Marketing Agency Lead Qualification Script Templates

Six marketing agency lead qualification scripts -- open the call, audit current channels, define success, surface retainer budget, and set the next step. Use the variants as-is, edit the placeholders, or download the editable Word doc.

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Open and set the frame

Script

Hi first name, thanks for reaching out to agency name -- I am your name.

Before I tell you anything about us, can I ask you a handful of questions about what is going on your side? It takes about ten minutes, and at the end I will tell you honestly whether we are the right agency, the wrong agency, or whether you do not need an agency at all right now. Some of the most useful calls I have had ended with me telling someone to hire in-house.

If they agree

Great. Let me start with where you are today rather than where you want to get to.

If they push for pricing first

Happy to get there, and I will not dodge it. The problem is that any number I give you before I understand the scope is a number I would have to change later, and I would rather not start that way. Give me five questions and you will get outcome plus a real range.

Why it works

Prospects shopping for agencies have usually been oversold at least once. Leading with a genuine willingness to disqualify inverts what they expect, lowers the guard, and buys you the honest answers that a defensive prospect will never give you.

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6 ready-to-use variants

1

Open and set the frame

When to use: Use it in the first minute, once the prospect has joined or replied.

Script

Hi first name, thanks for reaching out to agency name -- I am your name.

Before I tell you anything about us, can I ask you a handful of questions about what is going on your side? It takes about ten minutes, and at the end I will tell you honestly whether we are the right agency, the wrong agency, or whether you do not need an agency at all right now. Some of the most useful calls I have had ended with me telling someone to hire in-house.

If they agree

Great. Let me start with where you are today rather than where you want to get to.

If they push for pricing first

Happy to get there, and I will not dodge it. The problem is that any number I give you before I understand the scope is a number I would have to change later, and I would rather not start that way. Give me five questions and you will get outcome plus a real range.

Why it works

Prospects shopping for agencies have usually been oversold at least once. Leading with a genuine willingness to disqualify inverts what they expect, lowers the guard, and buys you the honest answers that a defensive prospect will never give you.

2

Current marketing and channels

When to use: Use it as your first substantive question, straight after the frame.

Script

Walk me through what marketing looks like at company name today. What is actually running, who is running it, and what is working?

Follow-ups

How big is the team -- is team size about right? What have you tried and then stopped doing? And is there anything you are still doing that you suspect is not earning its place?

If they mention a prior agency

What did previous agency get right, and where did it come apart? I am not fishing for gossip -- I want to know what you will not tolerate a second time, so I do not accidentally recreate it.

If a channel is clearly underperforming

How long has channel been running like that, and what has stopped you fixing it -- time, budget, or not being sure what to fix?

Why it works

The stopped experiments and the failed agency relationship are where the real constraints live. Prospects will happily describe their current plan to anyone, but what they abandoned tells you what they believe, what they can staff, and what they will never sign off on again.

3

Goals and what success looks like

When to use: Use it once you understand the current setup, before any talk of budget.

Script

Say this goes brilliantly and we are talking again in timeframe. What has changed at company name that makes you glad you did this?

Pushing past the first answer

You said goal -- what would that be worth in numbers? If metric went up, how far does it need to go before this was obviously worth the money?

The reverse question

And the other way round: what would have to happen in timeframe for you to look back and say that was a mistake? I would rather know now what failure looks like to you than find out later.

If the goal is fuzzy

That is honest, and it is more common than you would think. Then part of this engagement is agreeing what we are measuring, and I would want that pinned in the first fortnight rather than left open.

Why it works

Agencies churn because success was never defined, so both sides invent a definition at renewal. Forcing a number and a date up front makes the engagement scoreable -- and the failure question surfaces the unspoken expectation that would have quietly killed the account.

4

Budget and retainer range

When to use: Use it after the goal is quantified, so the number has something to be measured against.

Script

Let me be upfront about money, first name, because I do not want to design something you were never going to sign off.

For goal at the pace you described, engagements like this usually run between low retainer and high retainer a month, and that is separate from ad spend. Where does that sit against what you had in your head?

