Create an effective lead scoring system in 7 steps

Lead scoring solves an important problem… it keeps your sales team focused on only your best opportunities, so they aren’t wasting time on dead end leads.

A good lead scoring model can help you prioritize leads by:

how likely they are to purchase,
purchase size, and
purchase timeframe

… so your sales team is always focused on the hottest, biggest prospects.

You can also use a lead scoring system to:

Identify and target leads that need nurturing — Lower scoring leads may need additional nurturing to increase their interest and engagement. With our marketing automation, you can segment your leads with a range of scores and drop them into nurturing campaigns built specifically to develop them into sales-ready leads.

Test assumptions about your target market and sales process — How well do you understand the characteristics of your customers and the pattern of behavior that leads to a purchase? You can think of your lead scoring as a predictive model and continue to refine and improve it over time. If it’s accurate, you can use the leads in your pipeline to forecast your revenue.

Identify your “raving fans” and “net promoters” — Lead scoring tools can be used to track the engagement of your customers over time, so you identify extremely satisfied, highly-engaged fans of your company. These customers are often ready to recommend you when the opportunity presents itself, and you can encourage that with automated campaigns. These champions of your company deserve a little special treatment.

Standardize how leads are discussed and evaluated — By giving marketing and sales a common language for discussing the quality and quantity of leads, they’ll naturally align themselves. Marketing will have a numerical value of how important each lead factor is, and they can alter their inbound marketing to target specific factors to generate more leads that match specific criteria.

Further refine your marketing messages — You may find that your best leads respond to slightly different marketing. By segmenting those contacts that are the best match for your business, you can test different approaches that might not work for less interested leads. You may be able to contact these leads more often or be more aggressive with your calls to action.

 

Your lead scoring system is only as good as its rules…

Some of the most common mistakes are:

Failing to score on both fit and interest — Lead characteristics (fit) are important, and their behavior (interest) is important. You need multiple rules from both categories and points spread more or less evenly between them, so you are accessing leads along both dimensions.

Score leads by fit and behavior

Scoring on whim — It’s easy to look at a rule and say, “Well, that’s important so we’ll give it XX points.” But, this guesstimation is unlikely to create a logical distribution of points. You’ll end up with an unbalanced system that allows leads to score highly by triggering a few big rules. The process outlined below will help you avoid this problem by asking you to divide points among categories of rules, so you start with a balanced point distribution, before dividing them among rules.

Using a lead scoring system that is too simple — It’s true that there is power in simplicity, but a lead scoring system with only a few rules will not be nuanced enough to identify and prioritize your best leads. You’ll be able to divide “okay” leads from “bad” leads, but your “best of the best” leads won’t be at the top of the pile where they belong. You can’t expect 3 or 4 rules to distinguish your ready-to-buy leads from the lukewarm from the bad.

What follows is a 7 step plan for identifying those lead scoring rules that identify your best, most interested prospects. If you follow these steps you’ll create a set of lead scoring rules with enough complexity to effectively prioritize your leads and you’ll have a categorically balanced point distribution that takes both fit and behavior into account.


Begin by establishing the minimum criteria a lead must pass to become a customer. These are inflexible qualifications. If it’s not truly essential, don’t list it here.

For instance, your customer may need to be 18 years of age or older. Or, they might have to be within a regional service area.


Next, identify those qualities that your target market usually possesses. If you are familiar with your existing customer base, you’ll probably be able to list many of these attributes quickly.

In contrast to the minimum qualifications of Step 1, these are common characteristics of your customers but not necessarily essential.

The point is to find those prospects that are most like your typical customer. If they are similar to your existing customer base, they are probably also a fit for your product.

This may be a question your marketing team is better equipped to answer because they’ve probably done extensive research into who your target market is so that they can find and speak to them with tailored messages. But, your sales team probably has some meaningful input here as well because they are speaking to the market day in and day out.


Now you want to identify characteristics of the “perfect” customer so that these leads earn a higher score.

Consider what makes some leads better than others… what are the qualities and characteristics of your ideal leads? This is a question better posed to your sales team but don’t neglect to get marketing’s input.

These might be things like a certain size budget, a deal with a contact in upper management, or a short timeframe to purchase.


We are now shifting focus from the characteristics and qualities of the lead to the behavior of the lead. These rules will help identify the most highly engaged and interested leads.

Begin by listing all possible behavior leads can engage in. While some behaviors are more important than others, it can be helpful to assign a point value to all behavior (even if it is a very small value). So don’t leave anything out just because it seems unimportant.

Consider using:

  • Email opens
  • Email clicks
  • Email replies
  • Email forwards
  • Social media shares
  • Web page visits
  • Website sessions
  • Requests to contact
  • Downloads and form submissions
  • Free trials
  • Product demos

If you have a follow-up campaign, break it down into individual behaviors. What are the different calls to action it contains?

Some of these behaviors will be “critical conversion behaviors” (behaviors that the majority of your leads go through prior to becoming customers). These might be things like a free trial or requesting a sales demo. A thorough analysis of your Google Analytics data should make these behaviors obvious.

