Universal Lead Definition: Why 61% of B2B marketers are wasting resources and how they can stop. from B2B Lead Generation Blog Podcast by bcarroll@startwithalead.com (Brian Carroll, MECLABS)
Universal Lead Definition: Why 61% of B2B marketers are wasting resources and how they can stop:
A universal lead definition (ULD) clarifies what a lead is to everyone in your organization. It also:
- Fits the profile of your ideal customer
- Has been qualified as sales-ready
- Spells out the responsibilities and accountabilities of Sales and Marketing
- Makes Marketing and Sales more efficient
Are these truly leads? Not really. Anyone who expresses interest in what you sell is an inquiry, not a lead. Experience has taught me that only 5% to 15% of inquiries are ready to speak to Sales. However, as many as 80% of inquiries will be ready to speak with Sales in the future. If you send leads too soon, Sales will discard them, so you must nurture them until they fit your ULD.
A ULD doesn’t need to be complex. Here’s an example from one of our past research partners, an $80 billion IT management organization.
An inquiry becomes a lead when it:
- Fits the target customer profile (industry, revenue, number of employees, etc.)
- Has interest from a decision maker
- Needs what the company sells
- Plans to evaluate the solution in three months or less
- Plans to make a purchase decision in six months or less
- Is ready to speak with a sales rep within two weeks
- Leads not being qualified or prioritized
- Leads not being nurtured
- Sales rejecting leads
- No accountability or handoff
How to create a universal lead definition
So now that you know what a ULD looks like, here’s how you create one:- Bring Sales and Marketing together for a meeting with a leader/facilitator whom both groups respect. The premise is that you’re in this together.
- Asks Sales this key question: “For us to be 100% certain that when we send you a lead, you will act on it and provide feedback 100% of the time, what do you need to know? At what point do you consider a lead qualified?”
- Listen to what Sales has to say and don’t interrupt. Every salesperson must participate.
- Clarify and continue. Write a summary of your meeting, including your initial definition, and have another one to clarify what was said. Make sure everyone is satisfied — strong consensus is critical.
- Publish the ULD everywhere so people who are involved with lead generation are constantly aware of their target.
- Close the loop with huddles — face-to-face or voice-to-voice meetings. Don’t count on software to close the loop for you. Sales and Marketing should meet biweekly to ensure the lead definition is still accurate. Ask questions like, “Was X a lead? Did they enter the sales process? Why or why not? What else would you like to have known about this lead? What else can we improve? What should we stop doing? What should we start doing?”
Related Resources:
Lead Generation Check list – Part 4: Clear and Universal Lead Definition5 dials to tune in your lead generation process
Why the Term “Marketing-Qualified Lead” Creates Serious Confusion – Part 2
Fostering Sales-Marketing Alignment: A 5-Step Lead Management Process
Webinar Replay: 2012 B2B Marketing Benchmark Report Reveals How Marketers Can Transform Mounting Pressure, Challenges into Revenue


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