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B2B glossarySalesQualified meeting

Qualified meeting

Qualified meeting

Qualified meeting

Sales

A booked call or meeting with a prospect who meets your ICP criteria and has confirmed genuine interest in exploring your solution.

A booked call or meeting with a prospect who meets your ICP criteria and has confirmed genuine interest in exploring your solution.

What is Qualified meeting?

What is Qualified meeting?

What is Qualified meeting?

A qualified meeting is a scheduled and attended conversation with a prospect who meets your defined ICP criteria, has a confirmed problem your solution addresses, and has sufficient authority or influence over the purchasing decision to make the meeting commercially valuable. The qualified label distinguishes meetings that represent genuine pipeline potential from meetings that are simply booked, regardless of whether the prospect has the right fit, problem, or budget to actually buy.

Tracking qualified meetings separately from total meetings booked is essential for measuring outbound effectiveness accurately. A campaign that books 20 meetings from an ICP-misaligned list and a campaign that books 15 meetings from a well-qualified list may appear to favour the first on raw meeting counts, but if only 3 of the 20 are qualified and 11 of the 15 are qualified, the second campaign has dramatically better efficiency.

The definition of qualified meeting should be agreed between marketing, SDRs, and AEs before measurement begins. The most common definition requires: prospect is at a company meeting ICP firmographic criteria, the specific contact has a relevant job function and seniority, and a minimum of one of the following is confirmed: a real pain statement, a budget indication, or a defined evaluation timeline. Some teams also require a confirmed next step to be agreed before the meeting counts as qualified.

Incentivising SDRs on total meetings booked without a qualified meeting quality threshold creates perverse incentives where meeting volume is maximised at the expense of meeting quality. AEs end up spending time on unqualified meetings while the metric looks healthy. Qualified meeting rate, calculated as qualified meetings divided by total meetings booked, is the better SDR performance metric.

For sales teams, the value is less about terminology and more about decision quality. A strong definition lets managers inspect deals the same way across reps, compare conversion honestly, and spot problems before they show up as a missed quarter. It usually becomes more useful when it is defined alongside ICP, Qualification, and SQL.

A qualified meeting is a scheduled and attended conversation with a prospect who meets your defined ICP criteria, has a confirmed problem your solution addresses, and has sufficient authority or influence over the purchasing decision to make the meeting commercially valuable. The qualified label distinguishes meetings that represent genuine pipeline potential from meetings that are simply booked, regardless of whether the prospect has the right fit, problem, or budget to actually buy.

Tracking qualified meetings separately from total meetings booked is essential for measuring outbound effectiveness accurately. A campaign that books 20 meetings from an ICP-misaligned list and a campaign that books 15 meetings from a well-qualified list may appear to favour the first on raw meeting counts, but if only 3 of the 20 are qualified and 11 of the 15 are qualified, the second campaign has dramatically better efficiency.

The definition of qualified meeting should be agreed between marketing, SDRs, and AEs before measurement begins. The most common definition requires: prospect is at a company meeting ICP firmographic criteria, the specific contact has a relevant job function and seniority, and a minimum of one of the following is confirmed: a real pain statement, a budget indication, or a defined evaluation timeline. Some teams also require a confirmed next step to be agreed before the meeting counts as qualified.

Incentivising SDRs on total meetings booked without a qualified meeting quality threshold creates perverse incentives where meeting volume is maximised at the expense of meeting quality. AEs end up spending time on unqualified meetings while the metric looks healthy. Qualified meeting rate, calculated as qualified meetings divided by total meetings booked, is the better SDR performance metric.

For sales teams, the value is less about terminology and more about decision quality. A strong definition lets managers inspect deals the same way across reps, compare conversion honestly, and spot problems before they show up as a missed quarter. It usually becomes more useful when it is defined alongside ICP, Qualification, and SQL.

A qualified meeting is a scheduled and attended conversation with a prospect who meets your defined ICP criteria, has a confirmed problem your solution addresses, and has sufficient authority or influence over the purchasing decision to make the meeting commercially valuable. The qualified label distinguishes meetings that represent genuine pipeline potential from meetings that are simply booked, regardless of whether the prospect has the right fit, problem, or budget to actually buy.

