Pipeline Revival Audit Process

Here is the exact path from purchase to a usable stale-pipeline recovery plan.

This offer is intentionally narrow. The goal is not to disappear into a long consulting process. The goal is to identify the recoverable revenue already sitting in old opportunities and hand back one clean first move your team can actually execute.

Turnaround target: 72 hours after intake is complete.

What happens after purchase

No mystery. No proposal maze. No bloated discovery sequence.

1

Buy the audit

Checkout locks the engagement and ties the audit to your email so the intake and follow-up path are clear from the start.

2

Complete the intake

You provide the practical inputs that matter for recovery work:

  • where stale opportunities currently live
  • deal sizes, offer types, and sales motion
  • examples of ghosted proposals or silent deals
  • constraints around who can follow up, what can be offered, and what cannot be changed yet
3

Stale segments get ranked

The evidence is sorted into a small number of stale opportunity pools. The audit does not try to revive everything at once. It forces a first segment choice based on warmth, likely value, and execution ease.

4

You receive the written recovery plan

The final output gives you the revival opportunity map, recoverable pipeline estimate, best first segment, 14-day reactivation plan, and reply-handling rules so the first pass can begin without improvisation.

What the final audit contains

The deliverable is built for action, not for looking impressive in a folder.

Revival opportunity map

A view of the stale pools that still deserve attention instead of a random catch-all list of old leads.

Recoverable pipeline estimate

A practical estimate of what may still be revivable based on stale volume, warmth, and offer value.

14-day reactivation plan

Who to contact first, what order to use, and how to structure the first pass without bloating the test.

Reply-handling rules

How to handle positive replies, objections, soft interest, and dead-end signals without dropping the revived conversation.

What this process is designed to prevent

Most stale-pipeline work dies because the team does too much, too vaguely, too late.

Trying to revive every dead deal at once

The audit deliberately narrows the first pass so execution stays real.

Sending one generic follow-up to wildly different segments

Different stale pools need different angles, timing, and expectations.

Buying more traffic before recovering what already exists

For many teams, stale opportunities are the faster revenue move than more top-of-funnel.

If the money is already in old conversations, this is the faster move.

Use the offer page if you are ready to buy, the intake preview if you want to inspect the questions first, or the FAQ if you are still checking fit.