If you’ve been in a marketing or leadership role for any amount of time in a business that relies on lead-generation, you’ve likely heard some version of this question:
“How many leads did we get this month?”
It’s a fair question—but often the wrong one. Because not all leads are good leads. In fact, lead volume alone can be one of the most misleading success metrics in digital marketing.
I admit that I’m also guilty of looking at this metric at times and falling into the quantity vs. quality trap. Probably safe to guess that you don’t have a goal written into your digital marketing plan of flooding your CRM with a bunch of unqualified inquiries. It’s built to help you generate leads that convert, close, and create measurable ROI.
That requires a shift in mindset—from quantity to quality.
Chasing lead volume feels productive. It’s a metric that’s easy to measure, easy to track, and easy to celebrate. But when lead count becomes the primary focus, teams often lose sight of what matters: business outcomes.
Here’s what happens when lead quality isn’t prioritized or built into your digital marketing plan:
- You flood your sales team with poor-fit prospects who don’t convert
- You burn budget on channels that look good in dashboards but don’t deliver
- You celebrate vanity wins (like “300 new leads!”) that don’t move revenue
If your goal is 100 leads per month but only 3 of them are sales-qualified and just one closes—are you really succeeding? Or are you just spending time and money on activity that feels like progress, but isn’t?
This is exactly the type of misalignment the Digital Marketing Success Plan® START Planning Process was designed to solve. When you define success up front—based on real business metrics—you can plan digital marketing efforts that drive meaningful results.
I’ve seen this firsthand across hundreds of partnerships at VOLTAGE. The clients that win aren’t the ones with the flashiest campaigns or the most impressions. They’re the ones who understand their ideal customers, align marketing with sales, and focus every tactic on attracting the right leads—not just more leads.
Here’s how to put the focus properly on lead quality versus quantity–whether you do this as part of START Planning or in your own process and approach.
1. Define your ideal customer clearly (and quantitatively)
Start by getting alignment on who you want to attract. Not just vague personas like “decision-making Dan” or “marketing Mary.” Go deeper.
You need to define:
- Industry and verticals you serve best
- Company size, budget thresholds, or geography
- Pain points your product/service solves
- Purchase behavior or sales cycle length
Your marketing, sales, and leadership teams should all agree on what qualifies someone as a lead, a marketing-qualified lead (MQL), and a sales-qualified lead (SQL). That shared definition drives everything else.
When you get this wrong, everything else suffers—targeting, messaging, ad copy, website content, and even your reported metrics. Or, fuzzy or siloed definitions lead to frustration down the road with teams not seeing things the same way and spending a lot of time and energy to realize the need to take a step back.
2. Map your funnel to actual conversion metrics
It’s not enough to say, “We need more traffic.” You have to know how that traffic moves through the funnel—and how it translates into revenue.
This is why the Strategy phase of the START Planning Process is so critical. It forces you to document:
- Your current performance benchmarks
- The real math behind your funnel
- Where drop-offs happen
For example:
- 1,000 monthly site visitors
- 5% convert to leads = 50 leads
- 30% of those are qualified = 15 MQLs
- 20% of those close = 3 new customers
With an average deal size of $5,000, you’re bringing in $15,000/month. That’s a baseline. Now you can compare channels based on cost and performance.
3. Prioritize intent-based channels and content
If you want better leads, go where your best prospects are actively looking for solutions. These include:
- Bottom-of-funnel SEO (problem/solution-based keywords)
- Paid search ads with highly specific targeting
- Remarketing campaigns to re-engage past visitors
- Email nurture sequences for leads who aren’t ready to buy yet
Avoid defaulting to awareness-only tactics unless they’re part of a broader funnel strategy. Social ads, video views, and boosted posts can generate interest—but that doesn’t always translate into leads that convert. I’m not writing those off–I just want them to have shared accountability and attribution with the full funnel and set of channels and platforms.
4. Use disqualification as a positive metric
This is often overlooked. Most marketers focus on attracting the right people—but it’s just as important to keep the wrong ones out.
Tactics to consider:
- Qualifying questions on forms (e.g., “Do you have a $10K+ budget?”)
- Content that speaks directly to niche needs or challenges
- Clear statements on who your product/service is not for
Yes, your lead count might go down. That’s the point. If you can help your sales team avoid 10 unqualified calls per month, that’s time they can spend closing better-fit opportunities.
5. Align sales and marketing on what “good” looks like
This is a cultural shift as much as a tactical one. Sales and marketing must communicate frequently—ideally every week—about:
- Lead quality
- Feedback from the front lines
- Closed-won vs. closed-lost reasons
- Shifts in customer behavior
Your Digital Marketing Success Plan® should bake this into the process. If marketing is sending what it thinks are good leads, but sales isn’t closing them, your plan needs to evolve.
6. Tie lead quality to ROI in your reporting
Finally, don’t stop at reporting how many leads came in. Show how many were qualified, how many converted, and what the value of those deals was.
This is where the Review phase of the START Planning Process comes into play—connecting the dots between your tactics, metrics, and actual business performance.
Use dashboards that go beyond form fills and track:
- Cost per SQL
- Pipeline contribution per campaign
- Revenue per channel
That’s what stakeholders care about—and it’s what gets marketing a seat at the business strategy table.
Final Thought
The goal of digital marketing isn’t to generate the most leads—it’s to generate the right leads.
When you use a documented plan like the Digital Marketing Success Plan®, you stop chasing metrics that don’t matter and start building a system that drives real business growth.
If you’re tired of spending money on leads that don’t convert, it’s time to revisit your strategy. Start your planning process at https://thedmsp.com or grab the book and dive into the START Planning Process.
Because not all leads are good leads—and the ones that are deserve a better plan.