A rep loses a deal, and you go looking for the recording. You find the moment: the buyer raised a specific objection about migration risk, and your rep, competent, well-meaning, improvised an answer that was almost right. The case study that would have nailed it existed. It was sitting in a folder no one opens, three versions out of date. That gap, between what the company knows and what the rep can say in the room, is the entire problem sales enablement exists to solve.

The quick version

  • Sales enablement is a cross-functional discipline that equips client-facing teams with the content, training, coaching and tools to have valuable conversations with buyers at every stage of the purchase, not a software category.
  • The independent evidence is real: CSO Insights found firms with a formal enablement charter hit 73.6% quota attainment versus a 57.7% study average, and Gartner finds buyers spend only 17% of their time with any supplier, so each conversation has to count.
  • Tooling (content platforms, sales-engagement, conversation intelligence, CRM) is the delivery mechanism, not the strategy. Reps ignore tools that cost them time and don't surface the right thing at the right moment.
  • The discipline lifts averages, but it is not a substitute for a real product, a clear segment, or a sound sales process, and badly governed tooling quietly makes things worse.

The idea in depth

The term gets used loosely, so it helps to start with how the analysts who named it define it. Forrester's foundational report Sales Enablement Defined (Scott Santucci and colleagues) frames it as a cross-functional discipline that bridges the gap between go-to-market strategy and what actually happens in a sales conversation. Forrester's later, widely-cited refinement is more concrete: enablement is "a strategic, ongoing process that equips client-facing employees with the ability to consistently and systematically have a valuable conversation with the right set of customer stakeholders at each stage of the customer's problem-solving life cycle." The phrase doing the work there is valuable conversation. Enablement is judged by what a rep can do in front of a buyer, not by how much content sits in a repository.

That matters because the buyer's behaviour has shifted under the seller's feet. Gartner's research on the B2B buying journey finds that when a buying group is working through a complex purchase, it spends only about 17% of its time meeting with potential suppliers, and because there are typically six to ten people in that group, any single rep's share of attention is a sliver of a sliver. The buyer does most of the work alone, online, comparing. So the move is: stop treating enablement as "more collateral" and start treating it as making the few minutes a rep gets disproportionately useful, the one answer, proof point or framing that moves the buyer's internal conversation forward when the rep isn't in the room.

Does any of this pay off, or is it a budget line that feels responsible? The most credible numbers come from CSO Insights' annual sales-enablement studies (the research arm of Miller Heiman Group, later part of Korn Ferry). Their Fifth Annual study found organisations with a formal enablement charter reported 73.6% quota attainment against a 57.7% study average, and that firms with an informal, ad-hoc approach actually landed below the average. The signal across years of their data is consistent: it is not the existence of an enablement team that moves the needle, it's whether enablement is run as a deliberate, measured discipline with a defined remit.

"A valuable conversation with the right set of customer stakeholders at each stage.", Forrester's definition of sales enablement

Which points to where you actually start: before you buy anything, write the charter. One page. Who enablement serves, what business metric it owns (ramp time, win rate, quota attainment), who it reports to, and how content and training requests get prioritised. CSO Insights' own finding is the argument for it, the formal-charter group is the group that beats the average. The companies that skip this step and lead with a tool purchase are buying the thing that, on the evidence, correlates with the below-average outcome.

Why the tooling is the easy part, and the trap

Here is the uncomfortable arithmetic enablement is meant to fix. Salesforce's State of Sales research has repeatedly found that reps spend less than a third of their week, around 28%, actually selling; the rest goes to admin, internal meetings, data entry and hunting for information. Tooling promises to claw that time back: a content platform so the right case study surfaces in two clicks, sales-engagement software so follow-ups don't get forgotten, conversation-intelligence tools that record and analyse calls so coaching is grounded in what was actually said rather than what the rep remembers.

The trap is assuming the tool delivers the outcome. A content library only saves time if content is findable, current and tagged to the buyer's situation, otherwise you have digitised the folder no one opens. The discipline that decides this is governance: who owns each asset, when it expires, and how usage is tracked so dead content gets retired. April Dunford's work on positioning is the underrated input here. In Obviously Awesome (2019) and Sales Pitch (2023) she argues that most sales material fails not because it's badly produced but because it never establishes what the product should be compared with and why it wins. The practical upshot: fixing the message comes before buying the system that distributes it. A polished platform that ships a muddled pitch faster just spreads the confusion at scale.

flowchart TD
  S("Go-to-market strategy & positioning") --> C("Charter: who, what metric, how prioritised")
  C --> K("Codify the winning conversation: content, plays, proof")
  K --> T("Tooling delivers it at the moment of need")
  T --> R("Rep has a valuable conversation")
  R --> M(["Measure: ramp, win rate, quota"])
  M -.feedback.-> K
					
