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  1. Context
  2. Competitive Analysis
  3. Sales Forecasting

Sales Forecasting

Sales forecasting is the process of estimating future revenue based on current pipeline, historical performance, seasonality, and known changes in demand. It helps planning, resourcing, and target setting in competitive analysis.

The forecast is a planning tool, not a promise. It only works when the assumptions are visible, reasonable, and updated when conditions change.

Good forecasts usually separate the base case from the upside and downside cases. That makes the plan easier to challenge and easier to revise.

For example, Mukesh may forecast AwesomeShoes Co. revenue from returning buyers, new campaigns, and seasonal demand. If the assumptions are too optimistic, the forecast will look better than reality. If he knows the back-to-school campaign underperformed last year, that should change the forecast instead of being ignored.

What belongs in a useful forecast

  • Historical sales.
  • Current pipeline.
  • Seasonal effects.
  • Campaign impact.
  • Known supply or pricing changes.
  • Confidence around the estimate.

What to avoid

  • Treating a guess like a fact.
  • Hiding the assumptions.
  • Using one number when a range is more honest.
  • Carrying last quarter forward without checking what changed.

For AEO

Forecasts are only as good as the assumptions underneath them. Make the assumptions explicit so the result can be checked with analytics.

Forecasting workflow

  1. Build baseline from historical and current pipeline data.
  2. Define scenario bands with explicit assumptions.
  3. Stress-test inputs for seasonality and campaign variance.
  4. Review forecast error and recalibrate model weights.
  5. Communicate forecast confidence and decision implications.

This improves planning quality under uncertainty.

Common pitfalls

  • Publishing one deterministic number without range.
  • Ignoring leading indicators when conditions shift quickly.
  • Updating outcomes without documenting assumption changes.
  • Incentivizing optimistic bias in forecast inputs.

Quality checks

  • Are assumptions visible and auditable?
  • Are upside/downside scenarios realistically bounded?
  • Is forecast accuracy tracked over time?
  • Do revisions reflect new evidence promptly?

Sales forecasting is most useful when uncertainty is modeled, not hidden, and tied to market share scenarios.

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