When you interview for an Account Executive role, you are competing against candidates who can all sell. What sets the very best apart is not just charm or storytelling ability. It is precision. Top performing AEs can walk into an interview and immediately recall the key numbers that prove their success.
Hiring managers want to see evidence that you run your book of business with discipline. If you know your own sales data inside and out, you show that you understand not only how to close deals but also how to manage performance at scale. If you cannot talk about your own quota attainment, deal size, or pipeline coverage, you risk sounding like someone who was carried by circumstance rather than skill.
The following guide outlines the exact numbers every AE should know. Each section ends with a checklist to help you prepare before your next interview.
Revenue Performance
Your revenue achievements are the foundation of your track record. This is usually the first number a hiring manager will ask for.
What to prepare:
- Your quota attainment for the last 4 to 8 quarters. Be clear on the percentage of target you hit.
- Your total revenue closed in the last 12 months.
- The consistency of your results. Were you steady each quarter, improving over time, or strongest in the second half of the year?
Checklist for revenue performance:
☑ Know your annual revenue closed
☑ Know your quarterly quota attainment percentages
☑ Be able to explain the story behind your best and worst quarters
Pipeline Metrics
Revenue tells the outcome. Pipeline shows the process. Hiring managers want to know if you were capable of generating or influencing pipeline as well as converting it.
What to prepare:
- The value of pipeline you sourced yourself compared with pipeline handed to you by marketing or SDRs.
- Your typical pipeline coverage ratio. Most sales leaders want to see at least three times pipeline coverage against quota.
- Your conversion rate from opportunity to closed-won.
Checklist for pipeline metrics:
☑ Know how much pipeline you generated personally
☑ Know your pipeline to quota ratio
☑ Be able to quote your conversion rate from SQL to closed-won
Deal Size and Volume
Understanding deal economics is essential. Average deal size reveals the scale you are used to operating in. Volume shows how many deals you typically manage at once.
What to prepare:
- Average deal size (ACV or TCV depending on your product).
- Largest deal you have closed. This is a strong headline example to include.
- The number of deals you closed per quarter.
Checklist for deal size and volume:
☑ Know your average deal size
☑ Know your largest deal and the story behind it
☑ Know how many deals you typically close per quarter
Sales Cycle and Velocity
Hiring managers want to know how quickly you move deals from prospect to close. This gives them a sense of your efficiency and whether your experience matches their typical cycle length.
What to prepare:
- Average sales cycle length in days or months.
- Time to your first closed deal in a new role. This shows ramp speed.
- Your win rate, which is the percentage of opportunities that ended in a closed-won outcome.
Checklist for sales cycle and velocity:
☑ Know your average sales cycle length
☑ Know your time to first deal when starting a new role
☑ Know your overall win rate
Activity Metrics
Even though AEs are not SDRs, activity still matters. Hiring managers want to see that you understand the relationship between activity and outcomes.
What to prepare:
- Number of qualified meetings you typically booked or ran each month.
- Proposals or demos delivered each quarter.
- Average number of touchpoints required to close a deal, such as calls, emails, or LinkedIn messages.
Checklist for activity metrics:
☑ Know your meeting volume per month
☑ Know your proposal to close ratio
☑ Be able to describe your average number of touchpoints per deal
Customer Impact
Your influence does not stop at signing a contract. If you have worked on renewals or expansions, you should be able to quantify that impact too.
What to prepare:
- Renewal rates for your accounts if you managed ongoing relationships.
- Expansion or upsell revenue that you personally closed.
- Retention percentages where you contributed to keeping clients post-sale.
Checklist for customer impact:
☑ Know renewal percentages if relevant
☑ Know expansion revenue closed
☑ Be able to explain how you influenced retention
Market and Territory Coverage
Finally, you should be able to show that you understand the scope of your territory and how you approached it. This is particularly important for mid-market or enterprise AEs.
What to prepare:
- The total territory value or TAM you were responsible for.
- Number of accounts in your patch or named account list.
- Penetration rate, meaning the percentage of accounts converted from prospect to customer.
Checklist for market and territory coverage:
☑ Know the total size of your territory
☑ Know how many accounts you managed
☑ Know your penetration rate across the territory
Bonus Tip: Tell the Story Behind the Numbers
Numbers on their own prove performance, but context makes them powerful. Be ready to explain:
- What actions you took to deliver those results
- How you adjusted when you fell short of quota
- The tactics or creativity that helped you close your biggest deal
A candidate who combines data with compelling stories immediately stands out. You are showing not just what you achieved, but how you achieved it.
Final Thoughts
When you prepare for an AE interview, treat it like you would a client pitch. Come in with the numbers, structured in a way that proves your value, and ready to answer questions with confidence. Most candidates will walk into an interview with vague statements about “overachieving quota” or “closing large deals.” The ones who get hired are the ones who can back those claims with specifics and then explain the story behind the results.
Knowing your numbers will help you land the role. Knowing how to communicate them will help you stand out as the best candidate in the room.