If you’re reading this article, you’re probably no stranger to the sales funnel.
The sales funnel is a pretty easy concept — lots of people come in as leads at the top, they go through a series of steps, and a few people drop out the bottom as customers. Easy, right?
Where it gets a little murky is how you classify people as they move through the funnel. This is where we start to hear terms like "marketing qualified leads" and "sales qualified leads," or their acronyms: MQLs and SQLs.
These different categories of leads and customers are called lifecycle stages. Different companies often have different names for these stages. And, what's even more confusing is that many companies call them the same thing but have different definitions.
We want to help clear up this ambiguity and confusion. In this post, we'll help you understand lifecycle stages, and break down each stage with the most common definitions.
After that we'll give you some tips on which edits to make (and avoid making), and how lifecycle stages fit into the rest of your HubSpot ecosystem. Now let's get started!
At its core, lifecycle stages are just a setting that you apply to contacts or companies, to give you a more precise idea of where they're at in their buyer's journey.
We like to think of it as the 10,000 foot view: giving you an idea of where customers are, from their very first interaction with your company all the way through to being happy customers who are sending more business your way.
Since we’re a HubSpot Partner Agency, we’re going to use HubSpot’s lifecycle stages. That list includes:
Tip: if you're still deciding whether to purchase HubSpot, or which version to get, read our free HubSpot buying guide (no contact info necessary).
This is one of the easiest lifecycle stages to understand because, well, subscribers are subscribers. In other words, they’ve signed up to receive content from you but haven’t taken any other actions. They're very early in their buyer's journey.
People should be categorized as subscribers when they fill out a form to receive your newsletter or notifications about new blog posts. The subscriber lifecycle stage is also a great place to put leads that have been disqualified but are still interested in your content.
It doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to spend a lot of time trying to sell to your subscribers. The subscribers will typically be a large pool of people and it’s likely that the majority of them will never become customers.
What you should do is continue to give them content that’s valuable to them, and make sure there’s always an opportunity for them to “raise their hands” if they become more interested in what you have to offer. You can leverage HubSpot workflows to automate this nurturing process and respond to a lead's behavior.
Pro Tip: Even the subscribers who aren’t a fit for your core products and services can be valuable to your company. If they love the content you put out, they could become your biggest advocates in the marketplace. You may also be able to monetize this audience by creating secondary, more transactional products such as courses, branded products, or books.
Leads are the people who have shown some interest in the products or services you offer, but aren’t yet qualified beyond that.
Usually, someone gets classified as a lead once we know they have a problem we can help them solve or an opportunity we can help them achieve. But, we still don’t know if they have the budget required to work with us or if they’d be a good fit as one of our customers.
We typically know they have a relevant problem or opportunity because they’ve taken advantage of a top of the funnel offer. This may be downloading a piece of educational content, using an online tool, or taking a quiz.
This is also the lifecycle stage most commonly used when importing leads you’ve gathered offline from things such as trade shows or events.
You’ll want people to stay classified as leads until they’re either disqualified or they take an action that signals they’re ready to move up to the next lifecycle stage. As such, people may remain in the lead stage for quite some time.
This is the stage where things start getting serious. A marketing qualified lead is someone who the marketing department has determined is ready for a one-on-one follow-up from the sales team.
This is also the stage where you begin to see big difference between companies in the methods they use to classify different types of leads.
At the simplest level, you can designate someone as an MQL once they fill out a form for a bottom of the funnel (or decision stage) offer. This may be a product demo, product guide, or request for a quote or proposal.
However, classifying someone as a marketing qualified lead is usually a little more complex than that. First, you want to make sure that your marketing and sales departments agree on what “qualified” means.
You’ll also want to make sure that people with red flags don’t move up to this stage, regardless of whether they’ve filled out a bottom of the funnel offer or not. For example, if your company works with medium-sized enterprises, you don’t want to pass off a one-person company to your sales team just because that person downloaded a product guide.
Another thing you’ll want to make sure of at this stage is that you have all the information about the lead that your sales people will need. This will vary from company to company, but it usually includes at least their phone number, job title, and geographic region. You can use the form that gates your bottom of the funnel offer to ensure that you get all the necessary information.
In some companies, lead scoring may be used to designate someone as an MQL. This allows them to take more into consideration than just a single action like filling out a bottom of the funnel form.
This is another stage that can vary between companies, but the basic definition is generally the same. Sales qualified leads are leads that your sales team has accepted as qualified. It’s usually the process of moving a lead from MQL to SQL that varies.
Sometimes, MQLs get upgraded to SQLs after a sales person or sales manager reviews the lead’s information in your CRM and decides to pursue them.
Other times, the action that a lead took to get upgraded to an MQL in the first place will put them in touch with a salesperson, such as a request for a demo. The salesperson will then use that interaction to decide if the lead is truly qualified or not.