Tracking qualified meetings separately from total meetings booked is essential for measuring outbound effectiveness accurately. A campaign that books 20 meetings from an ICP-misaligned list and a campaign that books 15 meetings from a well-qualified list may appear to favour the first on raw meeting counts, but if only 3 of the 20 are qualified and 11 of the 15 are qualified, the second campaign has dramatically better efficiency.

The definition of qualified meeting should be agreed between marketing, SDRs, and AEs before measurement begins. The most common definition requires: prospect is at a company meeting ICP firmographic criteria, the specific contact has a relevant job function and seniority, and a minimum of one of the following is confirmed: a real pain statement, a budget indication, or a defined evaluation timeline. Some teams also require a confirmed next step to be agreed before the meeting counts as qualified.

Incentivising SDRs on total meetings booked without a qualified meeting quality threshold creates perverse incentives where meeting volume is maximised at the expense of meeting quality. AEs end up spending time on unqualified meetings while the metric looks healthy. Qualified meeting rate, calculated as qualified meetings divided by total meetings booked, is the better SDR performance metric.

For sales teams, the value is less about terminology and more about decision quality. A strong definition lets managers inspect deals the same way across reps, compare conversion honestly, and spot problems before they show up as a missed quarter. It usually becomes more useful when it is defined alongside ICP, Qualification, and SQL.

Qualified meeting — example

Qualified meeting — example

A sales team tracks qualified meeting rate alongside meeting volume. After introducing a qualification checklist that SDRs complete before a meeting is marked as qualified, total meetings per month remain at 45 but qualified meetings drop from the assumed 45 to 28. The AE team's close rate on these meetings improves from 18% to 31%, validating that previous conversion problems were primarily a lead quality issue rather than a closing skills problem. Pipeline efficiency improves even though raw meeting volume is unchanged.

A B2B sales team uses Qualified meeting as a working rule in weekly pipeline reviews. Managers inspect a sample of deals, compare rep judgment against actual deal behavior, and tighten the definition until everyone is using the same bar. They also make sure it connects cleanly to ICP and Qualification so the definition is not trapped inside one team.

Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions

Who should decide whether a meeting is qualified — the SDR or the AE?
The AE who attends the meeting should make the final determination after the meeting has occurred. The SDR ensures minimum ICP criteria are met before booking. The AE confirms after the call whether the meeting met the full qualification standard. Tracking both the SDR's pre-booking qualification and the AE's post-meeting classification reveals where qualification gaps occur in the process.
What is the typical conversion rate from booked meeting to qualified meeting?
For well-run outbound programmes targeting strong ICPs, 60% to 80% of booked meetings should qualify as genuinely qualified after the call. Below 50% suggests ICP targeting, SDR qualification criteria, or list quality problems upstream of the meeting stage. Above 90% may indicate qualification criteria are too loose.
How does show rate affect qualified meeting metrics?
Account for show rate when evaluating campaign efficiency. A campaign producing 20 booked meetings with a 60% show rate produces 12 attended meetings. Of those, 70% qualify: 8.4 qualified meetings. Another campaign producing 15 booked meetings with a 90% show rate and 80% qualification rate produces 10.8 qualified meetings from fewer bookings. Show rate is part of the efficiency calculation.
Can a meeting be qualified even if no budget has been confirmed?
Yes, if the other qualification criteria are sufficiently strong. Many enterprise buyers do not discuss budget until later in the evaluation. A confirmed problem, clear decision-making role, and a defined evaluation timeline can constitute a qualified meeting even without explicit budget confirmation. Define your specific qualified meeting criteria in advance and apply them consistently rather than retroactively.
Should I track qualified meetings by source?
Yes. Qualified meeting rate by source reveals which channels are producing genuinely fit opportunities versus volume that looks good on booking reports but underperforms in the pipeline. Outbound, inbound, referral, and event leads typically have different qualified meeting rates. This data informs channel investment decisions far more accurately than raw meeting volume by source.

Related terms

Related terms

Related terms

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