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.
When pipeline is down, the default reaction is to increase volume (more SDRs, more events). This is a flawed guess that ignores process efficiency. The real leverage comes from understanding the conversion effectiveness of existing activities, not just adding more inputs to a broken system.
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.
Your GTM process is a factory that turns raw materials (leads) into a product (pipeline). Just as a car factory rejects faulty parts, you must analyze your process to stop feeding it low-quality leads that SDRs discard, thereby eliminating massive marketing and sales waste.
CMO Ben Schechter argues that tracking raw lead count is a dangerous metric. A marketing leader can easily manipulate lead scoring to hit a volume target, flooding sales with low-quality prospects. This erodes sales team trust and causes them to stop following up on all marketing-generated leads.
Instead of maximizing the volume of prospects at the top of the funnel, strategically narrow your focus to fewer, high-potential accounts. This 'martini glass' approach prioritizes depth and engagement over sheer productivity, leading to better quality opportunities.
Adding qualification steps to a sales funnel weeds out bad-fit leads. This increases cost-per-lead but lowers overall customer acquisition cost (CAC) and boosts morale by letting salespeople focus only on high-intent, closable deals.
One company discovered that while MQLs were plentiful, they took 130 days to convert. In contrast, "hand-raiser" leads converted in just 12 days at a much higher rate. Focusing on conversion velocity reveals where to allocate resources for efficient growth.
Counterintuitively, removing qualification steps to boost lead volume consistently resulted in less profit. A higher cost to acquire a much higher-value customer ($5k to acquire $45k) is far more profitable than a low cost for a low-value one ($1k to acquire $5k), challenging the focus on CPL over LTV.
Instead of defensively protecting metrics like MQL volume, marketing leaders should proactively question their quality and impact on pipeline. This shifts the conversation from blame to curiosity, builds trust with sales, and positions marketing as a strategic revenue driver.
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.