Noise filters through the double-pane glass of the conference room, a muffled chaotic symphony of the sales floor, while inside, the silence is heavy enough to choke a horse. Dave, the Marketing Director, has just clicked to slide 18. It is a beautiful slide. It features a line graph that arcs upward like a falcon taking flight, representing 10,008 new leads generated in the last 48 days. He is beaming. He is looking for a pat on the back, or perhaps a trophy made of pure attribution data. But across the table, Marcus, the VP of Sales, is staring at his lukewarm coffee with the intensity of a man watching a slow-motion car crash. He isn’t seeing 10,008 opportunities. He is seeing 10,008 reasons why his team will miss their quotas, because he knows, with a soul-crushing certainty, that 9,998 of those leads are actually just people who wanted a free PDF about ‘industry trends’ and have no intention of ever spending $8,888 on a software license.
Generated by Dave
Identified by Marcus
This is the corporate cold war in its purest form. It’s a ritual we perform every quarter, a liturgical dance of misaligned expectations. We talk about ‘alignment’ as if it’s a spiritual state we simply haven’t prayed hard enough to achieve, but the truth is far more clinical and far more sinister. We have built these
