TL;DR
Win rate is won deals divided by total resolved opportunities. For B2B SaaS, median win rate ranges from 15-25% across all opportunities to 30-45% for qualified pipeline only. A 5-point increase in win rate on the same pipeline adds 20-25% more closed revenue (Gartner, 2025).
What is win rate?
Win rate (also called close rate, conversion rate, or opportunity-to-close rate) is the percentage of sales opportunities that end in a signed deal. It measures the effectiveness of the sales process — from qualification through negotiation to close.
Win rate depends heavily on what counts as an "opportunity." If every inbound lead is logged as an opportunity, win rate will be low (10-15%) because the denominator includes unqualified prospects. If only BANT-qualified or MEDDIC-qualified deals count, win rate rises to 25-40%. The definition of the denominator matters more than the numerator.
For B2B SaaS, overall win rates (all opportunities) typically range from 15-25%. Qualified opportunity win rates range from 25-45%. Enterprise deals with long cycles tend to have lower win rates (15-20%) but higher deal values. SMB self-serve motions have higher win rates (30-50%) on smaller deals.
Win rate is not the same as conversion rate in the marketing sense. Marketing conversion rate measures website visitors to leads. Win rate measures sales opportunities to closed deals. They are different stages of the funnel with different benchmarks.
Why win rate matters for operators
Win rate is the most efficient lever in the revenue equation. Generating more pipeline requires more marketing spend. Increasing deal size requires pricing changes. Shortening the cycle requires process overhaul. Improving win rate requires better qualification, positioning, and execution — all of which are process improvements, not budget increases.
A company with 200 opportunities per quarter at $25,000 average deal size and 20% win rate closes $1M. Improving win rate to 25% — a 5-point increase — closes $1.25M. That's $250K in additional annual revenue from the same pipeline, same team, same spend.
Operators who track win rate by segment, rep, and loss reason find the improvement path quickly. If enterprise win rate is 18% but mid-market is 32%, the sales process works for mid-market but breaks at enterprise. If one rep wins 35% and another wins 15% on similar deals, it's a coaching opportunity, not a market problem.
Win rate formula
What to include in "resolved opportunities":
What to exclude:
Win rate by stage (more useful for process diagnosis):
Stage-to-stage conversion rates: - Stage 1 → Stage 2: 60% - Stage 2 → Stage 3: 45% - Stage 3 → Stage 4: 55% - Stage 4 → Closed-Won: 72% Overall win rate from Stage 1: 0.60 x 0.45 x 0.55 x 0.72 = 10.7%
- Closed-won (signed deal)
- Closed-lost (lost to competitor, lost to no-decision, lost to timing)
- Open/active opportunities (still in pipeline)
- Disqualified leads (never became a real opportunity)
Win rate benchmarks by segment and motion
How win rate varies across deal types and sales motions.
| Segment / Motion | Win rate range | Median | Key driver | If below benchmark |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SMB self-serve | 30-50% | 38% | Product-led conversion, low friction | Simplify the buying process and trial experience |
| SMB sales-assisted | 25-40% | 30% | Speed to lead and qualification quality | Improve response time and lead scoring |
| Mid-market inbound | 22-35% | 28% | Discovery quality and competitive positioning | Strengthen demo-to-proposal process |
| Mid-market outbound | 15-25% | 20% | Targeting accuracy and outreach relevance | Tighten ICP definition |
| Enterprise | 12-22% | 17% | Multi-threading and executive alignment | Invest in champion development |
| Channel/partner | 25-40% | 32% | Partner enablement and deal registration | Improve partner training and co-selling |
Sources: Gartner Sales Benchmark Report 2025, Pavilion CRO Survey 2025, industry-observed ranges.
Common mistakes when measuring win rate
1. Including disqualified leads in the denominator
If a "lead" was never a real opportunity — wrong ICP, no budget, no authority — counting it as a resolved opportunity deflates win rate. Only include opportunities that were genuinely qualified. This means the CRM needs a clear stage gate between "lead" and "opportunity."
