The B2B sales cycle is the sequence of stages a prospect moves through from first awareness to closed deal. Understanding the stages helps sales and marketing teams coordinate effectively, align messaging to where the prospect is in their journey, and know what information and proof points matter at each phase.
A typical B2B sales cycle includes: awareness, consideration, evaluation, negotiation, and close. But within each stage, there are smaller milestones that matter. Knowing what stage a prospect is in tells you what to do next.
The prospect recognizes they have a problem that needs solving.
In this stage, the prospect might not even know your solution exists. They just know something isn't working. Maybe their sales cycle is too long. Maybe they're losing deals to competitors. Maybe they're spending too much time on manual tasks. They've identified the problem but haven't started evaluating solutions yet.
**Prospect mindset:** "We have a problem. We should do something about it."
**What they need:** Education about the problem space. Content that validates their thinking. Proof that the problem is real and worth solving. They don't need product information yet.
**What marketing should do:**
**What sales should do:**
**Red flags:** If a prospect in awareness stage gets a sales call about pricing and features, they'll dismiss it. Not ready.
The prospect has decided they want to solve the problem and is starting to explore approaches.
Maybe they've decided they need better intent data. Maybe they've decided they need account-based marketing. But they haven't narrowed down to specific vendors yet. They're exploring different approaches, different vendors, different implementations.
**Prospect mindset:** "We have a problem. We want to solve it. Let's understand what approaches exist."
**What they need:** Comparisons of approaches. What's the difference between first-party and third-party intent data? What's the difference between 1-to-1 ABM and 1-to-many ABM? Educational content that helps them think about how to solve the problem.
**What marketing should do:**
**What sales should do:**
The prospect has narrowed down their approach and is evaluating specific vendors.
They've decided they want third-party intent data. Now they're comparing 6sense vs. Bombora vs. Demandbase. They're looking at feature differences, pricing, implementation requirements, customer references. They're building a shortlist.
**Prospect mindset:** "We want this type of solution. Which vendor should we choose?"
**What they need:** Detailed comparisons. Product information. Case studies from similar companies. ROI models. Security and compliance information. Proof that your solution actually works.
**What marketing should do:**
**What sales should do:**
**Red flags:** If there's no buying committee, if you can't arrange customer references, if they're not talking implementation details.
The prospect has narrowed to a shortlist (usually 2-3 vendors) and is negotiating terms.
They're asking tough questions. Can you integrate with our existing tech stack? What's your implementation timeline? What does training look like? What happens if we want to expand? They're getting serious about buying.
**Prospect mindset:** "We're going to buy something. Let's make sure it's the right something and we get good terms."
**What they need:** Detailed answers to implementation questions. SLAs. Support structure. Custom pricing or terms. Proof that you can deliver on your promises.
**What marketing should do:**
**What sales should do:**
The prospect signs the contract. They're now a customer.
**What they need:** Smooth onboarding. Clear next steps. Training. Support. Quick time-to-value.
**What sales should do:**
Sales cycle length (time from awareness to close) varies significantly:
Complex deals with large buying committees move slowly. Every stakeholder needs information. Every objection needs addressing. Negotiation takes time.
**Budget availability.** Is the money already approved? If yes, faster close. If no, they might need to wait for next fiscal year.
**Buying committee consensus.** If everyone agrees they want to solve the problem, things move fast. If stakeholders disagree, things stall.
**Competitive situation.** If the prospect is evaluating many vendors, it takes longer. If they're seriously considering you and one competitor, faster.
**Organizational change.** A new VP decided to buy something? Faster. A committee needs to align before deciding? Slower.
**Technical complexity.** Simple implementations close faster. Complex customization slows things down.
**Organizational bureaucracy.** Startups close fast. Enterprises with approval processes close slow.
Understanding the sales cycle helps you:
**Create the right content for each stage.** You don't need a feature list for someone in awareness stage. You need problem education.
**Know when to involve sales.** Don't send a sales rep into an awareness-stage conversation. They'll kill it.
**Set realistic timelines.** If your average deal is 6 months, don't expect to close in 3 months.
**Identify bottlenecks.** If deals get stuck in evaluation stage, something's wrong. Maybe your product information is unclear. Maybe you're not addressing a key objection.
**Align teams.** Marketing knows they're responsible for driving awareness and consideration. Sales knows they're responsible for evaluation and close. They coordinate to move prospects through the cycle.
**Measure and optimize.** Track how long deals spend in each stage. If they're spending too long somewhere, figure out why and fix it.
B2B sales cycles have stages. Each stage has different prospect needs, different content requirements, and different selling approaches. Teams that align to these stages move deals faster and close more business.
Understand where your prospect is in their journey. Provide exactly what they need at that stage. Move them forward. Repeat until close.