AI-Enablement, Trends & Insights, Sales
Why Enablement Should Lead Innovation in Revenue Teams
By Irina Soriano — On May 14, 2026

AI-Enablement, Trends & Insights, Sales
By Irina Soriano — On May 14, 2026

Before we talk about who should lead innovation, it is worth being precise about what innovation means in a revenue context. Most people default to thinking about new products, new tools, or a new sales methodology rolled out at an annual kickoff. That is too narrow a definition, and it is costing organizations real performance.
For revenue teams, innovation means changing how the work gets done. It means rethinking how sellers access information, how managers coach, how post-sale teams drive retention, and how the entire go-to-market motion adapts to market changes. Revenue enablement strategy sits at the center of all of that. And that is exactly why enablement is best positioned to lead it.
Enablement does not live in one lane. It works across executives, frontline managers, field teams, pre- and post-sale, operations, product marketing, and marketing. That cross-functional visibility is rare. Most functions operate inside their own scope, but enablement operates across all of them, consistently and at scale.
In effect, enablement becomes a strategic command center. Enablement sees where friction slows deals down, where knowledge gaps cost pipeline, where new messaging is not landing in the field, and where process changes create confusion across customer-facing teams. No other function has that full-picture view on a recurring basis.
The reality is that Enablement is the connective tissue of your entire revenue organization. When you understand the scope of enablement over revenue teams that way, the case for enablement-led innovation becomes obvious. The function already touches every lever that matters.
Here is what actually happens in most organizations. A business unit buys a new tool or launches a new initiative. Enablement is brought in at the end to "activate" it. There is no workflow mapping, no integration check, no behavior change design, and no success metrics defined upfront. Enablement is then asked to prove ROI on something it had no hand in designing.
As I've seen throughout my career time and time again, that model does not work. And it is especially broken now, when AI is accelerating the pace of change across every dimension of GTM. Teams are adopting new technology fast, often without established use cases, guardrails, or measurement. The result is pilots that do not scale and field teams that are confused about what they are supposed to do differently.
When enablement leads innovation instead of reacting to it, the entire dynamic shifts. Enablement-driven innovation starts with the field reality first: what are sellers actually struggling with, what does the data say about where deals stall, and what behavior changes would move the needle. The innovation follows the need, not the other way around.
One of the most underused levers in enablement-led innovation is revenue intelligence. Revenue intelligence for sales teams means having real-time visibility into how deals move, where reps struggle, what content gets used in live selling situations, and which conversations convert. AI makes this possible at a scale that was not accessible even two years ago.
When enablement teams have access to revenue intelligence technology, they stop guessing and start building with precision. They can see which learning formats drive behavior change in the field, which content influences deal outcomes, and where gaps in knowledge are costing pipeline. That is the link between enablement activity and revenue outcomes that most organizations are still missing.
Revenue intelligence is not a reporting tool. It is the operating layer that makes the enablement-led innovation operating system work.
When enablement leads innovation, the results are measurable and they show up faster than most leaders expect. Ramp time drops. Content usage in active deals increases. Manager coaching becomes more consistent. Field teams stop reinventing the wheel on every deal. And the organization builds a repeatable system to absorb change rather than being destabilized by it.
When enablement leads, the field stays aligned even as the market shifts underneath them. And enablement leadership earns a permanent seat in GTM strategy conversations, not just execution conversations.
Here Is What to Do
The organizations that will win in the next phase of GTM will be the ones that can execute well, adapt fast, and keep their revenue teams sharp through constant, well-managed change.
Enablement is the function built to do exactly that. But it only works if enablement leaders stop waiting to be asked and start leading with intention. Own the innovation agenda. Build the capability to stay ahead. Use your cross-functional position to drive change rather than just support it.
The intersection enablement sits at is a command center. Start using it like one.
