What Makes a Lead Worth Contacting?
Most CRMs are full of companies that should never have been contacted. The cost of that mistake is not just a low reply rate; it is the reputational drag of being remembered as a sender of irrelevant messages. The fix is upstream: a clearer answer to a simple question — is this lead worth contacting at all?
Company fit
Does the company match the size, model and maturity the product is built for? Fit is the floor; without it, nothing else matters.
Sector relevance
Even within the right size band, some sectors will adopt and some will not. Sector relevance keeps the team focused on the markets where the product actually wins.
Timing signals
Hiring, funding, launches and expansion are timing signals. They suggest a window is open. The absence of any signal is itself information.
Business need
Is there a plausible reason this company should care today? Not in theory — today.
Budget or growth indicators
Public indicators of budget or growth — headcount changes, recent rounds, expansion announcements — help separate the accounts that can act from the ones that cannot.
Geographic relevance
Region, language and time zone matter more than most lists assume. A perfectly qualified account in the wrong geography is still the wrong account.
Decision-maker clarity
Can the team identify the right person or buying group? If not, the touch is a guess.
Message relevance
Is there a specific, defensible angle for this account? If the only message the team can write is generic, the answer is no.
Reputational risk
Some contacts cost more than they earn — sensitive industries, fragile moments, public scrutiny. A good scoring system flags them.
Human approval
Every other criterion feeds into one final step: a person decides. The best sales systems do not treat every company as a target. They help identify which companies are genuinely worth approaching.