Mark your critical conversion behaviors with a star so you can given them appropriate emphasis when it is time to tie points to rules.


For many companies a straightforward 1 – 100 lead scoring scale will be sufficient but there are additional options opened up by adding digits to your scoring structure.

If your company deals with different types of leads, you could use the thousands digit to classify a lead. For instance, in B2B markets you might classify leads as “small business,” “medium business,” or “large business” with a 1, 2, or 3. So a lead with a score of 2089 would be a medium sized business rated with a score of 89.

If you identified minimum qualifications in Step 1, you can use a lead’s score to qualify them aside from other factors. This way a bad lead never makes its way to your sales team (no matter how many behavior-based rules they trigger). To do this, you could give out blocks of 100 points for specific “must have” criteria, so a lead only reaches your threshold for qualification if they match all those necessary criteria.

For instance, you may need leads located in a certain region of the United States, have a contact in a specific department, and are in a certain industry. By giving out 100 points for each of these criterion, a lead only becomes sales-ready when it reaches 300 points. The tens and single digits further refine the score on the basis of more malleable lead characteristics and engagement. So a lead with a score of 389 would be passed to the sales team but one with a score of 289 would not.


Now that you have a system and a set of rules, it’s a matter of distributing your points.

As I mentioned earlier, it is tempting to look at a rule and give it a point value because it’s pretty easy to judge the importance of each rule based simply on logic, but this can lead to problems so resist the temptation. Instead, begin by assigning a maximum value to categories of rules. From there you can distribute points to individual rules in each category.

This way you’ll end up with a balanced system that gives proper weight to different factors. This approach will prevent a lead scoring system that scores leads highly simply because they match your target market or display highly engaged behavior — it will take a bit of both to achieve a high score.

You may want to divide your points evenly between characteristic rules (Steps 1-3) and behaviors (Step 4) so that you give appropriate weight to fit and interest based rules.

If a lead can only earn 50 points (out of 100) from behavior, they’ll probably never make it to the top unless they also match some of your ideal characteristics. But 50 points is enough that engagement is a major factor in a high score, and there is plenty of opportunity for engaged leads to raise their score.

You may want to give equal weight to the “good fit” rules you created in Step 2 and the “ideal prospect” rules you created in Step 3 so that your best leads have the opportunity to distinguish themselves. So maybe distribute 25 points (out of 100) go toward “good fit” and an “ideal” lead can earn an additional 25 points.

You may also want to give equal weight to “critical conversion behaviors” and “interest indicating” behaviors. This way a lead can receive a high rating for interest but they won’t rank as high as someone who has also engaged in critical behaviors.

You can vary the specific proportion of points according to your experience with your prospects. The important thing is that you are dividing up your points along categories in logical ways before assigning those points to individual rules. This way you can be sure that the distribution of points leads to meaningful, well-balanced scores.


As long as you continue to make adjustments your lead scoring system will continue to improve over time. Create a schedule for reviewing its performance. Every 30 days might be a good time frame in the beginning.

Once you have 30 days or more of data you can begin to do some analysis:

Were there low scoring leads that ended up converting?

Were there many highly scored leads that didn’t convert?

Try to identify new lead scoring rules or adjustments in point distribution that could have prevented these scenarios. Focus on the low scoring leads that ended up converting, especially.

Some great leads just won’t convert so you should expect some inconsistencies there, but you want to be sure you are identifying all your best leads. A high number of low-scoring leads that end up converting indicate that your current scoring system might not be identifying all your best leads. If you examine these leads closely you may find additional rules that would have included them.

It’s unlikely that your lead scoring system will be perfect right off the bat but as long as your average lead score for “prospects who end up converting” is higher than the average lead score of “those who didn’t convert,” you know you are on the right track.

Using Lead Scoring…

Our lead scoring tool is extremely flexible.

You can score contacts and you can score deals (or both). You access lead scoring in the upper left-hand corner of the “Contacts” page:

Access lead scoring

If you have a variety of products or different markets, you can set up as many distinct lead scoring programs as you want. You can also create distinct lead scores along different dimensions. For instance, you could have separate scores for characteristics and engagement. You could have different scores for email interaction and site tracking.

These lead scoring programs can house an unlimited number of rules. The rules can be based on any contact field (including custom fields), behavior such as email opens and forwards that are automatically tracked, and website behavior tracked by Site Tracking.

Mautive’s lead scoring is unique in that you can use lead scores within automations. You could have automations that adjust a lead’s score based on where they fall on if/then statement or increase their score after they open a particular campaign.

Change points within automations

You can also use lead scores to trigger automations. You could have an automation that automatically distributes leads once they cross a threshold score or send an email inviting the lead to participate in a sales consultation or product demo to close the sale.

Trigger automations with lead scores

Lead scoring is a powerful marketing automation tool. A quality set of lead scoring rules can help your marketing department create better leads and help your sales team convert more leads by focusing their efforts on the highest quality leads.

Any time you invest into creating and perfecting your lead scoring rules will continue to pay off as each new lead is handled according to their exact fit and interest and you are able to focus your time exactly where it matters most.

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