Aligning marketing and sales around the lead
When marketing and sales argue about "lead quality", the problem is almost never the leads: it is the lack of a common definition. We show you how to align both teams so they stop fighting.
In almost every company there is a recurring, predictable conflict: marketing says it delivers good leads and sales says they are bad. Both are partly right and partly blind. The root is almost never the real quality of the leads, but the absence of a shared definition of what a good lead is.
The underlying misunderstanding
Marketing optimizes for volume and cost per lead; sales optimizes for closing. If no one defines what counts as a deliverable lead, each team uses its own yardstick. Marketing celebrates a thousand leads; sales complains that nine hundred do not fit. They are not lying: they measure different things. The solution starts by measuring the same thing.
The internal service agreement
The classic alignment tool is an agreement between the two teams: a joint definition of what a qualified lead is for marketing (MQL) and for sales (SQL), with objective criteria. What fit, what signals and what data a lead must have to pass from one team to the other. When that definition exists and is respected, the "quality" argument becomes data, not opinion.
- A joint, objective definition of a qualified lead
- Shared fit (ICP) criteria
- An SLA for follow-up by sales
- Sales feedback that returns to marketing
- Common metrics: not just volume, also conversion
The feedback loop
Alignment is not a document signed once. It is a loop: sales returns to marketing information on which leads closed and which did not, and marketing adjusts its criteria with that feedback. Without that loop, marketing keeps optimizing for the wrong metric and sales keeps receiving leads that do not fit. The feedback is what closes the circle.
Where buying leads fits
Buying qualified leads can be neutral ground that reduces conflict, because it starts from a brief with objective criteria agreed by both teams. The provider delivers against an agreed definition, which forces marketing and sales to agree on what a good lead is before buying. That conversation, by itself, already aligns.
One question to diagnose
If you want to know whether your teams are aligned, ask them separately: "What is a good lead?". If the answers differ, there is your problem. And the solution is not buying more leads or generating more: it is sitting both teams down to write a single answer.