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Demand GenerationMarketing Strategy

Generate High-Quality Leads for B2B Sales: Strategies That Actually Work

OSLO HQ28 July 2025
Generate High-Quality Leads for B2B Sales: Strategies That Actually Work

Why Lead Quality Beats Lead Quantity

61% of marketers cite lead generation as their top challenge (HubSpot State of Marketing). But most lead generation programmes are optimised for volume, not quality. A pipeline full of unqualified leads costs more to work than it generates in revenue.

The shift from quantity to quality starts with a clear ICP: not just industry and company size, but specific signals that indicate a prospect is likely to buy, buy soon, and retain.

Six Strategies That Prioritise Quality

1. ICP development from closed-win analysis: Map your best customers—not your most common leads—and build targeting from that. Segment campaigns by ICP tier. Different messaging for different segments.

2. LinkedIn targeting: Sponsored content and message ads with pain-point-driven messaging. Not feature announcements—problems you solve. Use LinkedIn's account targeting to reach buying committees, not just job titles.

3. Account-based marketing: Intent-driven playbooks with personalised campaigns for tier-1 accounts. Identify accounts showing research behaviour in your category and hit them with coordinated multi-channel outreach.

4. Content authority: SEO-optimised resources, case studies, and explainer videos that attract buyers actively researching solutions like yours. Content that educates your ICP builds trust before the first conversation.

5. Marketing automation: Lead scoring and qualification workflows that filter out unqualified leads before they reach sales. Only pass prospects who meet your SQL definition.

6. Landing page optimisation: Single, clear conversion offers. Reduce form fields. Add social proof adjacent to the CTA. Test headlines. Small improvements in conversion rate compound quickly at scale.

The Alignment Framework

Lead generation without sales-marketing alignment produces volume without revenue. Shared metrics—sales-accepted leads, pipeline influence, and MQL-to-SQL conversion rate—create accountability on both sides.

Marketing owns MQL quality. Sales owns speed-to-follow-up and conversion. Both own the SQL definition—written down, agreed, and reviewed quarterly.

When both teams measure themselves against pipeline and revenue rather than their own departmental metrics, lead quality problems solve themselves faster.