pipeline
Inbound
30% effort
33% pipeline
Referral
15% effort
45% pipeline ✓
Solid = share of effort
Faded = share of pipeline generated

QUESTION 2 - HOW THEY BUY

Three buying motions. Three different companies

This is the bigger decision. Who closes the deal determines your team, your tooling, your sales cycle, and your margins.

Sales-Led

A human closes. SDRs and AEs run discovery, demo, negotiation. Best for higher ACV, complex products, multi-stakeholder buying. Higher CAC, longer cycle – justified when deal size supports it.

Product-Led (PLG)

The product closes itself. Free trial or freemium, self-serve signup, expansion through usage. Best for low-friction, high-volume products. Low CAC, fast cycle – but needs product and growth investment, not reps.

Partner-Led

Someone else closes for you. Resellers, agencies, integration partners, referral partners. Indirect motion. Lower direct cost, extends reach – but you trade margin and control for leverage.

Motion economics at a glance

Directional comparison

DIMENSION SALES-LED PLG PARTNER-LED
Best ACV $25K++ < $5K Varies
Sales cycle Long Short Medium
CAC High Low Medium
You invest in AEs & SDRs Product & growth Channel mgrs
Margin / control High control High margin Lower both

WHY KNOWING YOUR MOTION MATTERS

The same deal costs wildly different amounts in different motions

This is the number that should keep a CEO up at night: running the wrong motion for your ACV can multiply your cost to acquire a customer by 3-5×. Here's the shape of it.

Cost to acquire one customer, by motion

High

Low

Mid

Sales-Led

PLG

Partner-Led

If your ACV is $3K and you’re running a sales-led motion, the CAC eats the deal. If your ACV is $80K and you’re relying on self-serve, you’re leaving money on the table and losing to competitors with real AEs.

What the wrong motion looks like in your numbers

CAC payback > 24 mo

Often a sales-led motion bolted onto a low-ACV product

Reps idle / underused

A self-serve product that didn’t need a sales team yet

High-ACV, low close rate

A complex deal being run through a self-serve funnel

Flat reach, good product

A partner motion you never built – leaving distribution on the table

WHAT WE BUILD

A motion designed on purpose, and the dashboard to run it

A great ICP only creates value when every function works from the same definition of a good account. That's when handoffs get clean and pipeline quality climbs.

Motion Diagnosis

We map your current acquisition channels and buying motion against your ACV, cycle, and buying committee to find exactly where they’re misaligned.

Motion Mix Design

Most companies need a blend – self-serve for small, sales-assisted for mid, partner for reach. We design the right combination and the thresholds between them.

Channel Allocation

How much effort and budget goes to outbound vs inbound vs referral – based on the economics, not on habit.

Motion Dashboard

CAC, cycle length, and conversion tracked by motion and channel – so you can see which one is actually working and shift spend with evidence.

Motion fit is the difference between scaling and burning

Two companies with the same product and the same ICP can have completely different outcomes purely from motion design. The one that matches motion to ACV - self-serve where it scales, human where the deal size justifies it, partners where reach matters - compounds. The one running an inherited, mismatched motion burns cash on the wrong team and wonders why CAC won't come down. Choosing the motion deliberately costs nothing but the discipline to decide.

WHY IT MATTERS

Not sure you're running the right motion?

Start with a Sales Audit. We'll map how your customers actually learn and buy, compare it to your ACV and economics, and show you where the motion is costing you money.

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