Sales talks quotas, marketing talks leads, and finance talks margin. But without translation, it’s chaos with a scoreboard.
Chad C. Paris, Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing, has over 15 years of experience building revenue engines across organizations like Pattern Brands and AdditPrize. He believes sales success requires marketing, operations, finance, and customer service to move as one.
“Ever seen a football team where the quarterback ignores the coach, the linemen run their own plays, and the kicker shows up late?” says Paris. “That’s what sales looks like without cross-functional collaboration.”
Getting Everyone Speaking the Same Language
“My goal in any company is to create a shared dashboard, quarterly alignment sessions so all teams can see the same data, speak to the same goals, and feel ownership in the outcome,” Paris explains. “That transparency moves us from me to we.”
Most organizations operate with functional silos where each department optimizes for its own metrics. Sales chases quota regardless of whether marketing qualified leads properly or operations can fulfill promises. Marketing generates volume without understanding which leads actually close. Finance enforces margin requirements without visibility into competitive dynamics.
This creates misalignment where functional success doesn’t translate to business success.
Shared dashboards show how functional metrics connect to business outcomes. When sales sees how marketing’s lead quality affects conversion rates, they stop complaining about volume. When marketing sees which leads actually close, they optimize for quality. When finance sees how margin requirements affect win rates, they calibrate targets based on strategic value.
Involving Teams Early Rather Than After
Too often, sales brings in other teams once the deal is nearly done. That’s a mistake.
“From proposal to onboarding, bring marketing, ops, and service in at ground level,” Paris explains. “At AdditPrize, involving product and fulfillment teams early helped us close enterprise deals faster and with fewer surprises.”
Most sales processes treat other functions as support resources activated when needed. Sales develops relationships independently. Marketing gets pulled in to create materials. Operations gets notified when deals close. Service inherits customers without context about what was sold.
This late involvement creates problems. Marketing produces materials misaligned with how sales position value. Operations discovers commitments they can’t fulfill within promised timelines. Service inherits customers with expectations nobody documented.
Early involvement brings marketing, operations, and service into ground-level conversations. Marketing understands customer language shaping messaging. Operations identifies fulfillment constraints before promises get made. Service learns customer priorities informing onboarding strategy.
At AdditPrize, involving product and fulfillment teams early helped close enterprise deals faster because technical questions got answered immediately rather than through email chains. Fewer surprises meant smoother delivery because operations understood commitments before contracts were signed.
Measuring More Than Revenue
When only sales get credit, collaboration dies.
“We began tracking KPIs tied to joint effort: campaign engagement, delivery timelines, onboarding scores,” Paris explains. “Everyone had skin in the game. Customer satisfaction scores jumped 22% in six months. Not from more sales, but from better alignment.”
Most organizations measure sales through revenue and quota attainment. Marketing tracks leads generated. Operations monitors fulfillment metrics. Service watches satisfaction scores. Each function optimizes independently.
This creates competition rather than collaboration. Sales sacrifices lead quality for speed. Marketing generates volume over fit. Operations prioritizes efficiency over customer experience.
Tracking KPIs tied to joint effort changes behavior. Campaign engagement shows whether marketing and sales align on messaging. Delivery timelines reveal whether sales and operations coordinate on commitments, and onboarding scores indicate whether the entire handoff creates a positive customer experience.
When everyone measures shared outcomes, sales don’t close deals operations can’t fulfill. Marketing doesn’t generate misfit leads. Operations don’t optimize for efficiency at the expense of experience.
Building Culture Where Every Department Plays Quarterback
“Winning in sales isn’t a solo sport,” Paris concludes. “Stop siloing your success. Build a culture where every department plays quarterback. When your whole team wins, your customer always does too.”
Siloed teams chase their own numbers. Aligned teams chase the same win.
Connect with Chad C. Paris on LinkedIn for insights on leading cross-functional collaboration for sales wins.