60+ Sales Metrics to Track: Role-by-Role Guide to Activity & Performance

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Sales metrics are your early indicators, your coaching roadmap, and your proof of sales training ROI.

They show you what’s working, where your team needs help, and whether your sales training investment is actually paying off.

But not all metrics tell the full story.

Activity is easy to measure and quota attainment is easy to celebrate. But by themselves, those numbers don’t tell you if reps are building skills, progressing deals, or gaining the confidence to hold real sales conversations.

That’s why we’re breaking down the top sales metrics to track by role.

Because every sales position contributes to pipeline and revenue in different ways, and tracking the right metrics helps you spot success earlier, coach more effectively, and tie enablement wins to revenue.

Here are the roles we’ll cover:

Let’s take the guesswork out of performance and start measuring what matters.

BDR/SDR Metrics

Confidence shows up in activity. Skill shows up in conversion. That’s why the best BDR metrics don’t just tell you how many calls they made, but what actually happened after they hit “dial.” You won’t measure all of these, but pick 2-3 that are easily reported in your world. Focus on quantity and quality.

Here’s what you can track:

  • New hire ramp – How long it takes to meet quota. Measure training effectiveness against past class baselines or use a control group. Four to six months to goal is average.
  • Dials – Baseline activity matters, especially with newer reps. Just don’t stop here. Outbound BDR/SDR should average 50-100 dials a day.
  • Dial-to-connect rate – Are they reaching humans? If not, it’s probably a data issue. Look for a 3-10% connect rate.
  • Average talk time – Measure by call or daily total by rep. Good top of funnel calls are 2.5 – 10 minutes in length and focused reps should spend at least 2.5 hours/day on the phone. 
  • Connect-to-conversation rate – If a call lasts more than 2 minutes, that’s a human connection worth tracking. If you’re below 25%, reps need help with skills. 
  • Daily conversations An average number of quality conversations per day (over 2 minutes). Aim for 3-5 conversations/day.
  • Positive outcomes A less common stat that can add “small wins” like accounts qualified, referrals gained, or follow-up meetings scheduled – anything that’s not quite a meeting. Aim for 25% plus. 
  • Meetings booked – Conversion from connect to meeting booked. Cold calls convert 2-5% on average, top reps and situations closer to 33%. Always pair with the next metric.
  • Meeting show rate – AKA “hold rate.” Are these meetings actually happening? 50-60% is a good starting point, top performers come in around 90%.
  • Percentage of qualified meetings – AEs will help you define what “qualified” means here and they’re always pickier than the SDR team. If more than 50% are being accepted, you’re winning. 
  • Lead to opportunity conversion – What percent of meetings actually wind up in the pipeline. An average is 1-3% of leads being added to the sales pipeline.
  • Inbound calls – SDRs should be leaving messages, and good messages get returned. Great messages plus consistency will get up to 25% of calls returned.
  • Call quality scores – This is where skill execution lives. Use your coaching rubric to track growth.
  • Call engagement scores – A new AI feature from your conversational intelligence tool. No industry benchmarks yet, but like call quality scores, a smart add to your balanced scorecard.

These metrics help you go beyond the mindset of “more dials = better rep.” You’ll see who’s dialing scared, who’s winging it, and who’s actually applying the skills from training.

Skills That Move Metrics (and how to track them):

  • Call intros and brush-offs – A great opener gets the prospect talking within the first 10 seconds and keeps them after an initial brush-off (it’s like an objection, but not). If they’re engaged, your talk time and connect-to-conversation increase along with your positive outcomes, and meetings booked. Take SWIIFT℠ Introductions That Work and Overcoming the Brush-off.
  • Voicemails and prospecting planning – If callbacks and connects spike post-training, reps are implementing new and improved voicemail messages and email/social messaging. Take Messages That Get Returned and Planning for Prospecting
  • Deal qualification – When reps find the right people and pre-qualify leads by asking the right questions, the percentage of qualified meetings and meeting show rates spike immediately with lead-to-opportunity conversion following. Take Capture Contacts and Qualify and Categorize.
  • Discovery – When reps improve questioning and engagement techniques vs. script reading and survey-taking, customers engage, and results show up in connect-to-conversion rate, daily talk time, positive outcomes, and meetings booked. Take Question Like a Pro to improve sales call discovery.
  • Closing – SDRs lacking confidence struggle to have real conversations and ask for meetings. Reps improving in confidence and closing will show improvement in positive outcomes and meetings booked. Take Transitioning to Close to help close every call.
  • Call quality – Not sure what to track in the conversation itself? Step one is using a standard coaching form so you can track progress.