Enablement runs strategy → charter → codified knowledge → tooling → conversation → measurement, with the result feeding back into what gets codified. Tooling is one link, not the chain. Leaders Loop

The honest limitation. Treat the headline statistics as directional, not proof that enablement caused the result. The CSO Insights and Forrester figures are practitioner research from firms that sell into this market, not independent peer-reviewed trials, and they are correlational: high-performing companies tend to have formal enablement and to do many other things well (better products, clearer segments, stronger managers), and isolating enablement's contribution is genuinely hard. The numbers are a reason to take the discipline seriously, not a guarantee it will rescue a struggling sales org. Enablement amplifies a sound go-to-market; it cannot manufacture one. And tooling has its own failure mode, every platform you add is another login and another data-entry burden. If adoption isn't designed in, you've added to the ~70% of time already spent not selling, not clawed it back.

A worked example

Take a 25-rep company selling a mid-market HR platform, treat it as a composite and every figure below as illustrative. New reps take roughly nine months to reach full productivity, win rates are drifting, and the VP of Sales is convinced the fix is a content platform with a slick mobile app. The instinct is to buy it, dump the existing decks in, and announce it at the next kickoff.

Run the enablement discipline instead. Start with the charter, not the cart: enablement owns one number to begin with, time-to-first-deal for new reps, and reports into Sales. Codify the winning conversation before tooling it: listening back to a dozen recent calls shows deals stalling on the same migration-risk objection the opening of this article described, and that the reps who win have a specific way of reframing it plus one customer proof point. That reframing and that proof become a documented, named "play," not a 40-slide deck. Then choose tooling to deliver it at the moment of need: the play is surfaced inside the rep's existing workflow, and conversation-intelligence flags calls where the objection came up so a manager can coach on the actual moment. Govern it: the play has an owner and a review date, and material no rep opens in 90 days is retired. The illustrative result isn't "we bought a tool" but "new reps reach their first deal faster because the one conversation that decides these deals is now teachable, deliverable and measured", and the platform earns its place by serving that, rather than being the plan.

flowchart LR
  subgraph Tool["Tool-first"]
    A("Buy a platform") --> B("Dump existing decks in")
    B --> C(["Reps ignore it; admin time up"])
  end
  subgraph Disc["Discipline-first"]
    D("Charter + one metric") --> E("Codify the winning play")
    E --> F("Tool surfaces it at the moment")
    F --> G(["Faster ramp; play is coachable"])
  end
					
Illustrative: buying the platform first digitises the clutter; codifying the winning conversation first gives the tool something worth delivering. Leaders Loop

Frequently asked questions

Isn't sales enablement just sales training with a new name?

Training is one component, but enablement is broader and more continuous. Training is usually an event, onboarding week, a kickoff session, whereas enablement is the ongoing system that keeps content current, coaches against real calls, and delivers the right material in the flow of work. A useful test: if your "enablement" is a one-off course and a folder of decks, you have training and a content library, not the discipline. Enablement is the connective tissue that ties the sales process to what reps can actually do at each stage.

Do we need a dedicated enablement person, or can sales ops do it?

Below a certain size, a sales leader or a sales-ops person wears the hat, and that's fine. The CSO Insights evidence isn't really about headcount, it's about formality: a defined remit, an owned metric, and a prioritisation method beat an ad-hoc "whoever has time makes the deck" approach, regardless of whether that's one named person or a team. The mistake is leaving it implicit. Write the charter even if the team is one person doing it two days a week.

How do we stop reps ignoring the tools we buy?

Design adoption in rather than mandating it after. Three things move the needle: the tool must save the rep time on net (not add a login and a data-entry chore), it must surface the right thing at the moment of need rather than expecting reps to go hunting, and the content inside it has to be governed so it stays trustworthy. Reps abandon any system the first time it serves them something stale or wrong. Tracking usage isn't surveillance here, it's how you find the dead content to retire and the gaps to fill.

What should we measure to know it's working?

Pick metrics tied to the conversation and the funnel, not vanity activity. Good leading and lagging indicators: ramp time (how fast new reps reach full productivity), win rate by stage, content usage in won-versus-lost deals, and ultimately quota attainment. Avoid measuring "pieces of content produced" or "logins", those reward motion, not outcomes. Start with one metric the charter owns and earn the right to more.

Where does enablement stop and the rest of go-to-market start?

Enablement makes a sound strategy executable; it doesn't set the strategy. The choice of go-to-market motion, the sales methodology, and the territory and quota design are upstream decisions. Enablement takes those as given and equips reps to execute them well. If the underlying motion or segment is wrong, better enablement just helps reps fail more efficiently, which is exactly why the charter starts by naming the strategy it serves.

Related in the Toolkit

Enablement only makes sense as the execution layer beneath the strategic choices: it codifies and delivers the sales methodology you've chosen, and it lives or dies on the real customer need the winning conversation is built around.

Where to go next