All posts
GTM

Dec 4, 2025

The Playbook for Marketing and Sales Alignment with Kevin White

Headshot of Kevin White with an Agents of Revenue Logo
Share
Copied to clipboard

Sign up for the latest from Spara

By entering your email, you agree to receive marketing communications from Spara. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Marketing and sales alignment is not about meetings, dashboards, or terminology. It becomes real when both teams share an understanding of intent, operate from the same signals, and commit to the same outcomes.

Kevin White, Head of Marketing at Scrunch AI and longtime GTM operator, has seen this play out across high growth teams. His perspective is practical. Alignment is built through clear definitions, validated triggers, and unified expectations for when and how buyers should be engaged.

This is his playbook.

1. Align on the moment that actually matters

Misalignment begins when marketing and sales use different definitions of success. Kevin frames it simply: “The disconnect between marketing and sales has often been around a shared language and metric.”

For him, pipeline is the most reliable alignment point. Not because it is easy, but because it represents the moment when a buyer’s intent becomes meaningful and verifiable. Pipeline is created when a prospect demonstrates intent strong enough for sales to validate, whether through a demo request, a signup, or a sequence of high intent behaviors.

When marketing optimizes for this moment, handoffs improve, follow up becomes more focused, and both sides begin prioritizing the same signals.

2. Replace arbitrary scoring with meaningful triggers

Kevin is direct about traditional lead scoring. “There’s a whole market around lead scoring,” he says, “and it has probably eaten up a lot of marketing dollars and not been effective.”

Activity based scoring often inflates engagement without revealing true readiness. Email opens, webinar attendance, and page views can create misleading signals because they do not reliably reflect buying intent.

Kevin instead recommends tripwires, specific actions that indicate a shift from exploration to intent. Examples he offers include:

  • Visiting the terms of service or pricing page

  • Attempting an in-product upgrade

  • Hitting usage thresholds

  • Requesting a demo

To validate a tripwire, Kevin advises testing it with the sales team. “If the sales team is working 100 people who have hit this tripwire,” he says, “what percentage convert? I tend to look for 5 to 10% or higher.”

If a trigger does not meet that threshold, it is not a signal worth manual follow up.

3. Prioritize quality over quantity

Kevin emphasizes that alignment often means passing fewer leads — and that is the point.

“When you have the right alignment between marketing and sales,” he says, “your MQL numbers usually go down. You’re applying more rigor to what gets passed over.”

A smaller pool of high intent leads produces:

  • Better conversion rates

  • Stronger sales focus

  • Clearer reporting

  • A more predictable pipeline

Teams perform better when qualification is based on readiness instead of volume. Less noise leads to more meaningful interactions and fewer disconnects between teams.

4. Run a full funnel audit to fix hidden gaps

One of Kevin’s most actionable recommendations is to audit the funnel from start to finish.

“Inspect and document every single stage of the funnel,” he says. “Follow someone from seeing an ad, to visiting the website, to filling out a form, to being handed to sales, to pipeline creation, to close.”

A full funnel audit helps teams:

  • Clarify ownership at each stage

  • Agree on handoff criteria

  • Establish SLAs

  • Identify where leads lose momentum

  • Build empathy across functions

Kevin notes that marketers especially benefit from working a sample of their own leads. “If you run through that process as a marketer and work the leads yourself,” he says, “you’ll see how hard it is. That’s what you’re asking the sales team to do.”

Visibility strengthens alignment. Alignment strengthens predictability.

5. Meet buyers where they are

Kevin reinforces that alignment is not only about when to hand leads to sales. It is also about how teams engage buyers based on where they are in their decision process.

“What I’m actually looking for,” he says, “is: does this person have enough intent to convert? And what was the one thing that pushed them over the line?”

This applies to both sales owned moments and the many signals that appear before a human ever gets involved. When teams understand and act on these moments quickly, they help buyers progress without relying solely on live sales interaction.

At Spara, we believe modern GTM infrastructure should support how buyers actually move today. Teams need systems that help them:

  • Recognize intent as it happens

  • Enrich context instantly

  • Engage buyers with the right message for their stage

  • Route leads to sales only when a lead is qualified and a human touch is needed

The goal is not to replace sales. It is to keep sales focused on the highest intent moments while ensuring every other signal receives timely, relevant engagement.

Final takeaway

Marketing and sales alignment becomes real when teams share signals, share definitions of intent, and share accountability for outcomes. Kevin’s playbook outlines how to build that alignment: validate meaningful triggers, prioritize readiness over volume, and create shared visibility across the funnel.

Spara helps teams act on intent in real time without increasing manual effort. Sales stays focused on the moments that matter. Marketing trusts that every other buyer receives the right next step.

In a world where buyers move quickly, alignment supported by real time engagement is becoming the foundation for modern GTM.

Sign up for the latest from Spara

Subscribe to get more GTM insights straight to your inbox.

By clicking Sign Up you're confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.