When BDR/SDR training is working, reps get more voicemails returned, keep prospects on the phone longer, and confidently set next steps. These are your first signs that sales training or coaching is making an impact.

READ: How to Keep Prospects on the Phone

Inside Sales Rep Metrics

Inside Sales Reps do it all: prospect, qualify, demo, and sometimes close. That’s why tracking ISR performance requires more than just activity. You need to know if they’re creating pipeline, overcoming early objections, and setting up seamless handoffs (or closes). 

Here’s what to track:

  • New hire ramp – how long it takes to meet quota. Measure training effectiveness against past class baselines or use a control group. For ISRs six months is pretty average.
  • Activity rate – Like SDRs, ISRs need a healthy outbound routine. Look for fewer outbounds than SDRs as ISRs balance demos, longer conversations, and orders, but insist on at least 10 outbound calls and 3-5x total activities including email/social per day. 
  • Initial call/lead conversion – Good initial calls convert into leads and follow up meetings. In addition to longer calls and talk time, top reps will convert above 30% of initial calls to a discovery call. Newbies and cold calls under 10%.
  • Opportunities conversion – The conversion from discovery call into actual pipeline ranges from 10-30% on average. 
  • Demo conversion rate – Wherever “show and tell” falls in your cycle, watch what percent of opportunities progress past this stage. Benchmarks vary from 20-60%. Use your team’s history.
  • Win rate – What percent of total opportunities in pipe ultimately close? Standards vary by industry and tenure from 15 to 50%.
  • Follow-up attempts – Persistence matters, especially in a full-cycle role. Leads not getting at least five attempts are wasting money. Well-qualified leads should show 10+ attempts.
  • Average sales cycle length – Are those opportunities moving forward? Or stalling out? Dividing the total number of days it took to close all the deals by the number of deals gives you baseline velocity.
  • Pipeline generated – What is the average dollar amount added to pipeline per rep per period?
  • Revenue/Profit – Actual revenue or margin closed. Use historical data for baselines and watch out for cyclicality. 
  • Average deal size – ACV/AOS depending on industry (average contract value/average order size). 
  • Quota attainment – Percent of goal achieved.
  • Number of deals – Watch for efficiency and hustle by not just measuring dollars closed.
  • Call/Demo quality scores – Customer engagement and rep skills are even more critical as deals progress. Measure standard discovery, communication, objection handling, demo, and closing skills. Keep coaching forms consistent between reps and teams.

*SaaS companies will track a few additional standard metrics like Customer Acquisition Cost, Lifetime Customer Value, MRR, and Customer Churn.

These metrics show you how effectively ISRs are turning conversations into qualified opportunities and moving deals through the pipeline. They help pinpoint where in the sales process training can create the biggest lift.

Skills to watch (and how to track them):

  • Discovery and qualification – Reps who listen and adapt during discovery ask better follow-ups and surface real business pain. You’ll hear it in call recordings, and you’ll see the impact in higher opportunity conversion, shorter sales cycles, and higher pipeline revenue generated. Go deeper than SDR discovery with SWIIFT℠ Discovery Dialogue
  • Customer engagement – Great ISRs can lead a conversation and follow the customers’ lead – all while driving deals forward. That means next-level rapport, listening, and acting like a consultant. Mid-funnel engagement pays off in opportunity conversion, average deal size, and overall win rate. Focus on skills found in, My Role as a Consultative Seller.
  • Demo/presentation – ISRs that give the same demo multiple times a day likely have low conversion rates. Great interactive presentations will pay off in call quality, demo conversion, average sales cycle, and pipeline generated. Take Demos That Don’t Suck to see lift here. 
  • Proving value – If you’re getting to the close but aren’t seeing conversion, we aren’t building enough value during the sales cycle. Reps who do this well have higher win rates, larger number of deals and faster sales cycles. Take Proposing with Value to help. 
  • Objection handling – Seasoned ISRs hear it all, from “This isn’t a priority right now” to dead silence. Tops performers will have higher follow up numbers, win rates, and quota attainment. Take Overcoming Objections and Selling With Stories to sharpen skills.

