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The Aged Lead Re-Qualification Sweep: Running a 60-Minute Team Working Session Where Reps Pull Every Marketing Lead That Was Never Properly Worked, Re-Score It Against a Hard Qualification Bar, and Build a Re-Engagement Plan That Turns Forgotten Pipeline Into Real Meetings — a 60-Minute Sales Training

📖 2,058 words⏱ 9 min read5/22/2026

The Aged Lead Re-Qualification Sweep: Running a 60-Minute Team Working Session Where Reps Pull Every Marketing Lead That Was Never Properly Worked, Re-Score It Against a Hard Qualification Bar, and Build a Re-Engagement Plan That Turns Forgotten Pipeline Into Real Meetings — a 60-Minute Sales Training

Format: Runnable team meeting | Length: 60 minutes | Audience: Full sales team (AEs, SDRs, sales manager) | What you need: CRM access on every screen, a shared doc or whiteboard, each rep's list of aged/untouched leads pulled before the meeting

Why run this session

Every sales team is sitting on a quiet graveyard. It is not the dead deals that went to closed-lost — those at least got worked. It is the leads that marketing generated, routed to a rep, and that the rep never actually engaged: the webinar registrant who got one templated email, the content download that got a single voicemail, the trade-show scan that was never called at all, the inbound form fill that landed during a busy week and slid down the list.

Those leads were paid for. They raised a hand. And then nothing happened.

This is different from a closed-lost win-back, where a real evaluation ended in a "no." It is also different from a speed-to-lead drill, which fixes how fast you respond to *new* leads. The aged lead re-qualification sweep fixes the *backlog* — the accumulated inventory of leads that were assigned but never genuinely worked.

On most teams that backlog is 20-40% of all leads ever created, and a meaningful slice of it is still qualified and still in market.

The goal of this 60 minutes is not to assign blame for the backlog. It is to (1) surface it, (2) re-score it honestly against a hard bar so you stop wasting time on the genuinely dead ones, and (3) leave with a concrete re-engagement plan for the leads that survive the bar. Run it, and most teams find 5-15 real meetings hiding in leads they already owned.

Before the meeting (manager prep — do this the day before)

The 60-minute agenda

The agenda below runs from 0:00 to 1:00. The minute blocks sum to exactly 60.

Segment 1 — Frame the problem and the number (0:00–0:07) — 7 minutes

Open with the team-level number, not a lecture. "We have 340 marketing leads that were assigned to us and never properly worked. Marketing spent roughly $X to generate them. Today we find out how many are still worth a conversation."

Make the safety rule explicit: this is not a performance review. Leads go cold for real reasons — bad timing, bad routing, a launch week, a quota crunch. The backlog is a *system* output, not a list of individual failures. The only unacceptable move today is hiding a lead because it is embarrassing.

State the three outcomes the hour will produce: a re-scored list, a kill list of genuinely dead leads (so they stop cluttering everyone's view), and a re-engagement plan for the survivors.

Segment 2 — Teach the Re-Qualification Scorecard (0:07–0:17) — 10 minutes

Walk the team through the hard bar. A lead stays alive only if it clears all five gates. Score each one fast — this is triage, not deep research.

  1. Fit. Does the account still match your ICP — industry, size, geography? (Companies change. A lead that fit 18 months ago may not now.)
  2. Reachability. Is the contact still at the company, and do you have a working email or phone? A 20-second LinkedIn check settles this.
  3. Plausible need. Was the original lead source a real buying signal (a pricing page visit, a demo request, a bottom-of-funnel asset) or a weak one (a generic giveaway, a swag scan)?
  4. No disqualifier. Is there a logged reason this can never work — already a customer, already a hard "never," a competitor, a partner, a student?
  5. Compelling-event potential. Is there any reason *now* could be different — funding, a new hire in the buyer's role, a regulation, a season, a renewal window with their current vendor?

Teach the three-bucket output:

Drive home the discipline: a rep's job today is to be *ruthless*. A bloated "maybe" list is how these leads got ignored the first time. Better 12 real REVIVE leads than 80 hopefuls.

Segment 3 — Silent scoring sprint (0:17–0:32) — 15 minutes

Everyone works their own list in silence against the scorecard. Heads down, CRM and LinkedIn open. The manager floors the room — answering routing questions, settling disqualifier edge cases, keeping people moving.

Set a pace target: aim for roughly 30-60 seconds per lead. This is triage. If a lead needs ten minutes of research to score, that itself is a signal — it goes to NURTURE, not REVIVE.

Each rep ends this segment with three labeled buckets and a count for each. The manager quietly collects the REVIVE counts to use in the next segment.

Segment 4 — Calibration round-robin (0:32–0:44) — 12 minutes

Go around the room. Each rep states their three counts, then reads out their single best REVIVE lead and their single most surprising KILL. Two minutes per rep, hard stop.

The manager's job here is calibration — making sure the bar is being applied the same way by everyone:

By the end, the team has a calibrated, trusted REVIVE list and a shared sense of what "qualified" actually means.

Segment 5 — Build the re-engagement plan (0:44–0:56) — 12 minutes

REVIVE leads do not get the same outreach a fresh lead gets — they have history, even if that history is silence. Build the re-engagement approach together.

The re-engagement message has three required ingredients:

Have each rep draft the first-touch message for their top REVIVE lead, right now, in the shared doc. Read two or three aloud and tighten them as a team. Then set the cadence: a re-engagement sequence of 4-6 touches over about two weeks across email, phone, and LinkedIn — not a single email that lets the lead go cold again.

Agree the routing fix too: every KILL gets marked dead with a reason, and every NURTURE gets handed to marketing the same day so it leaves the rep's queue cleanly.

Segment 6 — Commitments and close (0:56–1:00) — 4 minutes

Lock down accountability. Each rep states out loud:

The manager commits to two things: bringing the meeting-booked results back to the next team meeting, and owning the root-cause fixes surfaced in Segment 4 (routing, lead sources, form fields). Close by naming the prize plainly: this pipeline was already paid for. Every meeting booked from it is revenue at near-zero acquisition cost.

Agenda at a glance

TimeSegmentMinutes
0:00–0:07Frame the problem and the number7
0:07–0:17Teach the Re-Qualification Scorecard10
0:17–0:32Silent scoring sprint15
0:32–0:44Calibration round-robin12
0:44–0:56Build the re-engagement plan12
0:56–1:00Commitments and close4
Total60

The Re-Qualification Scorecard (print this)

A lead is REVIVE only if every box is checked. Any miss on gates 1, 2, or 4 sends it to KILL. A miss on gate 3 or 5 only (with 1, 2, 4 intact) sends it to NURTURE.

Manager's follow-through (the week after)

The session only pays off if the follow-through is real:

Common failure modes to watch for

What good looks like

A team that runs this session well walks out with a trusted, calibrated REVIVE list instead of a vague pile of old leads; a KILL list that cleans up everyone's CRM view; NURTURE leads handed back to marketing the same day; first-touch re-engagement messages already drafted and sequences launching within three days; and a manager committed to fixing the routing and lead-source problems that created the backlog.

Two weeks later, the scoreboard shows real meetings booked from pipeline the company had already paid for — the cheapest revenue the team will find all quarter.

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