Most B2B SaaS leaders believe their sales and marketing teams already work well together. The data says otherwise. Forrester's 2024 research found that 82% of C-level executives think their sales and marketing teams collaborate effectively, while 65% of the people doing the actual work report a lack of alignment (Forrester, 2024, via The Growth Syndicate). That perception gap is where revenue quietly leaks: leads that sales never call, content sales never use, and forecasts no one trusts.
A CRM is supposed to close that gap. In practice, most do the opposite, because the system was configured to store data rather than to move a lead cleanly from a marketing campaign to a closed deal. Fixing that is less about buying new software and more about rebuilding the platform around a shared revenue process. This guide explains how CRM consulting services do exactly that, and how revenue leaders can use a CRM to turn two siloed teams into one pipeline.
Alignment matters because misalignment is now the most expensive and most measurable problem in B2B revenue. Forrester found that aligned organizations achieve 2.4x higher revenue growth and 2x higher profitability growth than misaligned peers (Forrester, via The Growth Syndicate, 2026). SiriusDecisions documented 24% faster three-year revenue growth for aligned B2B organizations, and Aberdeen Group measured a 32% year-over-year revenue lift for highly aligned companies against a revenue decline for laggards (via Revenue Memo, 2026).
The cost of getting it wrong is just as concrete. B2B companies lose 10% or more of revenue per year to misalignment, which is at least $5 million annually for a $50 million company (ZoomInfo; Revenue Memo, 2026). Two numbers explain where that money goes: 73% of marketing-generated leads are never contacted by sales, and roughly half of sales time is wasted on unproductive prospecting (ZoomInfo). Marketing produces leads sales ignores; sales chases prospects marketing has already disqualified. Both teams stay busy. Neither moves the number.
In 2026, three shifts make this harder to ignore. Buyers complete most of their research before talking to sales, so a broken handoff costs a deal that was nearly won. Buying committees have grown, so inconsistent messaging across touchpoints compounds. And Gartner found that 76% of mid-sized B2B companies have their CMO and sales director reporting to different leaders, which means alignment cannot be solved by asking the two teams to be friendlier (Gartner, 2024, via Momo85). It has to be built into the system that both teams use every day. That system is the CRM.
CRM consulting services are engagements that redesign a CRM around a company's revenue process rather than around its data. A consultant maps the customer journey, the data flow, and how each team actually works, then configures the platform so marketing and sales operate from one source of truth (Two Impress, 2026). The deliverable is not a tidier database. It is a working revenue engine with automated handoffs, shared reporting, and a pipeline that leadership can forecast against.
Most CRM consulting engagements cover six areas:
The thread running through all six is business process optimisation. A consultant's real job is to encode the agreed revenue process into the platform so that following the process is the path of least resistance for every rep and marketer. This is the model Webdew uses on HubSpot engagements: the configuration follows the revenue process, not the other way around.
A CRM aligns sales and marketing by forcing both teams to share one definition of a qualified lead, one record of the buyer, and one set of numbers, then automating the moments where alignment usually breaks. The platform turns a verbal agreement to "work together" into rules that the system enforces. Four mechanisms do most of the work.
A shared lead definition fixes the handoff by removing the disagreement that causes most rejected leads. Research shows 62% of companies define a qualified lead differently across the two teams, which means every handoff is a coin flip (SiriusDecisions data, via GTM 80/20, 2026). When marketing measures volume and sales measures conversion, marketing sends everything, and sales trusts nothing.
CRM consulting services fix this by building the agreed lead definition directly into the platform: lead scoring thresholds, required fields, and ICP-fit criteria that a contact must meet before the system routes it to sales. The definition stops being a debate and becomes a gate. Marketing sees exactly which leads qualify and why; sales receives only leads that clear the bar both teams set.
Automated handoffs reduce revenue leakage by removing the manual step where 73% of marketing leads currently die (ZoomInfo). When a lead has to be passed by email, a spreadsheet, or memory, follow-up depends on someone remembering. A CRM workflow assigns the lead, notifies the rep, sets a follow-up task, and starts a timer the moment the lead qualifies.
The result is a handoff that happens in seconds with no lead left uncontacted. Sales sees the full marketing context, including which campaigns and content the lead engaged, so the first conversation starts informed rather than cold. This is where CRM implementation does the most direct work: the automation is the alignment.
Shared dashboards keep both teams accountable by reporting marketing and sales against the same pipeline instead of separate metrics. A common driver of misalignment is that 96% of teams do not use the same metrics, and 97% plan customer engagement separately (via GTM 80/20, 2026). When marketing reports MQLs and sales reports closed deals, no one owns the gap between them.
CRM consulting services build dashboards that track a lead from first touch to closed-won in one view, with attribution showing which marketing activity produced pipeline and revenue. Both teams see the same funnel, so the conversation shifts from blame to the specific stage where deals stall. Leadership forecasts from facts rather than two conflicting spreadsheets.
The CRM supports sales enablement by putting the right content and context in front of reps at the moment they need it, inside the system they already work in. This matters because 65% of sales reps say they cannot find content to send prospects, and 60 to 70% of B2B content created is never used (ZoomInfo). Marketing produces assets that sales never finds.
A well-configured CRM surfaces stage-appropriate content, logs which assets influence deals, and feeds that data back to marketing so the next round of content maps to real buyer-journey stages. That feedback loop is a cross-functional strategy in practice: marketing builds what sales actually uses, and the CRM proves which content moves the pipeline.
Implementing CRM-based alignment works best as a sequence, not a single switch. Rushing to configure software before the two teams agree on a process just automates the existing dysfunction. Here is the order that works:
Skipping straight to step four is the most common and most expensive mistake. The configuration is only as good as the process agreement underneath it.
Delaying CRM-based alignment costs a predictable percentage of revenue every year the gap stays open. At 10% or more of annual revenue lost to misalignment, the cost compounds quietly while the CRM keeps producing reports no one trusts (ZoomInfo). For a growth-stage SaaS company, that is often more than the entire cost of fixing the system.
The trend also runs in one direction. Gartner projected that 75% of the highest-growth companies would deploy a RevOps model by 2025, treating aligned, CRM-enforced revenue operations as standard rather than optional (via Revenue Memo, 2026). The companies that close the alignment gap keep compounding the 24% faster growth aligned organizations see; the ones that wait keep paying the 10% tax. The decision is not whether alignment is worth it. The numbers settled that. The decision is how quickly a team scopes the work.
Aligning sales and marketing comes down to one idea: agree on a shared revenue process, then encode it into the CRM so following that process is automatic. The software does not create alignment. It enforces the agreement the two teams make about what a qualified lead is, how it gets handed off, and which numbers everyone reports against. Without that agreement, a new CRM just automates the old silos faster.
For B2B SaaS revenue leaders, the practical next step is small and concrete. Audit how a lead currently travels from a marketing campaign to a sales conversation, and find the points where it stalls, gets rejected, or goes uncontacted. That audit usually reveals the same root cause the data predicts: two teams running on definitions no one wrote down. Webdew works with SaaS revenue teams to rebuild HubSpot around exactly that shared process, sequencing the lead definition, automated handoffs, and shared reporting so the platform moves pipeline instead of storing it.
As buyers do more of their research before ever speaking to sales, the handoff between marketing and sales becomes the moment that decides the deal. The revenue teams that win the next few years will be the ones whose CRM makes that handoff invisible and automatic. Alignment stopped being a nice-to-have when the data put a number on it. The only open question is how soon a team decides to capture it.