What is an MQL (Marketing Qualified Lead)?A Marketing Qualified Lead (MQL) is a prospect who has demonstrated enough interest and fit to warrant sales development attention, based on predefined scoring criteria combining: firmographic fit (their company matches ICP criteria on size, industry, and role) and behavioral engagement (they have taken actions indicating genuine interest:
What is an MQL (Marketing Qualified Lead)?
A Marketing Qualified Lead (MQL) is a prospect who has demonstrated enough interest and fit to warrant sales development attention, based on predefined scoring criteria combining: firmographic fit (their company matches ICP criteria on size, industry, and role) and behavioral engagement (they have taken actions indicating genuine interest: visiting product pages, downloading content, attending webinars, requesting demos, or starting trials). MQLs represent the transition from marketing nurture to active sales development outreach: below MQL threshold stays in marketing nurture; above threshold gets SDR attention.
MQL Definition and Scoring Thresholds
Effective MQL definitions balance quality and volume: too strict and marketing generates insufficient leads for sales to work; too loose and SDRs waste time on low-fit prospects. The threshold is typically defined as a minimum combined score from a lead scoring model, with separate floors for both fit score and engagement score. A lead must meet both minimums, not just the combined threshold, to prevent very-high-engagement low-fit leads (e.g., a student researching your product for homework) from being treated like genuine MQLs. Review MQL definition quarterly against SQL acceptance rate and closed-won rate by MQL source to continuously improve the model.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is MQL still a valid metric in an ABM-driven world?
MQL has faced criticism in ABM-focused organizations because it is a contact-level metric that does not account for account-level buying dynamics. In pure ABM programs, MQA (Marketing Qualified Account) replaces MQL as the handoff metric. However, most SaaS companies run both inbound and ABM motions simultaneously: MQL remains valuable for inbound lead management while MQA governs ABM account-based handoffs. The two metrics are complementary, not mutually exclusive. The key is ensuring marketing and sales agree on which metric governs which source of demand (inbound = MQL, ABM = MQA) to avoid confusion in pipeline attribution.
How do I reduce the MQL-to-SQL rejection rate?
Common MQL rejection reasons and fixes: (1) Wrong job title (marketing targeting personas not aligned with actual buying committee): improve audience targeting in ad platforms and content distribution. (2) Wrong company size or industry: add ICP firmographic gates to MQL criteria. (3) Low intent signal (content download only, no buying intent indicator): require product-page visit or explicit demo/trial interest before MQL designation. (4) No contact attempt (SDR volume too high for follow-up capacity): either hire more SDRs or raise MQL threshold to reduce volume. (5) Poor data quality (bad email or phone number): implement contact verification at MQL creation and before SDR outreach.