In Salesforce, Lead Stage and Lead Status represent two distinct ways to track your lead's progression through the buyer's journey.
Lead Stage is used to indicate where a person is in the buyer journey.
If you've integrated HubSpot and Salesforce, you may have noticed that Salesforce Lead Stages are similar to HubSpot Lifecycle Stages.
For reference, the standard HubSpot Lifecycle Stages include:
These stages represent where the lead is in your buyer's journey and help you determine, at a high level, what activity comes next for that prospect. For example, a marketing qualified lead may be enrolled in an automation that assigns a sales owner and creates a task for the sales team to follow up with the MQL to qualify them for fit and interest.
But, the Lead Stage alone does not supply all of the information needed to fully assess a prospect's status with your organization. Once the Lead Stage reaches Marketing Qualified Lead, the Lead Status field comes into play.
Lead Status indicates a lead’s progression from an MQL to a customer and is directly related to your sales team's interactions with the leads.
Once a lead reaches the MQL Lead Stage, the sales team begins their outreach. This field is usually used to indicate if they've attempted to contact the lead, if they've qualified the lead for an opportunity, or if they've determined a lead is unqualified.
In Salesforce, the default Lead Status options include:
Pro-Tip: Adding an additional picklist field to track these unqualified reasons gives your marketing team the insights they need to develop better re-engagement campaigns. You can create a Salesforce Validation Rule or use a Field Dependency to require that an "Unqualified Reason" is set when the Lead Status is changed to "Unqualified" to enhance your reporting and reactivation marketing efforts.
While these are the default options in Salesforce, it’s important to identify which status options work best for your team. If the default Lead Status options do not work, you can customize them for your business. For instance, you can use the following Lead Status categories to add more clarity for your sales team: New, Contacted, Working, Qualified, and Unqualified.
Now that we understand that the Lead Status represents the sales team's interactions with your prospect, it's time to design your Lead Status options in Salesforce. To set the Lead Status you'll use a Salesforce Lead Process. The Salesforce Lead Process can differ by Lead Record Type—just like Salesforce Opportunities and Sales Processes. The status options you define in this process will define the progress bar at the top of your lead records.
Now, you can see your Lead Status options in the Lead Status field and the progress bar on Lead records in Salesforce.
Once you've defined your Lead Status options in Salesforce, create a Lead Stage picklist to track the prospect's lifecycle.
Now, you can see the Lead Stage field on your Lead records in Salesforce.
Now that you've configured your Lead Stage and Lead Status in Salesforce, let's think about how to automate these fields.
Although your sales and marketing team can manage these manually, the goal should always be to automate processes where possible.
Here is the ideal framework for automating Lead Stage and Lead Status in Salesforce.
Now that we've established the basics of Lead Stage and Lead Status, it's time to implement them for your team. Lead Stage and Lead Status play a huge role in your overall Revenue Operations strategy as an organization. While the setup process may seem simple, the impact of managing the lead lifecycle process poorly can be detrimental.
Ready to dive deeper? Download our free Revenue Operations Guide to learn how to implement the Revenue Operations Framework at your organization.