CloudPay stopped using the word "lead" and adopted "signal" instead. This semantic shift prevents sales reps from chasing a single junior contact and encourages them to research and target the entire buying committee (CFO, CHRO) at the interested account.
Don't just measure SDR calls and emails. Systematically track the *reason* for outreach—the sales trigger. Was it an intent signal, a form fill, or cold outreach? This crucial data reveals which initial signals actually lead to the best outcomes and deserve more investment.
Friction between sales and marketing often stems from using separate definitions for a Marketing Qualified Lead (MQL) and a Sales Qualified Lead (SQL). The most effective approach is to have one unified definition: a potential customer that sales can realistically close. This focuses both teams on the ultimate goal of revenue generation.
Despite generating 1,000 leads a month (3x previous volume), CloudPay's marketing team saw the sales pipeline's dollar value fall. This forced a radical shift from a volume-based "net fishing" approach to a quality-focused, account-based "spear phishing" strategy.
The "Marketing" in ABM creates resistance from non-marketing teams, pigeonholing the initiative. Using broader terms like "Account-Based Strategy" or "Account-Based Engagement" repositions it as a company-wide GTM motion, dramatically improving adoption across sales, customer success, and leadership.
Top-performing companies are abandoning traditional metrics like MQLs. They now focus on understanding the entire prospecting process—from lead creation to BDR/SDR engagement—to generate stronger pipeline, higher win rates, and more revenue with less wasted effort.
In B2B sales with multiple decision-makers, tracking individual MQLs is a "lazy metric" that misrepresents buying intent. Success depends on identifying and engaging the entire buying group. Marketing's goal should be to qualify the group, not just a single lead.
To overcome the perception that ABM is just a marketing initiative, leadership considered renaming it "Account-Based Selling." This simple change in terminology helps position the strategy as a sales-centric approach, emphasizing that the AE is in the driver's seat, not just receiving leads.
CloudPay stopped attributing opportunities to single sources like "marketing" or "sales." Analysis showed multiple departments influenced every deal, rendering attribution a source of pointless internal arguments. They still use multi-touch attribution at the campaign level, but not to assign inter-departmental credit.
A traditional contact-based funnel (Lead > MQL > SQL) is inadequate for B2B. Shift to an account-based funnel that maps target accounts to stages like "Awareness" or "Engaged." The primary GTM goal then becomes progressing entire accounts from one stage to the next for a more accurate view of pipeline health.
To create genuine alignment, CloudPay's CMO changed his personal KPI from lead volume to the dollar value of sales-ready pipeline, a number co-signed by sales. This makes marketing directly accountable for generating valuable opportunities and forces them to operate like sales.