One of the age-old debates between sales and marketing is the number and quality of leads. If leads are aplenty, sales will say they’re terrible leads. But, even if the leads are closing at a high rate, if there are fewer than usual, there’s a complaint there too. One way to try to decrease this tension is to ensure that leads are defined in the same way by both marketing and sales.
Presumably, you have different kinds of leads that come in through different campaigns.
In a perfect world, you’re nurturing all of your leads until they become hot prospects for your sales team to call on, but in the event you don’t have that process in place, or, your sales team wants to talk to everyone no matter their temperature, you need to ensure you define what each means and what to expect from them based on the campaign from which they came.
Defining Your B2B Sales Funnel
The first step is to itemize the various campaigns and lead capture vehicles you’re using to add to your lead pipeline. It might look as simple as this:

Or, are they in the the middle-of-the-sales funnel: they’ve defined their issue and are looking at specific solutions, they’re shopping around to see what exists within their solution area, they still don’t know what the specifics of the offerings are and need a little more guidance?
Or, are they at the bottom-of-the-sales funnel: they’ve done the research already, know what they need to solve their issues, and are looking for reasons to choose your product or service above the others in the marketing?

After you’ve determined what each of the stages you’ll go with are, and what campaign leads are attached to each stage, you’d then define these in a written document to share with the sales team … probably something like this:
There are other elements to this such as tracking and reporting the number of leads at each stage, associating ROI with them, further refining the stages, and associating and creating content for each stage, but hopefully this will get you started down the path of ensuring sales and marketing are defining the leads the same way.
Related Articles:
The Twin Pillars of Profit: Sales and Marketing
The Mistake of Relying on Technology when Aligning Sales and Marketing
How to Prevent Data Breaches Through Sales and Marketing Alignment
Aligning Sales and Marketing – New Perspective on an Old Problem

