Resource

How to Define What a Fair Territory Actually Looks Like

Published April 21, 2026 by BoogieBoard Bot · Updated April 21, 2026

Most companies do not have a Territory fairness problem.

How to Define What a Fair Territory Actually Looks Like

Most companies do not have a Territory fairness problem.

They have a Territory definition problem.

Reps say their Territories are unfair. Managers say the model is balanced. RevOps says the math works. Everyone is arguing, but they are not arguing about the same thing.

That is the problem.

A fair Territory needs a clear definition before planning starts. If the company cannot explain what fairness means in measurable terms, every planning cycle becomes a debate and every rep uses their own standard.

Start with the real issue

“Fair” is too vague.

One rep may think fairness means better accounts. Another may think it means fewer accounts. Another may think it means a better shot at quota. Leadership may mean efficient coverage. RevOps may mean even distribution.

Those are not the same thing.

That is why companies talk past each other. The rep is talking about one thing. The company is talking about another. There is no shared definition, so there is no stable answer.

Balance Goals are the answer

Balance Goals are the measurable criteria that define what a healthy Territory looks like.

They turn fairness from a feeling into a standard.

Instead of saying “these Territories look fair,” you say:

  • these Territories have balanced revenue potential
  • these Territories have a balanced number of ICP accounts
  • these Territories have balanced workload
  • these Territories have balanced renewal timing
  • these Territories have balanced whitespace

Now the conversation is grounded in something real.

Without Balance Goals, fairness is subjective. With Balance Goals, fairness becomes measurable.

Define fairness before anyone sees assignments

This is critical.

You do not define fairness after reps see their books.

You define it before planning starts.

That is how you stop every disagreement from becoming a negotiation. If the standard is agreed to early, the planning process builds toward a shared definition instead of reacting to individual frustration.

Use the metrics that actually matter in your business

There is no single fairness formula for every company.

The right Balance Goals depend on the motion.

For prospect Territories, that might mean things like:

  • ICP account counts
  • account score bands
  • intent signals
  • open pipeline
  • vertical mix
  • geography or proximity

For existing-customer books, it might mean:

  • renewable ARR
  • renewal timing
  • customer health
  • whitespace
  • product adoption
  • support burden

The point is not to use every possible metric.

The point is to choose the few that actually define opportunity and workload in your business.

Let reps have a voice in the definition

Reps should not be the only voice in defining fairness, but they should be part of the process.

Ask them:

  • what kinds of accounts do you believe are strongest?
  • why do you believe that?
  • which patterns make a patch feel workable?
  • where do you see hidden workload that the model might miss?

That does not mean the loudest rep wins.

It means the company uses rep input to improve the definition over time instead of forcing RevOps to guess alone.

A fair Territory is not necessarily an equal Territory

This is one of the most important points.

Fair does not always mean identical.

Different roles, segments, seniority levels, or sales motions may justify different mixes of accounts or different quota relationships. But even then, the logic should still be quantifiable and explicit.

A fair model is one where the rules are visible and the tradeoffs are intentional.

Not one where every rep has the exact same number of accounts.

Publish the definition like policy, not folklore

This should not live in someone’s head.

If fairness matters, the definition should be published.

Reps should be able to see:

  • what metrics define a healthy Territory
  • why those metrics were chosen
  • how they are measured
  • when they are refreshed
  • how exceptions are handled
  • how the company uses them in planning

That is how the standard sticks.

If it is hidden, people will invent their own version.

Iterate it over time

A good definition of fairness is not frozen forever.

It should improve as the company learns.

Maybe one Balance Goal turned out not to matter much. Maybe a new data source becomes more predictive. Maybe the business changes its motion. That is fine. Update the definition. But update it deliberately, and do it before the next planning cycle starts.

That is how you create a standard that evolves without becoming chaotic.

The takeaway

If you want a standard for Territory fairness that sticks:

  1. stop using “fair” as a vague feeling
  2. define fairness with measurable Balance Goals
  3. choose the metrics that actually matter in your business
  4. set the definition before assignments are shown
  5. include reps in shaping the criteria
  6. publish the logic clearly
  7. improve it over time

A fair Territory is not one that no one complains about.

A fair Territory is one the company can define, measure, and explain.


Fair Territory Definition Template

Template name: Fair Territory Definition Template Applies to: [Sales Team / Segment / Role] Owner: [RevOps / Sales Ops / Sales Leadership] Last updated: [Date]

1. Purpose

This document defines what a fair Territory looks like for this role and segment.

The goal is to create a shared, measurable standard for Territory equity before planning starts.

2. Role and motion

Role: [AE / SDR / AM / CSM / Other] Segment: [SMB / Mid-Market / Enterprise / Region / Other] Primary job to be done: [Prospecting / Closing / Renewal / Expansion / Adoption / Other]

3. Definition of a healthy Territory

A healthy Territory for this role is defined by the following Balance Goals:

  • [Balance Goal 1]
  • [Balance Goal 2]
  • [Balance Goal 3]
  • [Balance Goal 4]
  • [Balance Goal 5]

4. Why these Balance Goals were chosen

Use this section to explain why these metrics matter in this business.

  • [Metric 1 reason]
  • [Metric 2 reason]
  • [Metric 3 reason]

5. How fairness will be measured

For each Balance Goal, define:

  • source field or data source
  • measurement method
  • refresh cadence
  • whether the metric is weighted or unweighted
  • acceptable range of variance

Example format

  • Balance Goal: [Revenue potential]

Source: [Field / system] Measurement: [How calculated] Refresh cadence: [Monthly / Quarterly / Annual] Acceptable variance: [+/- X%]

6. What fairness does not mean

Clarify what is not being optimized for.

Examples:

  • equal account counts alone do not define fairness
  • every rep having identical books is not the goal
  • short-term rep preference does not override the published definition

7. Rep and manager input

The company will gather input from reps and managers through:

  • [Survey / workshop / manager review / design review]
  • [Timing]
  • [Owner]

Rep input may shape the definition, but final approval belongs to: [Role]

8. Review cadence

This definition will be reviewed:

  • [Annually / Semiannually / Before each planning cycle]

Changes to the definition must be approved by: [Role]

9. Communication plan

This definition will be shared with the sales team through:

  • [Notion / SKO / enablement session / email / CRM dashboard]

Questions should go to: [Role / channel / form]

Use With AI

Download or copy the markdown version of this template and paste it directly into Claude, ChatGPT, or your LLM of choice. Then add context about your org:

  • the role and segment you are defining fairness for
  • the metrics that actually drive opportunity and workload in your business
  • what data sources you trust most
  • what acceptable variance looks like across Territories
  • how reps and managers should participate in shaping the definition
  • how often you want to revisit the Balance Goals

The LLM will use the template structure and your context to generate a customized version for your specific Territory fairness scenario.

Part of BoogieBoard's Territory Planning Resource Library. More templates and guides at boogieboard.ai/resources.