Marketing qualified lead glossary illustration

Marketing qualified lead (MQL)

A plain-English guide for B2B sales and marketing teams.
Quick answer: A marketing qualified lead (MQL) is a prospect who has shown meaningful interest in your product — through actions like visiting your pricing page, downloading a guide, or engaging with emails — but hasn't been vetted for sales readiness yet. MQLs sit between raw leads and sales qualified leads (SQLs). In 2026, AI tools are accelerating the MQL-to-SQL handoff by enriching lead data and collecting qualification signals automatically via chatbots and on-site engagement.
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What is a marketing qualified lead?

A marketing qualified lead (MQL) is a prospect who has engaged with your marketing in a way that suggests genuine interest — but who hasn't yet been confirmed as ready for a sales conversation.

Think of it as a signal threshold: the lead has done enough (visited the right pages, downloaded content, attended a webinar) to stand out from general website traffic, but nobody has asked them whether they have budget, authority, or an active timeline.

The MQL stage exists to create a handoff point between marketing and sales. Marketing generates and nurtures interest. When a lead crosses the MQL threshold, it enters the qualification queue — where an SDR, an AI chatbot, or a lead qualification system evaluates whether the lead is ready to become an SQL.

MQL vs SQL: key differences

The MQL-to-SQL transition is where interest becomes opportunity. Getting this handoff wrong is one of the biggest sources of friction between sales and marketing.

MQL SQL
Based on Engagement and behavior signals Confirmed fit, intent, and readiness
How identified Lead scoring, page visits, content downloads Qualification conversation (human or AI)
Owned by Marketing Sales
Action needed Nurture or qualify further Schedule demo, call, or proposal
Risk if too loose SDRs waste time on unqualified leads Reps take meetings that go nowhere
Risk if too strict Good prospects stay stuck in nurture Pipeline stays thin despite traffic

The healthiest B2B teams treat this handoff as a documented SLA: marketing commits to delivering MQLs that meet specific criteria, and sales commits to following up within a defined window.

How to identify MQLs

Most teams use a combination of behavioral scoring and demographic fit to determine when a lead crosses the MQL threshold.

Behavioral signals (engagement)

Demographic fit

Practical tip: Avoid making your MQL definition purely behavioral. A competitor researcher who downloads everything isn't a lead. Combine engagement with at least one fit signal to avoid flooding your SDRs with noise.

Why it matters

The MQL concept exists to solve a specific problem: marketing generates a lot of interest, but not all interest is equal. Without a qualification layer, sales teams either drown in low-quality leads or — worse — ignore inbound entirely because they've lost trust in lead quality.

A well-defined MQL stage creates accountability. Marketing can measure what they produce (not just volume, but quality). Sales can trust that what they receive has been filtered. And the business can measure the full funnel: traffic → MQL → SQL → opportunity → revenue.

In 2026, the MQL stage is evolving. AI chatbots and qualification tools can accelerate the MQL-to-SQL handoff by collecting qualification data in real time — asking visitors about their company size, use case, and timeline during the first visit instead of waiting for an SDR to follow up days later.

Improving MQL quality

If your MQL-to-SQL conversion rate is low, the problem is usually one of these:

The fastest lever: add on-site qualification. Instead of waiting for a lead to accumulate engagement points over days or weeks, use an AI chatbot to ask qualifying questions on the first high-intent visit. A visitor who answers three questions about their company and use case gives you more signal in two minutes than a month of email opens.

FAQ

What is a marketing qualified lead?

A marketing qualified lead (MQL) is a prospect who has demonstrated interest through engagement signals — such as visiting key pages, downloading content, or clicking emails — but has not yet been vetted for sales readiness. MQLs sit between raw leads and sales qualified leads (SQLs) in the funnel.

What is the difference between MQL and SQL?

An MQL has shown behavioral interest (page visits, downloads, email engagement). An SQL has been further qualified against specific criteria like budget, authority, need, and timeline. The MQL-to-SQL handoff is where marketing's work becomes a sales opportunity.

How do you determine if a lead is an MQL?

Most teams use lead scoring — assigning points for engagement actions (page visits, content downloads, email opens) and demographic fit (company size, industry, title). When a lead crosses a threshold score, it becomes an MQL.

Why are MQLs important in B2B sales?

MQLs create a filter between raw traffic and sales engagement. Without MQL qualification, sales teams waste time on leads who aren't interested or don't fit. With it, reps focus on prospects who have already shown meaningful interest.

What is a good MQL-to-SQL conversion rate?

Rates vary by industry, but the important thing is the trend. If your rate is improving, your MQL criteria and nurture process are working. If it's declining, your MQL definition may be too loose or your qualification process has gaps.

Is the MQL dead in 2026?

Some argue that AI qualification makes MQLs obsolete because leads can be evaluated for sales readiness instantly. In practice, the MQL stage still matters for leads who show interest but aren't ready for a sales conversation yet — they need nurture, not a pitch.

How does AI improve MQL quality?

AI tools can enrich MQL data in real time — identifying company size, role, and intent signals automatically — and apply consistent scoring rules. AI chatbots can also engage MQLs on-site to collect qualification data that accelerates the MQL-to-SQL handoff.