Another common practice is for salespeople to begin by trying to set up an initial call -- we usually refer to this as a connect call. The salesperson will typically send the lead a series of emails to try to get the lead on the phone for 20 minutes or so. The goal of that 20-minute call is to find red flags that disqualify the lead. If none are found, the lead gets upgraded to an SQL and the salesperson continues to work with them.
If you’ve designated MQLs correctly and your marketing and sales departments are properly aligned, nearly all of them should become SQLs rather quickly.
Pro Tip: If you’re using HubSpot’s Sales Starter or Sales Pro, you can leverage email templates, sequences, and meetings links to make the process of requesting and scheduling a connect call much easier.
People get moved to the opportunity stage once a real sales conversation has begun. This usually means that you have a clear idea of who the decision maker is and a pretty good idea of what products or services they’re interested in, how much the deal will be worth, and what the timeline is for them to make a decision.
For example, we move people to the opportunity stage once we’ve had a discovery meeting and they’ve requested a proposal.
This one’s pretty clear, customers are people who have decided to buy from you. How long people stay classified as a customer, though, usually depends on the type of business you have.
For example, if you work with people on a recurring or ongoing basis, people usually stay classified as customers for as long as they’re continuing to work with you.
If your business is more transactional in nature and people make one or more repeat purchases, it’s up to you how long people should stay classified as customers. You may decide that, once someone makes a purchase from you, they stay classified as customers. Or you may want to downgrade their lifecycle stage if they haven’t bought from you in a predetermined amount of time.
Evangelists are people who are advocates for you. Some companies classify anyone who refers business their way as evangelists. Other companies put all past customers in this category (as long as the customer was happy with the product and/or service). Both of these are good options, but you'll need to decide which one is best for your company and ensure that the definition remains consistent across the company.
If you’re using HubSpot, you’ll also have a lifecycle stage option for “other.” We use this as a catch-all category that we further define with a second custom field. We call that second field “Other Clarification” and have options such as vendor, influencer, media contact, etc.
The definitions above might not line up perfectly with your sales process, so HubSpot allows you to edit them. To do this, you'll go to your Settings > Objects > Contacts, and you'll see this "Lifecycle Stage" tab for settings.
On this page, you can set up some basic automation, advanced workflows, etc, especially if you want to get granular about advancing people from one stage to the next automatically. There's some upfront setup here, but if you do it with a clear understanding of your stages, you'll save yourself a lot of time in the long run.
Bear in mind that life cycle stages, while they apply to contacts and companies, they have to be the same stages for both records. You'll edit them on the contact record, and then you'll see those edits applied to the dropdowns for both contact records and company records.
HubSpot also has some pre-built settings in here, such as the ability to sync life cycle stages between contacts and companies. The way this works is anytime a company updates their life cycle stage, the contact can update to match it.
Oftentimes when we get clients who are new to HubSpot, they really want to jump in and edit these. Maybe marketing qualified lead doesn't mean anything to you. Maybe you've got a sales process with your own names for the stages that people go through from lead all the way to becoming a customer, but we highly recommend to minimize the editing that you do in here.
Why?
In these instances, we highly recommend clients take look at all these life cycle stages, apply their own definitions to the stages where necessary, and to document that (along with when they're using HubSpot's definitions).
There will often be one or two lifecycle stages you want to add. One we see all the time is the "former customer" stage. Maybe you've got a subscription or retainer setup for your product or service, something happening on a long-term basis. What happens if they churn?
We usually want to know who those people are very quickly in our CRM, so we often add a former customer contact here.
There are two properties that HubSpot gives you:
We get quite a few people that watch these videos and reach out to us and say, "hey, I'm looking to start using HubSpot. I just want to make sure that it can support the processes that I have and that I can see where everybody's at in that process in my CRM."
Meanwhile, we also get a lot of people who are using HubSpot and tell us, "I know I could be getting more clarity from this tool, but it's a little bit of a mess. Our data is a mess. We haven't really thought through how we're going to have this process set up in HubSpot, or how we have it set up now. It really needs to change."
Lifecycle stages are the foundation of that. It all starts with that lifecycle stage. What are the stages we need? What are their definitions?
With all that said, lifecycle stages aren't the only tools we have. Take a look at this chart, which helps illustrate how lifecycle stages relate to other HubSpot tools, and how they can all work together for a clearer buyer journey.
Be sure note to confuse lifecycle stages with lead score or lead status — you can get a better understanding of the difference with our article on lead scoring.
We also see too many teams using deal stages when they should be using lifecycle stages — creating deals far too early in the process, which leads to more data entry for your team, and less clarity around your actual open opportunities. This then starts to screw with things like forecasting, which creates its own set of problems.
We hope this guide helps you clear up lifecycle stages for your marketing and sales team so you can focus less on what each stage is and more on moving those leads through the funnel. If you have any questions unique to your company, get in touch and we’ll be happy to help!