Accelerating Deal Velocity in Media: Why Unified Platforms are Key

Harry

Solution Architect

AI

Summary:

  • Fragmented workflows are the primary barrier to deal velocity in media.
  • Structured, end-to-end platforms reduce friction across the revenue lifecycle.
  • Connected systems enable seamless handover across sales, advertising operations and finance.
  • Reliable data improves decision-making and supports more effective teams.
  • AI use cases depend on consistent inputs, without them, it underdelivers.

Introduction

Increasingly, media organisations are being asked to do more with the same teams.

Deals are more complex than they were a few years ago, buyers expect quicker responses and new revenue streams are being added on top of already stretched processes.

At the same time, AI is being positioned as the next lever for growth. From automated proposal responses to performance-led product recommendations, the opportunity is clear.

The challenge is that many organisations are trying to apply these capabilities on top of workflows that are not set up to support them.

Where Deal Velocity Breaks Down

In most media businesses, the revenue lifecycle is fragmented. Sales, Revenue Operations (RevOps), Advertising Operations (AdOps) and finance each rely on different systems, with limited alignment between them.

This fragmentation creates friction at every step. Proposals take longer to assemble; product combinations don’t translate cleanly into fulfilment and handover points become points of failure.

This is where deal velocity slows down. Not because teams aren’t moving quickly, but because the system they’re working in isn’t designed to support speed.

It also explains why AI struggles to deliver meaningful results. When the underlying data is inconsistent, the output is just a more efficient version of the same problem.

A Different Starting Point

The organizations making progress aren’t starting with AI, they’re starting with the structure of the deal itself.

That means building a single, end-to-end model of the revenue lifecycle. One that brings together sales, product configuration, fulfilment and billing into the same flow, rather than treating them as separate steps.

In practice, this is where platforms like Salesforce Revenue Cloud Advanced come into play. Not as an add-on, but as the backbone that holds the entire process together.

The key shift is embedding product configuration directly into the sales process. Instead of treating deals as a collection of separate components, teams can build structured, multi-product quotes within a single environment, with logic and dependencies already defined.

This is particularly relevant in media, where deals often combine subscriptions, digital advertising, newsletters and content creation. When these elements are handled in isolation, complexity compounds. When they’re structured together, it becomes manageable.

What Changes With a Unified Process

When workflows are unified, deal execution becomes more predictable:

  • Sales teams spend less time assembling proposals and more time focusing on the client.
  • Pricing and product logic are defined upfront, which reduces the need for rework later.
  • Orders are handed over in a format that downstream teams can act on immediately.
  • AdOps and finance no longer need to interpret or correct incomplete information.
  • The effect is straightforward. Deals move faster because less time is spent fixing what came before. The customer experiences that as speed. Internally, it shows up as fewer delays and less rework.

Increasing Team Effectiveness

The impact goes beyond operational efficiency. This isn’t about doing the same work more quickly; it’s about removing the obstacles that prevent teams from working effectively in the first place.

When data is consistent and accessible, sales can see what is performing and build stronger proposals. RevOps has clearer visibility into pipeline and performance. Delivery teams spend less time fixing issues and more time optimizing outcomes.

The overall effect is an increase in effectiveness. The same teams can produce better outcomes because they’re no longer working with a system that inherently works against them.

Supporting New Revenue Models Without Friction

This becomes more important as media organizations look to evolve their offerings.

Adding something like subscriptions is rarely as simple as it sounds. It introduces new requirements around renewals, amendments and billing cycles that many existing setups can’t support.

This is where gaps in the underlying infrastructure become visible.

With a platform like Salesforce Revenue Cloud Advanced, those capabilities are already part of the model. New products don’t need to be forced into a structure that wasn’t designed for them. They can be introduced in a way that aligns with how the business already operates.

That removes a common blocker. Instead of redesigning processes every time a new revenue stream is introduced, organizations can build on what’s already in place.

Laying the groundwork for AI

This is where AI can do its best work.

Once the data is consistent and workflows are structured, AI tools have something reliable to work with. They can support tasks such as generating proposals, recommending product combinations based on performance or identifying opportunities to optimize pricing and inventory.

These use cases depend on having a clear view of products, customers and outcomes across the full lifecycle.

A More Practical Way to Think About Deal Velocity

For media organizations, improving deal velocity and preparing for AI are often treated as separate initiatives.

In reality, they are the result of the same underlying change.

When the revenue lifecycle is connected and structured properly, deals move faster as a natural outcome. At the same time, the business becomes better positioned to use AI in a way that adds real value.

That makes the question less about what tool to introduce next, and more about whether the current system is capable of supporting what comes after.

The Author

Harry
Harry

Solution Architect

Harry is a Solution Architect and a leading Media industry Subject Matter Expert. He helps media businesses replace fragmented Sales, Revops, and Finance workflows with a single, end-to-end model of the revenue lifecycle.

He is a BCS certified Solution Architect and an AI and automation enthusiast. Harry champions the principle that AI only adds real value once the underlying data and workflows are understood AND consistent. By getting the structure of the deal correct at the start, he can help the same teams produce better outcomes—faster, at higher quality, and at lower cost and risk—while laying the groundwork for AI and automation that genuinely delivers.