Sell with LinkedIn / Resources / Sales terms / Lead qualification
An important business reality is that not every person or company who expresses interest in a product or service is willing to make the jump to becoming a customer. In sales, reps are constantly using new strategies and tactics to land deals for the company they work for. Pitching, messaging, meeting, and even cold calling, are all part of the job but that doesn’t always mean the prospective customers are going to be the right kind that’ll close the deal.
That’s why lead qualification is one of the most useful and important tactics for any sales rep and sales org. Lead qualification helps ensure reps aren’t wasting time on the wrong kind of prospects but rather nurturing the ones that are likely to become customers with the hope of longevity and a strong relationship.
Ahead, we’ll unpack what goes into lead qualification, how marketing can help qualify leads for reps, and the process involved. Here, too, are ideas on how to identify and attract good quality leads, as well as how to manage any challenges along the way.
Learn about lead qualifications:
First, before any work can be done on nurturing a lead or qualifying, let’s start with what a lead is exactly. A lead is a customer or client who hasn’t brought a product or service from a company, but there is potential to become one. In a future section, we’ll unpack the different types of leads a company may get from a variety of departments, including sales and marketing, as well as product teams and those working on growth and acquisition.
Leads often come from outreach efforts such as ads—and other traditional types of marketing— and digital marketing efforts targeted to customer personas or profiles with similar demographics and groupings. According to a Data Portal report, over 90% of Americans are connected to the Internet in some way, which means many of the opportunities to find and qualify leads come through digital means. Many leads are found online through touches on ads, emails, content or social media posts. Ahead, we’ll unpack how marketing helps sales with lead qualification.
It seems fairly straightforward that if a qualified lead means a potential customer is actually a really good fit for a product or service then an unqualified lead is exactly opposite of that: can’t afford it and they don’t really seem to be seriously interested in the product or service. Additionally, an unqualified lead may be a business customer in the wrong industry, but they are still accessing or finding interest in the content about a product or service.
It’s important to keep these two categories in mind and understand how unqualified leads may impact measuring lead percentages. Sometimes a person browsing will never be the type of customer a business wants to attract, but that doesn’t exactly stop them from looking anyway.
1. Marketing qualified leads (MQL). Through this lead type, leads are deemed fit by marketing team members to receive marketing communications such as emails, ads, social content, and other content offerings.
2. Sales qualified leads (SQL). From the sales side of an org, SQLs are leads who are ready to speak to someone directly and put them in the sales process pipeline.
3. Product qualified lead (PQL). In this case, PQLs are identified because of their interest in a product based on, for example, a free subscription sign-up or trial before making an actual purchase.
4. Conversion qualified leads (CQL). Leads identified through conversion mean that a potential customer has executed on an action such as filling out a form for a report.
5. Contact leads
Contacting leads can be done through the rep (such as emails or even cold-calling) or through meetings a lead has scheduled with a rep. LinkedIn Sales Navigator’s AI features can prioritize outreach by providing real-time alerts on lead activities, such as job changes or shared content engagement, so reps can reach out at the most opportune moments.
One of LinkedIn Sales Navigator’s most powerful features is Account IQ, and AI-assisted tool that leverages the power of LinkedIn’s real-time data so sales reps can show up to every call with a strong understanding of the customer — in a fraction of the time it used to take them.
For sales teams, it means every rep shows up to each meeting with the information they need for the deep, meaningful conversations today’s buyers expect.
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BMC connects with a new, broader set of decision-makers
ROI within the first 12 months
more connections with decision-makers within key segments
New accounts within just six months of using Sales Navigator, driving $3.4M in revenue after three quarters
Expanding into new markets often means facing new challenges—and that’s exactly what BMC, a global business management software provider, encountered when buying power began shifting within organizations. Traditionally, their sales teams focused on CIOs and IT departments. But as decision-making started to include functions like finance and operations, BMC found themselves missing key players.
“There were suddenly all-new networks we needed to reach,” explains Will Stephen, Director of Sales Operations at BMC Software. With fewer established connections in these emerging markets, BMC needed a way to uncover and engage with new decision-makers—quickly and credibly.
More revenue on average for sellers that use Sales Navigator
More deal by enabling sellers to source high-conversion deals and improve relationships
The customer success industry is undergoing rapid change, with frequent turnover and evolving leadership roles. Gainsight, a global leader in customer success software, needed to keep up with these shifts by identifying and connecting with the right personas at their accounts.
“The biggest pain points we’ve had include turnover in the customer success industry, changes in leadership, and identifying the right people to reach out to,” says Easton Taylor, Senior Vice President of Customer Success at Gainsight.
To address this challenge, Gainsight turned to LinkedIn Sales Navigator to uncover critical personas within customer accounts. The platform’s persona-mapping and relationship-mapping features helped Gainsight’s customer success managers (CSMs) identify decision-makers and target new opportunities for upselling, cross-selling, and account expansion.
"Exposure to the right personas and ideal decision-makers has significantly improved due to Sales Navigator," says Taylor. With features like multithreading and persona mapping, Gainsight’s executives were able to align peer-to-peer for outreach, creating stronger relationships and better engagement.
more leads.
new connections.
of pilots participants wanted to continue using Sales Navigator
In the hospitality industry, relationships are everything. For Hyatt, a company whose purpose is to care for people so they can be their best, nurturing connections is at the heart of their sales strategy. However, the shift toward digital sales created new challenges for Hyatt’s teams, who needed to maintain their relationship-driven approach while adopting modern selling techniques.
“The challenge for hotel salespeople today is that the buyer isn't always easily identified,” explains Kaaren Hamilton, Associate Vice President of Commercial Services for Hyatt, Americas. With fewer opportunities for face-to-face meetings and more buyers entering the industry, Hyatt needed a solution to build relationships earlier in the customer journey.
As these trends take shape, the sales landscape will continue to shift toward smarter, faster, and more efficient processes. The future of lead qualification isn’t just about finding leads—it’s about finding the right leads, at the right time, with the right message. And with tools like LinkedIn Sales Navigator already incorporating AI and real-time insights, the future is closer than we think.
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