2. Measuring win rate without segmenting
A blended 22% win rate might combine 35% mid-market with 12% enterprise. Acting on the blended number leads to wrong conclusions. Segment by deal size, segment type, source channel, and rep.
3. Inflating win rate by avoiding "closed-lost"
Some teams leave dead deals in "open" status instead of marking them lost. This keeps win rate artificially high because the denominator stays small. Run a monthly pipeline scrub: any deal with no activity in 30+ days and a passed close date should be resolved.
4. Not tracking loss reasons
Win rate tells you how often you lose. Loss reason analysis tells you why. Track at least: lost to competitor (which one?), lost to no-decision, lost to timing, lost to budget, and lost to internal solution. The distribution reveals where the process breaks.
How Fairview tracks win rate automatically
Fairview's Pipeline Health Monitor calculates win rate from CRM data — segmented by deal size, source channel, rep, and pipeline stage. Win rate updates weekly and is displayed alongside sales velocity and pipeline coverage.
The Operating Dashboard shows win rate trends over time with loss reason breakdowns. When win rate drops below historical averages, the Next-Best Action Engine identifies the pattern: "Win rate dropped from 26% to 19% over 8 weeks. 62% of losses were to [competitor]. Review competitive positioning in Stage 3 demos."
Win rate vs close rate
In practice, win rate and close rate mean the same thing in most organizations. The critical detail is the denominator — always specify whether open deals are included or excluded.
| Win Rate | Close Rate | |
|---|---|---|
| What it measures | Won deals / total resolved opportunities (won + lost) | Often used interchangeably with win rate |
| Common distinction | Excludes open deals from denominator | Sometimes includes all opportunities (open + resolved) |
| When they differ | Win rate = won / (won + lost). Close rate sometimes = won / all created | Close rate can produce a lower number if open deals are included |
| Best practice | Use won / resolved for accuracy | Clarify the denominator when reporting "close rate" |
At a glance
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Frequently asked questions
What is win rate in simple terms?
Win rate is the percentage of sales opportunities you close as deals. If you had 100 opportunities last quarter and won 24 of them, your win rate is 24%. It measures how effective the sales team is at converting pipeline into revenue. Higher win rate means more revenue from the same pipeline.
What is a good win rate for B2B SaaS?
For qualified pipeline, 25-35% is healthy for mid-market B2B SaaS. Enterprise deals typically run 15-22% due to longer cycles and more competition. SMB self-serve can reach 35-50%. The number varies by how strictly you define "opportunity" — tighter qualification raises win rate but reduces the denominator.
How do you improve win rate?
Five approaches: improve qualification to remove bad-fit deals from the pipeline (fewer losses), strengthen competitive positioning with better battlecards (win more competitive deals), shorten time-to-value in demos (show ROI faster), multi-thread into multiple stakeholders (reduce single-thread risk), and coach based on loss reason data (fix the specific breakpoints).
What is the difference between win rate and conversion rate?
Win rate measures sales opportunities to closed deals. Conversion rate typically measures website visitors to leads, or leads to opportunities. They operate at different funnel stages. A company can have a high marketing conversion rate (lots of leads) and a low win rate (few leads become customers).
How often should you measure win rate?
Monthly for trend analysis. Quarterly for strategic assessment. Win rate needs enough resolved deals to be statistically meaningful — if you close 5 deals a month, monthly win rate will be volatile. Use a rolling 90-day window to smooth the signal while still catching trends.
Should win rate include no-decision losses?
Yes. A "no-decision" is a loss — the prospect chose not to buy, even if they didn't choose a competitor. Excluding no-decisions inflates win rate and hides a common sales problem: deals that stall indefinitely because the team didn't create enough urgency or prove enough value.
Sources
Fairview is an operating intelligence platform that tracks win rate by segment and rep — alongside sales velocity, pipeline coverage, and forecast confidence. Start your free trial →
Siddharth Gangal is the founder of Fairview. He built win rate segmentation into the platform after watching teams optimize a blended number that hid a 3x difference between their best and worst-performing deal types.
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