When ISR training is working, you’ll hear better discovery calls, improved demos, stronger objection handling, and confident next steps. And you’ll see it in stage-by-stage conversions in your pipeline. 

READ: Call Bridging 101: Paving the Way for a Follow-up Sales Call

Account Executive Metrics

AEs get judged by the number, but that doesn’t tell the full story. You can close a big deal and still be losing pipeline behind the scenes. That’s why it’s critical to track not just what they’re closing, but how they’re progressing deals, and where they’re getting stuck.

Here’s what to track:

  • Opportunity-to-close rate – A high rate means reps are moving qualified deals across the finish line; a low rate can reveal gaps in qualification or closing skills.
  • Stage conversion rates – Show where deals are moving forward and where they’re getting stuck, helping you target coaching where it’s needed most.
  • Days in deal stages – Longer times in a stage can point to stalled opportunities, poor follow-up, or hidden objections.
  • Win rate – Indicates overall effectiveness at closing deals compared to total opportunities worked.
  • Forecast accuracy – Builds trust in the pipeline by showing whether reps are correctly predicting which deals will close.
  • Deal size and margin – Reveal whether reps are consistently landing high-value business or leaning on discounts to close.
  • Pipeline coverage ratio – Highlights whether reps have enough in the pipeline to stay on track for quota.
  • New opportunities created – Tracks how much pipeline reps are sourcing themselves versus relying on handoffs.
  • Follow-up attempts per opportunity – Shows persistence in advancing deals and staying top of mind with prospects.
  • Average sales cycle length – Gives insight into deal velocity and whether reps are moving opportunities forward efficiently.
  • Call/demo quality scores – Reflects the strength of rep communication, objection handling, and ability to progress deals during live interactions.

These metrics give visibility into each stage of the sales cycle so you can see where deals are progressing smoothly and where they may need coaching or additional support to move forward.

Skills to watch (and how to track them):

  • Discovery and uncovering customer needs – Great AEs don’t ask generic questions. They dig until they uncover the real business pain. When this skill is sharp, you’ll hear deeper conversations in call recordings and see more accurate opp qualification, faster stage movement, and fewer stalls after demos. Take Question Like a Pro to learn advanced questioning techniques that turn scripts into real, value-driven conversations.
  • Demo/presentation – A strong demo isn’t about showing every feature, it’s about telling the right story. Great AEs tailor the conversation to the prospect’s needs, show the exact value they care about, and make it easy for them to see themselves using your solution. You’ll see this reflected in higher stage conversion rates, stronger call/demo quality scores, and more stakeholders engaged after the call. Take Demos That Don’t Suck to learn how to engage, adapt, and close more deals from your presentations.
  • Demonstrating customer value – It’s not about pitching, it’s about showing how your solution impacts their business. If reps are demonstrating value well, you’ll see less discounting, stronger deal size, and customers pulling in stakeholders instead of ghosting you. Take What Customers Care About to map buyer motivators to your solution and propose in a way that resonates.
  • Driving deal momentum – If deals are sitting in the pipeline, it’s not because they’re bad deals, it’s because they’re not being worked. AEs who drive momentum confirm mutual next steps, secure time on the calendar, and keep the deal moving. You’ll see this in shorter days in stage, cleaner notes in the CRM, and fewer “stuck” opportunities with no recent activity. Take Getting Deals Moving to keep deals advancing and commitments in place.
  • Handling objections – Objections at this stage often signal deeper unaddressed concerns. Reps who respond effectively keep deals alive and increase win rate. Take Overcoming Objections to apply a proven four-step process that addresses concerns and moves the conversation forward.
  • Consultative selling – AEs who operate like business advisors uncover more opportunities and face less pricing pressure. Look for this in higher-quality CRM notes, increased stakeholder engagement, and higher ASP (average selling price). Take My Role as a Consultative Seller to sharpen your business advisory approach and build trust faster.
  • Proposing with value – When done right, proposals clearly connect your solution to the customer’s goals. Look for higher proposal acceptance, fewer stalls, and improved close rates. Take Proposing with Value to create compelling proposals that drive decisions.
  • Closing confidently – Reps with strong close skills don’t beg for business, they ask with clarity and confidence. You’ll hear it in recorded calls and see it reflected in win rate, number of deals, and reduced discounting. Take Closing Confidently to find your go-to close statements and build muscle memory for asking.

