Forecastable: Definition, Examples, and Use Cases
Forecastable means having the property that an outcome can be predicted with high confidence inside a known time horizon. In B2B sales, a forecastable deal has a named economic buyer, a named forecast event, a shared next step, and an operating cadence that surfaces drift in the period.
The term sits at the intersection of two ideas. The first is predictability: an outcome that can be foreseen with reasonable accuracy. The second is operational discipline: the conditions that have to be in place for that prediction to hold up under stress. A deal can be predictable in name only, where a rep tells the manager it will close because the rep wants it to close. A deal becomes forecastable when the operating mechanics make the prediction defensible.
Why “forecastable” matters as a term
In most B2B sales conversations, “forecastable” gets used as a synonym for “predictable” or “in the forecast.” That usage misses the operating dimension. A pipeline can be forecasted (a number gets reported) without being forecastable (the underlying deals support the number). The distinction is consequential because the operating remedy is different: forecasting tools can tighten the report; only operating discipline can tighten the forecastability. Public sales research from Gartner and Forrester consistently shows enterprise forecast accuracy in the 50-70% band, which is the outcome of treating forecasting as a reporting discipline rather than an upstream one.
Forecastable is a property of the deal, the pipeline, or the business, not a property of the forecasting cadence. This matters because most sales organizations try to improve forecast accuracy by tightening the cadence (more frequent reviews, more deal-mechanic gates, more rep accountability). That helps, but only against deals that were forecastable in the first place. Cadence cannot create forecastability where the upstream conditions are missing.
Forecastable in practice
A forecastable deal looks like this:
A pipeline becomes forecastable when most of the deals inside it meet these conditions. A business becomes forecastable when its pipeline structure produces forecastable deals at the rate the business needs.
Related terms
The closely related concept is forecastability, which describes the upstream property that produces forecast accuracy. Adjacent terms include executive alignment, which is one of the four conditions that make a deal forecastable; forecast collaboration, which is the operating cadence between sales, partnerships, and finance that surfaces drift; and partner-touched pipeline, which often carries richer signal and is more forecastable than direct-only pipeline at the same segment.
Where you’ll see “forecastable” used
In practice, the term shows up in three operating contexts. Deal review: “Is this deal forecastable?” is shorthand for “do the four conditions hold.” Pipeline review: “How much of the pipeline is forecastable?” asks how much of the aggregate is predicted on operating discipline rather than rep optimism. Operating planning: “Are we structured to produce forecastable revenue?” surfaces whether the operating model is set up to compound forecast accuracy over time.
The concept is also the namesake for Forecastable, a platform-and-service combination that helps B2B SaaS companies build forecastable pipelines through better partner-touched deal mechanics and joint operating cadence with their partner ecosystems.
Forecastable is an independent third-party professional services company. Our evaluations of other vendors are based on publicly-available information as of May 2026 and our own client experience.
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By Alex Buckles
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