Many private equity firms prioritize their sales transformation early in the hold period since margin expansion, growth acceleration, and competitive positioning all depend on commercial execution.
But where PE-led transformations go wrong is in diagnosis. Too often, sales transformation is treated as a combination of:
All of those can help. None of them, on their own, reliably create pricing power.
The result often looks like early activity, some improvement, and then a slow return to discounting, stalled deals, and uncomfortable deal reviews. And sometimes, the "transformation" wreaks havoc on customer relationships.
The issue is that most sales transformations stop at training and infrastructure, when what’s required is capability.
Another common move in PE-backed transformations is to invest heavily in sales strategy, infrastructure, and data-driven process improvement.
This usually looks like:
In many cases, these investments are necessary. But they are frequently mistaken for value creation.
Strategy, infrastructure, and process enable performance, but they do not create it. On their own, they primarily deliver efficiency, not impact.
Efficiency without impact does not expand margin.
Efficiency without impact does not protect price.
Efficiency without impact does not change how customers perceive value.
It simply helps organizations execute the same behaviors faster.
Data and process are powerful—but only if they are oriented toward customer value creation, not internal motion.
Many commercial transformations unintentionally optimize for:
Sellers move deals through stages more quickly, but nothing meaningful changes in how value is positioned or defended. Pipeline visibility improves, but discounting persists. Forecast accuracy increases, but margins remain fragile.
Without capability, infrastructure becomes a reporting system for value leakage.
Value is created when customers decide to:
Those decisions are shaped by how sellers:
No amount of internal efficiency substitutes for that.
Sales strategy and infrastructure matter, but only to the extent that they amplify seller capability, not replace it.
The most effective PE-led sales transformations make a subtle but critical shift:
From: “How do we make sales execution more efficient?”
To: “How do we increase the customer’s perception of value—and the seller’s ability to defend it?”
When strategy, process, and data are explicitly designed to:
They become force multipliers instead of overhead.
That is when efficiency turns into impact, and impact turns into enterprise value.
When PE operating partners hear concerns about margin erosion or discounting, the instinctive response is often, “Our sales team is underperforming. They need training.”
That instinct is understandable—and not entirely wrong.
Training can absolutely help. It can reduce concessions. It can improve confidence in late-stage conversations. It can help roll out a price increase. In some cases, it appears to “fix” discounting.
But training is not a structural solution to a problem that is often caused by a poorly defined value proposition and the ability to articulate it in words that matter.
By the time a deal reaches negotiation, the leverage ship has sailed. The leverage has either been created or it hasn’t. If sellers haven’t uncovered value, aligned stakeholders, or structured alternatives earlier, price becomes the only lever left.
In those moments, even well-trained sellers will discount—not because they want to, but because they don’t have other credible options. When a sales team is under the gun to deliver rapid, sustained revenue growth, as most PE-held companies are, this is an understandable cycle.
If discounting is the symptom, negotiation training treats the pain.
Capability systems and value fluency treat the cause.
One of the most overlooked realities in sales transformation is the human one.
Organizational change almost always reduces efficiency in the short term, and constant change is the reality of PE ownership. When capability isn’t strong enough to absorb that disruption, pressure drives behavior—discounting, risk avoidance, and late-stage escalation.
In a human-driven function, the ability to fix that with tools and data is limited.
What does change behavior is confidence built through early wins—when sellers experience, firsthand, that a different approach works.
Sales transformation creates enterprise value when it does three things simultaneously:
1. Makes capability visible
A small set of commercial metrics—win rate, conversion rate, sales cycle length, average deal size, discount rate, deal margin, reason for loss—can reveal where value is leaking and why.
In the right combinations, these metrics point directly to specific stages of the selling cycle and the capabilities that need strengthening.
This allows operating partners to move from broad mandates to targeted interventions.
2. Changes deal decisions, not just seller knowledge
Capability shows up in:
In one portfolio company we worked with, introducing a structured way to score deal attractiveness and risk improved pricing, but it also changed internal conversations. Teams focused on the right opportunities, aligned earlier, and made clearer decisions about where to invest effort. It changed their decision infrastructure.
3. Produces quick wins that build belief
The fastest way to derail a sales transformation is to make it feel theoretical or clinical.
Quick wins are how belief is built. When sellers hold price, trade value instead of discounting, or restructure a deal successfully within weeks—not months—behavior changes. Confidence replaces fear. Discipline replaces heroics (and profit replaces revenue).
That is when pricing power becomes sustainable, and real value creation accelerates.
Holden Advisors is a team of experts in pricing and sales performance.
We help build and protect our clients’ pricing power by leveraging decades of expertise in negotiation, sales strategy, and value-based pricing.

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