Lead qualification is the process of assessing whether a prospect has the characteristics and intent that make them a viable candidate for a sales conversation, helping sales and marketing teams prioritise their time on the leads most likely to convert. Qualification typically evaluates a combination of fit (does this company and person match the profile of customers you can successfully serve?) and intent (are they actively considering a purchase in a relevant timeframe?).
The classic qualification framework is BANT: Budget (do they have the financial capacity to buy?), Authority (is this person involved in or responsible for the purchase decision?), Need (do they have a genuine problem your solution addresses?), and Timeline (are they planning to buy within a relevant window?). Other frameworks like MEDDIC and CHAMP extend this logic for more complex B2B sales contexts. Marketing qualification happens first, using data from form submissions, content engagement, and behavioural signals. Sales qualification goes deeper through direct conversation.
For B2B marketing operations teams, building effective lead qualification logic into your CRM and automation platform reduces wasted sales time on unqualified prospects and improves the efficiency of the entire revenue funnel. A well-defined qualification threshold, consistently applied, means sales receives a smaller but more predictably convertible pipeline. The qualification criteria should be reviewed regularly against actual conversion data to ensure they are accurately predicting sales success rather than just reflecting assumptions.
An MQL (Marketing Qualified Lead) is a lead that marketing has assessed as meeting the criteria to be ready for a sales conversation, based on fit and behavioural signals. An SQL (Sales Qualified Lead) is a lead that sales has confirmed through direct interaction as having the budget, authority, need, and timeline to be a viable opportunity. MQL is a marketing designation based on indirect signals; SQL is a sales designation based on direct qualification. The criteria for each should be defined and agreed by both teams.
BANT (Budget, Authority, Need, Timeline) is the most widely known framework and remains useful for basic qualification. MEDDIC (Metrics, Economic Buyer, Decision Criteria, Decision Process, Identify Pain, Champion) is more detailed and better suited to complex enterprise sales. CHAMP (Challenges, Authority, Money, Prioritisation) reorders BANT to lead with the prospect’s challenges rather than budget. The best framework for any organisation is the one that most accurately predicts whether a prospect will close, which requires calibrating against your own sales data.
Marketing automation supports qualification by systematically collecting qualification data through forms and progressive profiling, tracking behavioural signals that indicate intent, applying lead scoring models that weight these signals to produce a qualification score, and triggering automatic stage changes and notifications when a lead reaches the qualification threshold. This allows marketing to qualify leads at scale and pass only the most sales-ready prospects to the sales team, without requiring manual review of every contact.
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