To eliminate friction, Snowflake's marketing team, led by CMO Denise Pearson, abandoned MQLs. Instead, they focused solely on delivering qualified meetings for the sales team, treating sales as their primary customer whose success was paramount.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Instead of chasing quantifiable but often misleading metrics like MQLs or pipeline attribution, focus on qualitative feedback from sales. Successful brand marketing means the sales team enters 'warm rooms' where customers are already familiar with and receptive to the company, eliminating the need to start from zero.
Don't just hand signals to sales and expect them to act. Marketing should co-own enablement. A "Pipeline Wednesday" meeting is used to actively help the sales team connect specific marketing signals (e.g., account intent) to concrete messaging and outreach tactics.
Ditch MQLs. For sales-led motions, measure marketing on qualified pipeline (deals converting at >25%). For PLG motions, measure 'activated signups,' where users hit their 'aha moment.' This aligns marketing with quality and revenue, not volume.
MQLs should function as internal signals for the marketing team to orchestrate the next step in the buyer's journey, such as triggering a new automation. They are a delivery system within marketing, not a basket of leads to be handed to sales, which prevents sales from chasing low-quality signals.
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.