Lead Definition & Qualification Strategy
Overview
For lead-generation clients, the single most important alignment to establish early is a shared definition of what constitutes a good lead. Without this, reporting becomes ambiguous, client satisfaction suffers, and retention is at risk. This framework applies directly to clients like [1], [2], and [3], but generalizes to any engagement where the deliverable is leads rather than direct sales.
The Core Question
Why is this client paying us?
The answer is almost always one of two things: leads or sales. Anchoring every account management conversation to this question prevents scope drift and keeps reporting focused on what the client actually cares about.
Qualified Lead vs. Price-Shopper
Not all form fills or phone calls are equal. A useful working distinction:
| Type | Description | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Price-shopper | Someone asking "how much does X cost?" with no stated intent to buy | Low — unlikely to convert, inflates volume metrics |
| Qualified buyer | Someone actively shopping for a solution and comparing vendors | High — real pipeline, worth client's sales team time |
Example (from practice): For an Overhead Door client, someone asking "what does a new overhead door cost?" is a price-shopper. Someone saying "I need a new overhead door and I'm looking for the best option" is a qualified lead. The distinction matters because clients will judge the engagement on the quality of leads, not just the count.
Establishing the Definition with a Client
This conversation should happen at or before the first account management meeting — not after the first reporting cycle.
Recommended approach:
1. Ask, don't assume. Open with: "How does your sales team define a lead worth following up on?"
2. Listen more than you talk. The client's own language and examples are more useful than any framework you bring in.
3. Document the agreed definition and reference it in every reporting conversation.
4. Revisit periodically. Client definitions of a "good" lead evolve as their business changes.
Client-Type Considerations
Different client types attract different lead profiles, which affects how qualification is framed:
- B2B clients (e.g., Citra Casa — sells only to other businesses): Leads should be decision-makers or procurement contacts at target companies. Consumer inquiries are noise.
- B2C / home services clients (e.g., Exterior Renovations — homeowners seeking siding, decking, etc.): Leads should show intent to purchase, not just curiosity about pricing.
- Mixed B2B/B2C clients (e.g., Overhead Door — serves both commercial and residential): Requires separate qualification criteria for each segment, agreed upon explicitly.
Connection to Account Management Practice
This framework is foundational to the account management role. When Ben San Fratello began transitioning into account management (starting with Citra Casa and Reynolds/Exterior), Mark Hope's first coaching point was precisely this: understand why the client is paying, and make sure both sides agree on what a good outcome looks like.
Related: [4] — the same "why are they paying us" framing informs how pre-call decks are structured for new prospects.
Action Items & Reminders
- Confirm lead definition with Citra Casa at the Friday onboarding meeting.
- Confirm lead definition with Reynolds/Exterior in the follow-up meeting with Chris the following week.
- Document agreed definitions in the respective client records in HubSpot.