How to build your sales enablement charter in 3 steps

Craft a robust sales enablement charter to align your team, set clear objectives, and drive revenue growth.

November 14, 2024

Enablement is a key driver of revenue growth and team success. But without a clear strategy, even the best enablement efforts can lose focus and fall short of their goals. That’s where having a solid sales enablement charter — or blueprint — comes into play.

Why your enablement strategy needs a charter

Think of your sales enablement charter as a roadmap that defines your mission, sets clear objectives, and aligns your team with the company’s broader goals. It ensures that everyone is on the same page and that your efforts are driving measurable outcomes.

So, how do you create an effective sales enablement charter that gets results? Let’s dive into the foundational steps and core components that will guide you.

Laying the foundation for your sales enablement charter

Before you can craft a strong enablement strategy, there are three essential steps to lay the groundwork:

1. Immerse yourself in revenue team objectives

To create a strategy that truly impacts the business, you need to know the goals of each revenue team inside and out. This means understanding their key objectives and how success is measured. Whether it’s pipeline growth, customer satisfaction, or conversion rates, knowing what drives each team will help you shape an enablement plan that moves the needle.

2. Collaborate with stakeholders

Enablement can’t be created in a silo. It’s critical to collaborate with key stakeholders across the organization — your CRO, CMO, CCO, and even CFO or CPO. These leaders offer valuable insights into where enablement can add the most value. Don’t forget to talk to top-performing sellers, too — ask them what challenges they’re facing, and pair that feedback with data from metrics like pipeline health and win rates to build a data-driven plan.

3. Define the scope of enablement

Clarity is key. Work with your stakeholders to clearly define what falls within enablement’s remit — and what doesn’t. This step helps prioritize resources and keeps your team focused on the areas where it can make the most impact. It also ensures everyone is aligned on what success looks like.

With these foundational steps in place, you’re ready to build out your sales enablement charter.

The core components of an sales enablement charter

Let’s break down the key components of your enablement blueprint. These are the building blocks that will guide your strategy and keep your team focused on driving results.

1. Purpose: Every enablement team needs a clear mission that explains why they exist and what they’re here to accomplish. This purpose statement should guide everything your team does and keep everyone aligned with the bigger picture.

  • Example: Our mission is to empower the sales team to consistently exceed targets by equipping them with the tools, training, and support they need to succeed in every buyer interaction.

2. Objectives: Once your purpose is defined, it’s time to set clear, time-bound objectives. These should directly support your mission and give your team specific goals to work toward. Your objectives should be measurable and clearly aligned with both your team’s mission and the company’s broader goals.

  • Example: Scale the behaviors of top-performing sellers across the sales organization within six months to increase quota attainment by 15%.

3. Enablement pillars: Your enablement pillars are the main areas of focus for your team. These will depend on your organization’s needs, but they provide structure to ensure your efforts are targeted in the right places. These pillars act as guideposts for where your team should focus their energy.

  • Examples: Onboarding, methodology reinforcement, product training, and leadership development.

4. Success metrics: To track the effectiveness of your strategy, you need clear metrics. Success metrics should include both leading and lagging indicators to give a full picture of how well your initiatives are working. These metrics ensure you’re able to measure and report on the impact of your enablement efforts.

  • Examples: Leading indicators = pipeline growth and conversion rate | Lagging indicators = quota attainment and win rates.

5. Stakeholder management: Managing relationships with stakeholders is key to keeping your strategy relevant and impactful. Identify who your key stakeholders are, both up and down the organization, and regularly align with them to ensure your enablement efforts are meeting their needs. This step is crucial for getting buy-in and ensuring that enablement initiatives have support at all levels.

  • Example: Partner with the CRO, CMO, and sales managers to align with business goals and provide practical support for sales teams.

6. Audience coverage: Finally, you need to define who your enablement efforts will support. While the sales team is often the primary focus, many enablement teams also support customer success, solutions engineering, and other functions. Clarifying this upfront helps you allocate resources effectively and ensures all key teams get the support they need.

  • Example: The enablement team will support sellers and customer success and solutions engineering teams with tailored resources and training.

Bringing the sales enablement charter together

A sales enablement charter is the foundation for a strategy that keeps your team focused, aligned, and ready to deliver results. By clearly defining your purpose, setting specific objectives, and outlining measurable success metrics, you create a roadmap that drives real outcomes.

Taking the time to build this charter ensures that your enablement efforts are thoughtful, strategic, and set up to make a real impact on your organization’s success.

Check out Lessons in Excellence — a step-by-step video course that guides you through the six core elements of an enablement business plan.