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What an MQA Is (and How to Define It So Sales Trusts It)

If you replace MQL with “MQA” but nothing changes in Sales behavior, you didn’t modernize your funnel — you just renamed it.

The point of MQAs (Marketing Qualified Accounts) isn’t to create a new label. It’s to create a shared contract between Marketing and Sales that answers:

Which accounts are showing real buying momentum — right now — and what should we do about it?

Why MQAs work better than MQLs

MQLs are person-based and often form-triggered. MQAs reflect how B2B buying actually happens:

  • buying committees, not lone leads
  • anonymous research before forms
  • intent spread across channels and time
  • accounts that “warm up” before they “convert”

A Sales-trustworthy MQA definition

Use a definition that includes four non-negotiables:

An MQA is an ICP-fit account showing recent, multi-touch engagement with mid/high-intent content, across one or more personas — indicating active evaluation or buying interest.

That definition works because it forces clarity on:

  1. Fit: are they your ICP?
  2. Recency: is this happening now?
  3. Depth: are they consuming buyer-stage content?
  4. Breadth: is it spreading across the committee?

The handoff contract (this is the secret)

An MQA is only valuable if it triggers a consistent response.

Make the contract explicit:

  • Marketing commits to qualifying accounts using agreed rules
  • Sales commits to an SLA (speed-to-lead) and a disposition (accepted / recycle / reject w/ reason)

If you don’t have those, you’ll end up in the same old “lead quality” debate—just with new terminology.

Next in the series: how to score engagement so an MQA is measurable, not subjective.

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