Every sales leader, entrepreneur, and business developer discusses pipeline strategy, but few discuss its gritty, real-life side.
What happens when you lose a major client, and the revenue you were forecasting disappears overnight?
This blog walks through a real-world situation from my business where that exact thing happened—and how having the right tools, mindset, and sales strategy helped me respond (not react). You'll walk away with tangible lessons in:
I wrapped up the financial year in February. At that point, I flushed my pipeline—starting fresh for 2025–2026 with just around 5 active deals/opportunities.
That same month, a long-time customer informed me that their internal direction had changed. Nothing went wrong—they just don’t need my service right now.
This one change removed $25K–$40K in expected revenue.
If I hadn’t been checking in regularly, I might’ve been caught off guard. But this is exactly why account management isn’t just about service—it's about strategy.
Every 3 to 6 months, I meet with my clients—not just to "check in" but to really understand:
Because I had visibility into this client's direction, I had already forecasted that this revenue might be removed from my core forecast and had been planning for alternatives.
Basically, I was hoping for the best but preparing for the worst.
Let’s talk numbers.
As of now, I’ve moved from 5 deals to 13 active opportunities. My current pipeline is valued at $337K, with and average proposal value of approximately $37K–$38K.
Trying to replace the lost revenue with another $40K client would be difficult, so I’m not chasing that big $40K deal right away.
Instead, I’m intentionally pursuing:
This kind of thinking only works if you understand your average deal size, sales cycle, and close rates—and if you keep prospecting.
Most people only start prospecting aggressively after a deal falls through. But in reality, prospecting should be a regular rhythm in your sales process.
I use:
Note: Cold outreach is not about sending 100 cold emails overnight; it’s about structuring your base like a living, breathing system that feeds itself. So I use a lot of segmentation and tools within HubSpot to help me research clients for news and triggers.
Let’s be clear—I’m not writing this to promote HubSpot. But without a tool like it, I wouldn’t have this level of visibility or control.
Here’s how I’m using HubSpot to manage all of the above:
HubSpot doesn’t replace the strategy—it makes the strategy executable
This experience reinforced some hard-earned truths:
Losing a client will always sting.
But if you’ve built your pipeline intentionally, maintained strong client relationships, and used the right tools to stay on top of your numbers, you won’t panic. You’ll pivot.
That’s the difference between a sales tactic and a sales strategy.