As a marketing agency that supports a variety of B2B businesses, we know how important the handoff point between a marketing and sales team can be. By the time a prospect fills out a form on your website, books a demo on your scheduler, or even replies to an email, they’ve probably done their fair share of research on your brand. In fact, many B2B buyers prefer to research brands before reaching out to them. This creates a simple rule: sales shouldn’t start “cold” when the buyer is already warm.
Marketing teams have a responsibility to equip sales teams with insights on their prospects’ journey and engagement with the brand, including what pages they viewed, what topics they searched for, and what stands out about their company. This helps sales team members show relevance in their first touchpoint with a prospect, which matters because personalization in sales messaging is now the norm.
The Problem: No Context Creates Friction and Wasted Motion
In most funnels, the marketing-to-sales handoff is essentially: name, email, company, and a form field or two. The sales team then spends a bunch of time doing detective work (or worse, sending a generic email to the prospect). The result is predictable:
- Slower “Speed-To-Lead” (and Lost Momentum). Every sales team knows that the odds of contacting, qualifying, and closing a deal drop dramatically with every passing minute.
- Less Relevance (and More Resistance). When buyers are already researching your brand, irrelevant and generic messaging stands out—in a bad way.
- Longer Sales Cycle (and More Frustration). The more time a sales team member has to spend relearning what the marketing team already knows about a lead, the more friction and frustration builds between the two teams.
The fix isn’t more dashboards, though. It’s a better handoff process with more data.
What Data Should Follow a Prospect From Marketing to Sales?
Think of this process in three layers: behavior, identity, and intent. The best marketing and sales teams turn data and analytics into practical actions that help sales teams win more.
1. Behavioral Engagement (“What They Did”)
Think of this as a prospect’s digital body language. Examples include:
- The contact’s engagement score.
- Pages they viewed on the website.
- Content they downloaded from the website.
- Marketing emails they opened and clicked through from.
- Ads they clicked through from.
- How often and how recently they engaged with the website.
- Any particular landing page or call-to-action that seems to resonate.
2. Enriched Identity (“Who They Are”)
This is where sales teams can integrate some passive personalization. Examples include:
- The company’s fit score.
- The contact’s job role and seniority.
- The contact’s persona and buying role.
- The company’s industry, size, and annual revenue.
- The contact’s and the company’s geography.
- Any other information you can scrape, gather, or query that may be relevant to your brand’s products and services (i.e., the company website’s technology stack).
3. Intent Signals (“What They Care About”)
This is where sales teams can make their outreach resonate the most. Examples include:
- What the contact searched for.
- When the contact joined the company.
- How many contacts from the company visited the website.
- If the company recently received a capital investment injection from private equity.
- If the company recently started hiring for a role similar to your products and services.
Turn Raw Activity Into “Sales Enablement”
Your sales team doesn’t need a clickstream or activity log though. They need a one-screen summary that helps them answer the question: “What should I say, and why?” A simple format looks like this:
Summary
This should contain the key data points that affect how your sales team qualifies a lead, such as:
- The first and last source a prospect found the brand through.
- The last time the prospect engaged with the brand.
- How well the prospect fits your ICPs, whether that’s a score or a simple “high”, “medium”, or “low”.
Lead Information
This should contain more structured information about your prospect, such as:
- Their job title and seniority.
- Their contact information.
- Their buying role.
- Their persona.
- Their company industry, size, and annual revenue.
Lead Intent
This should contain the key engagements a prospect had with a brand that hints toward their motivation, such as:
- If they viewed your pricing online.
- If they downloaded a particular piece of content.
- If they visited a particular service page on the website.
Suggested Message
Both marketers and sellers work in a fast-paced environment where it’s easier to iterate than create from scratch. Providing a sales team member an opener for them to use or work from is a great move. Something like: “Hey {contact.first_name}, it looks like you’ve been searching for help with {contact.interested_service}. I’m happy to hop on a call to see if it can help solve a particular problem you’re facing, or if we might be able to help out directly.”
Next Steps
This should reflect the marketing team’s suggestion for how the sales team activates a lead. That might be based on how warm the prospect is, how well they fit your ICPs, or even if they should skip a couple stages in the average lead lifecycle.
Make It Operational: Where This Data Should Live (and How It Should Flow)
A strong marketing-to-sales handoff should always abide by these three rules:
- Engagement Is Visible Inside the CRM. The sales team should not have to leave their CRM to understand a prospect. Many CRMs have their own data model for storing these data points and presenting them to sales teams in an organized way. Given how expensive a good CRM can be these days, marketing teams should use them to their fullest potential.
- Data Is Unified Across Systems (Not Trapped in Silos). If your marketing data lives in a platform like Google Analytics, your enrichment data lives in a platform like Apollo, and your form data lives in someone’s email inbox, the sales team will inevitably get an incomplete picture of the prospect. Customer Data Platforms (CDPs) are designed to stitch prospect behaviors and traits into a consistent profile that downstream tools can use.
- You Prioritize Signals Instead of Dumping Data. The fastest way to make a sales team ignore marketing insights is to overwhelm them. Keep the handoff brief and opinionated, highlight the signals that correlate with actionable pipeline progression, and iterate your handoffs over time.
Practical Tools That Can Support This (Lightly, Without Over-engineering)
You don’t need all of these, but these are our favorites:
- Analytics and Measurement Tools: Google Analytics
- CRMs and CDPs: HubSpot and Klaviyo
- Data Enrichment Tools: Apollo.io and Clay
Your exact technology stack may differ based on your team and existing solutions, but the pattern is pretty consistent: you track behavior, you enrich contacts and companies, and you sync it to your CRM for better marketing-to-sales handoffs.
Done well, this feels helpful. Done poorly, this feels intrusive. A good rule of thumb for both marketing and sales teams to live by: use engagement data to be relevant, not to prove you were watching them. Reference topics that your prospect seems interested in, not the exact page they looked at (e.g. “It looks like you’re interested in sales enablement” instead of “I saw you visited our sales enablement page at 1:31 AM this morning”).
Note: As always, ensure your pipeline aligns with consent and privacy regulations; many CRMs and CDPs document consent, or the “legal basis” for communications, as part of their data model.
The Payoff: Better Conversations, Better Timing, Better Conversion Rates
When the sales team receives a lead with clear context—including what they care about, how ready they are to buy, and why they might buy—they can respond faster, personalize confidently, and reduce redundant discovery questions. That’s what modern buyers in B2B environments expect, and it’s how you can turn your marketing activity into sales conversions (and frankly, get your sales teams to like you).