If they are below the range

Then let us be practical. Either we narrow the scope to one channel and do that properly, or I tell you honestly that this budget buys a freelancer doing good work rather than an agency doing half a job. I would genuinely rather point you at the freelancer than take the retainer and underdeliver.

If they will not say

Fine. Then flip it: if the answer came back at high retainer, is that a no, or is that a conversation with someone else in the building?

Why it works

Anchoring the retainer to the goal reframes the number as a purchase rather than a fee, and offering to disqualify yourself downward is the single most credible thing an agency can say on a first call.

5

Decision process and stakeholders

When to use: Use it once budget is roughly aligned and the deal looks real.

Script

Practical question, first name. If you and I agree this is a fit, what actually has to happen at company name for it to start?

Follow-ups

Who else has to be comfortable with it? How did the last agency or contractor get signed off -- was it straightforward or did it take three months? And is there a date this needs to be settled by, or is it whenever it is ready?

If another stakeholder appears

What is stakeholder going to be sceptical about? If it is the cost, I will build the case around goal rather than the deliverables list. If it is the risk of another bad agency experience, that is a different document -- and I would rather write the right one.

If it is all on them

Good, that makes this simpler. Then the only question is whether it clears your own bar by decision date.

Why it works

Agency deals stall in procurement and at the founder's desk, not on the call. Asking how the last vendor got approved gets you the real process rather than the org chart, and arming your champion for the objection you know is coming beats being surprised by it in week three.

6

Propose the next step

When to use: Use it in the last two minutes, once you have enough to know it is a fit.

Script

Here is where I think we are, first name. Based on what you have told me about goal, I do think we can help, and I am not going to pretend otherwise just to seem picky.

The proposal

So rather than send you a generic deck, let me do this. Give me until meeting day and I will bring you deliverable -- built on your actual numbers, not a template. It is genuinely useful to you whether you hire us or not, and if you take it to someone else and they do the work, honestly, fine.

The ask

Can we get 30 minutes on meeting day, and can stakeholder be on it? Not to be sold to -- so the questions get answered in the room rather than relayed second-hand.

If they hesitate

No pressure on the extra person. But if they are going to have questions, I would rather answer them than have you defend my work for me.

Why it works

A dated, specific deliverable that is useful on its own demonstrates the work instead of describing it, and getting the real decision maker into the room removes the game of telephone that kills most agency deals.

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How to use this template

  1. 1

    Pick the closest variant. Choose based on the situation, not only the channel.

  2. 2

    Replace every placeholder. If you cannot fill a field, ask one clarifying question first.

  3. 3

    Save the final version into sem.chat, your CRM, or your help desk so the team stays consistent.

  4. 4

    Review results weekly. Drop variants that create confusion and improve the ones that work.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use these templates commercially?
Yes. Copy, edit, and use them in your business, client work, CRM, help desk, or sem.chat workspace.
Why are there six variants?
One generic template rarely fits every situation. Six variants give your team practical choices without a messy library.
Should I paste these into sem.chat?
Yes. Save the best variants as canned replies, knowledge base entries, routing rules, or CRM notes so your AI agent and team stay consistent.
What should a marketing agency qualify for on a first call?
Current channels and what has already been tried and dropped, a quantified goal with a date, a retainer range, and the approval process. The abandoned experiments matter most -- they tell you what the prospect believes, what they can staff, and what they will never sign off on twice.
When should I bring up the retainer range?
After the goal has a number attached, never before. A retainer quoted in a vacuum is judged as a price tag; the same number quoted against a defined outcome is judged as a purchase. Name your range yourself rather than asking what they have -- it is faster and it reads as transparency.
Is it worth disqualifying prospects on a first call?
Yes, and saying so out loud is one of the strongest moves available to an agency. Most prospects have been oversold before, so a willingness to point them at a freelancer or tell them to hire in-house buys more credibility than any case study. It also protects you from the small retainer that consumes a whole team.
How do I handle a prospect who had a bad agency experience?
Ask what the previous agency got right before you ask what went wrong, then ask specifically what they will not tolerate again. You are not fishing for complaints -- you are collecting the constraints that will otherwise recreate the same failure, and naming them back proves you were listening.

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