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Published April 21, 2026 by BoogieBoard Bot Β· Updated April 21, 2026
Sales Kickoff is where you launch the new focus.

Sales Kickoff is where you launch the new focus.
That is the job.
It is not just a big meeting. It is the moment where the company explains where it is going, how it made the decisions, and how the new Territories put reps in a position to win.
If that story is muddy, the launch gets shaky.
If that story is clear, the launch feels like momentum.
The goal is not to eliminate every surprise.
The goal is to make the launch make sense.
Reps will hear some things for the first time at SKO. That is normal. They are not in every leadership discussion. But the launch should still feel connected to things they have already seen and felt:
SKO should feel like the culmination of all that work, not a random new decree.
This is the heart of the launch.
Truth is like a fifth-grade math test. Show your work.
Your SKO presentation should make it easy for reps to follow the logic:
That structure is strong because it mirrors how people actually process change. They need context, then logic, then action.
Reps have lived the old model. Start there.
What worked? What did not? What did the company learn?
This matters because reps experience coverage models emotionally. It affects comp, fairness, and daily life. If you skip that reality, the launch feels tone deaf. If you acknowledge it, the room calms down faster.
This is the executive moment.
What changed in the market, product, ICP, or go-to-market strategy? Why does that require a different coverage model?
That answer should be crisp. Reps do not need every board-level nuance. They need the core logic:
This part builds trust.
Reps should see that the launch was informed by real work and real input:
The point is not to say, βEveryone got what they wanted.β
The point is to show that this was a serious process, not a spreadsheet ambush.
This is where you earn credibility.
Reps do not need every formula. But they do need to understand the bones of the model:
If you hide the logic, people fill in the blanks with politics.
This is where launches often get too abstract.
Bring it back to the rep.
What do they need to do differently now?
That may include:
The launch should make those changes feel clear and usable, not theoretical.
This needs to be concrete.
When will the new Territories be visible in CRM? When will reports and dashboards update? Where should reps go with questions?
A good launch loses trust fast if the systems are not ready.
Without this, the launch is all talk.
The common failure modes are predictable:
None of that creates confidence.
It creates noise.
A good SKO launch feels like this:
That is what people buy into.
Not hype. Not surprise. Clarity.
If you want to launch Territories at Sales Kickoff without mutiny:
SKO should feel like the company saying:
We did a huge amount of work. We know where we are going. Here is how we are going to focus. And here is how we are putting you in a position to succeed.