An account engagement score is a numeric rating that summarizes how actively a target account is interacting with a vendor's marketing and sales touches over a recent window. The score aggregates per-contact activities (email opens and clicks, web visits, content downloads, ad engagement, meetings) up to the account level. Engagement scores are used to prioritize sales follow-up, time outreach, and trigger account-based plays.
Each tracked activity is assigned a weight. Weights are higher for high-intent activities (pricing-page views, demo requests, multi-stakeholder visits) and lower for passive activities (one-off email opens). The score sums weighted activities across all known contacts at the account, often within a rolling window such as 30 or 90 days. Decay is applied so that older activity contributes less than recent activity.
Engagement at the contact level is noisy. Engagement at the account level is the actionable unit because B2B deals are bought by committees, not individuals. Aggregating to the account also smooths out churn at the contact level (when individuals leave) and surfaces real momentum.
For more, see lead scoring, marketing qualified account, how to set up account scoring, and account fit score.
Engagement measures interaction with the vendor's properties. Intent (especially third-party intent) measures research activity outside the vendor's properties. Engagement is first-party; third-party intent is broader but lower trust.
30 days for fast-moving categories and inbound-heavy programs. 90 days for considered enterprise sales. Apply decay so that recent activity outweighs older activity.
Route to the assigned account executive with the activity timeline, the names of engaged contacts, and a recommended first touch tied to the most recent meaningful event. See account engagement scoring running live, book a demo.