When account executive training is working, you’ll see cleaner pipeline stages, stronger discovery, and tighter forecasting. It’s less “I think it’s coming in” and more “Here’s where we are, here’s what’s next.”

WATCH: How to Fix the Top 5 Mistakes Made During Sales Demos

Account Manager/Customer Success Manager Metrics

Account Managers and Customer Success Managers are the face of your brand after the deal closes. But renewals and growth don’t come from check-in emails and good vibes. These reps need to earn trust, uncover new opportunities, and consistently demonstrate value. That’s how you keep customers, and grow them.

Here’s what to track:

  • CSAT (customer satisfaction score) – Tracks how happy customers are with your product or service. However you measure it, monitor changes over time by rep to spot trends and coaching opportunities.
  • NPS (net promoter score) – Measures customer loyalty and likelihood to refer you to others. A higher score can indicate strong relationships and a healthy base of brand advocates.
  • CLTV (customer lifetime value) – Shows the total revenue a customer is expected to bring over the course of the relationship. Helps you prioritize and protect high-value accounts.
  • Customer retention rate – Indicates what percentage of customers stay with you over a given period. High retention signals strong account management; declining retention may point to service gaps.
  • Churn – Tracks the percentage of customers leaving. Monitor closely to flag at-risk accounts early and take action to prevent turnover.
  • Renewal rate – The ultimate retention metric. Shows how often contracts are successfully renewed and can highlight patterns by rep or segment.
  • Expansion revenue – Measures revenue growth within existing accounts. A rise here means reps are finding and closing new opportunities in their current book.
  • MRR (monthly recurring revenue) growth – Tracks the increase in monthly recurring revenue from existing customers, indicating steady, predictable account growth.
  • Average purchase value – Look at the average transaction size. Growth here often signals effective upselling and cross-selling strategies.
  • New SKUs – Measures the number of purchases in new product or service categories, showing whether accounts are broadening their adoption.
  • Active buyers – Counts the number of individual buyers within an account making purchases. Growth suggests successful expansion to new departments, teams, or locations.
  • Customer health score – Combines product usage, engagement, and satisfaction into a single view to identify accounts at risk and those ready for expansion.
  • CES (customer effort score) – Tracks how easy it is for customers to get what they need from your team. Lower effort correlates with stronger loyalty.
  • Activity-to-engagement ratio – Compares how much time you spend with customers versus the quality or impact of those interactions. Reminds reps that more meetings don’t automatically mean more value.
  • Time to renewal/expansion opportunity – Measures how long it takes to uncover new value and growth potential in an account, helping you assess how proactive your AMs/CSMs are.

These metrics provide a clear picture of account health and growth potential, helping you spot risks early and identify where strategic conversations can open new opportunities.

Skills to watch (and how to track them):

  • Gaining referrals – Loyal customers don’t just renew, they advocate. If reps are asking the right way (and at the right time), you’ll see an uptick in warm intros and referral opportunities logged in the CRM. Take Gaining Referrals to build confidence and a proven process for turning satisfied customers into your best lead source.
  • Uncovering new opportunities – Great AMs don’t wait for customers to raise their hand. They ask smart questions, connect dots, and bring proactive solutions to the table. Track this by monitoring qualified expansion opportunities created and account mapping activity. Take Uncovering Sales Opportunities to uncover needs and position solutions that drive account growth
  • Increasing wallet share – If reps are building trust and delivering value, you’ll see increases in upsell, cross-sell, and product adoption across existing accounts. Take Growing Account Revenue to create targeted growth plans and confidently expand within your book of business.
  • Customer engagement – Great AMs create value in every interaction, not just touch base calls. Measure follow-up rates, meeting conversion, and customer survey comments. Take Engaging Your Customers to build excitement and keep customers invested in the relationship.
  • Consultative selling – Top AMs bring insights, not just checklists. Listen for strategic questions in call recordings and look for greater opportunity conversion and deal size. Take My Role as a Consultative Seller to elevate customer conversations and earn trusted advisor status.
  • Business acumen – AMs who understand the customer’s industry, org structure, and goals hold better conversations. You’ll see longer calls, better engagement, and more strategic expansion plays. Take Business Acumen to speak the language of executives and lead more impactful discussions.

