The perfect lead brief: template and examples
The brief is the silent contract between you and your lead provider. A good brief delivers sharp opportunities; a bad one, expensive noise. Here is the field-by-field template.
When a lead engagement goes wrong, the cause is rarely the provider. It is almost always an incomplete brief. The brief is where you translate "I want more customers" into actionable criteria. The more precise, the better the delivery. This is the structure we use and that you can copy.
Block 1: Who you are and what you sell
Before the criteria, the provider needs to understand your business. Product or service, value proposition in one sentence, average ticket, typical sales cycle and who you have sold well to before. Without this context, the filter is applied blind.
Block 2: The target profile (your ICP)
- Sector and sub-sector
- Company size (employees / revenue)
- Specific geography
- Decision-maker role or function
- Explicit exclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria are the part almost everyone forgets and the one that removes the most noise. "I do not want companies under 20 employees" is worth as much as the inclusion criteria.
Block 3: Desired intent and context
Define the intent level you need: leads for volume, leads with explicit interest or close-ready leads? Each level has a different cost and pace. Also specify what context is useful: detected need, urgency, estimated budget, preferred channel.
- Product and value proposition (1 line)
- Average ticket and sales cycle
- ICP: sector, size, zone, decision-maker
- Explicit exclusions
- Lead level: volume / intent / close
- Context required per lead
- Target monthly volume
- Delivery channel (CRM, API, export)
- Agreed definition of a valid lead
Block 4: Volume, pace and delivery
How many leads per month, at what pace (all at once or continuous flow) and how you want to receive them: CRM integration, API or export. Also define what you consider a valid lead: this agreed definition is what allows reviewing and replacing what does not comply.
Block 5: Quality and review
Agree in writing what happens if a lead does not meet the brief. A serious provider offers a review and replacement process per criteria. Without a definition of a valid lead, there is no objective way to claim, and quality is left to each party judgment.
A vague brief protects no one. A precise brief protects both parties.
Applied example
"We sell management software for private dental clinics, average ticket 4,000 EUR/year, 6-week cycle. ICP: dental clinics with 2 to 8 chairs in Spain, decision-maker manager or owner. Exclude large chains and franchises. WARM level with detected intent. Volume 120 leads/month in continuous flow, via API to HubSpot. Valid lead: clinic within the profile, decision-maker identified, verified email and phone."
A brief like this leaves no room for ambiguity. And when there is no ambiguity, delivery fits from the first week.