When account manager training is working, you’ll see AMs running stronger account reviews, finding new revenue inside existing customers, and proactively addressing risks before they become churn. They’re not just retaining customers, they’re growing wallet share, keeping renewal pipelines clean, and avoiding last-minute surprises.

READ: How to Ask Existing Customers for a Sales Referral

Sales Manager Metrics

Good managers build great reps. That’s why your manager scorecard should go beyond team quota and focus on how well they coach, develop, and retain talent. The best metrics show whether their reps are getting better, faster, and sticking around. You don’t need all of these, but pick a few that help you measure both leadership impact and team performance.

  • Ramp time – How long it takes new hires to hit quota; use past averages or compare trained vs. untrained cohorts to track manager impact.
  • Percentage of team to goal – The percentage of reps consistently hitting their number; a sign of strong leadership and accountability.
  • Promotion rate – Tracks how many reps are promoted from the manager’s team; high rates show strong development and bench-building.
  • Retention and engagement – Use surveys or attrition data to gauge whether reps are staying and thriving under their manager.
  • Forecast accuracy – Compares manager forecasts to actual revenue; accuracy indicates strong deal coaching and pipeline visibility.
  • Team skill improvement – Use training assessments, call scores, or certifications to track rep skill growth over time.
  • Consistency of performance – Measures if the team hits quota quarter after quarter vs. riding the rollercoaster; stability = good leadership.

These metrics measure a manager’s impact on team development, consistency, and overall performance, giving you insight into both leadership effectiveness and team health.

Skills to watch (and how to track them):

  • Coaching – A strong coaching culture improves rep performance and morale. You’ll see the impact in faster ramp time, higher call quality, and consistent team skill improvement. Take Call Coaching 101 to build a positive, interactive coaching style that leaves reps confident and ready to apply new skills.
  • Time management – Burned out or reactive managers cancel 1:1s, skip coaching, and lose focus. Look for low coaching frequency, weak consistency of performance, and manager survey scores to identify this early. Take Own Your Day to prioritize what’s important over what’s urgent and create space for high-value management activities.
  • Goal setting – Managers who translate team targets into clear daily expectations drive better accountability and percent of team to goal. You’ll also see more consistent performance over time. Take Driving Performance with Goals to break big goals into actionable milestones and behaviors that stick.
  • Having tough conversations – Strong leaders don’t let poor performance slide. This skill shows up in better team retention, improved engagement, and shorter time-to-improvement for struggling reps. Take Having Difficult Conversations to gain a framework and confidence for handling the hard talks effectively.
  • Developing talent – Growth-minded managers build the bench. High promotion rates, better rep retention, and higher engagement scores are clear signs this skill is in play. Take Developing Your Team to learn practical ways to inspire and grow your people between training events.
  • Strategic deal planning – Managers who support reps with territory, lead, and deal strategies improve forecast accuracy and drive stronger quota attainment and rep confidence. Take Sales Strategy Meetings to guide reps through targeted, high-impact planning sessions that move deals forward.
  • Hiring & onboarding – Smart hiring and strong onboarding reduce early attrition and shorten ramp time. Track first-90-day performance and how often their hires stick. Take Hire Like a Rockstar to build a best-practice interview and selection process tailored to your team.
  • Meeting effectiveness – Organized managers who run purposeful meetings drive stronger consistency of performance and better engagement. Check for cadence completion and team survey feedback. Take Essential Manager Meetings to create a proactive meeting cadence that keeps your team on track and engaged.

When sales manager training is working, you’ll see faster ramp times, stronger forecast accuracy, and more reps hitting quota consistently. Team skills improve quarter over quarter, retention goes up, and promotions happen more often. Great managers coach with purpose, run effective meetings, and keep their teams performing without the burnout rollercoaster.

READ: Build Your Sales Manager Cadence (& Save Time and Stress)

Tracking the right sales metrics isn’t just about managing performance, it’s how you prove what’s working, where to coach, and when your sales training is actually paying off. Whether you’re investing in new training programs or reinforcing skills with your current team, these metrics are your clearest window into what’s driving real behavior change and revenue impact. Because when you can connect skill development to pipeline movement, you’re not just improving performance, you’re proving sales training ROI.

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