Intent signal velocity is the rate at which a prospect or account accumulates buying signals over time. It measures how quickly they're moving through the buying cycle.
A prospect who visits one page of your website this month shows buying intent. A prospect who visits three different pages, downloads two resources, and attends a webinar in the same month shows much higher intent signal velocity. They're actively and rapidly researching and evaluating.
Intent signal velocity is the difference between "this company has some interest" and "this company is in active buying mode right now."
For sales and marketing teams, velocity is critical. It tells you which prospects are ready to close soon and which are months away.
Intent signal velocity tracks the accumulation and acceleration of buying signals. Common signals include:
**Website behavior:**
**Content engagement:**
**Outbound engagement:**
**Third-party intent data:**
**Account-level signals:**
When a prospect exhibits multiple signals over a short period, their intent signal velocity is high. They're moving fast through the buying cycle.
One website visit doesn't mean a prospect is close to buying. One email open doesn't mean they're ready. But five website visits across three pages, two email opens, a resource download, and attendance at a webinar in a two-week period shows high velocity.
Velocity indicates buying urgency. It tells you "this person is actively trying to solve a problem right now, not someday."
Consider two prospects:
**Prospect A:** Visited your website once, three weeks ago. Opened one email. No other activity.
**Prospect B:** Visited your website twice this week, downloaded a guide, attended a webinar yesterday, opened your last two emails.
Prospect B has much higher intent signal velocity. They're actively shopping. Sales should reach out to Prospect B first.
Most sales teams focus on individual signals (open rate, click rate, visit). The smarter teams focus on signal velocity - the acceleration of engagement.
Intent signal velocity is measured over time windows. The window you measure matters.
A prospect might have low velocity in the last 30 days (one visit, one email open) but high velocity in the last 7 days (three visits, two email opens, resource download). This indicates that buying urgency just accelerated recently. That's a signal to reach out.
Sales teams often use windows like:
Different windows tell different stories. A prospect with low velocity in 7 days but high velocity in 90 days might have been actively interested 2-3 months ago but has cooled. That's a different sales approach than someone with high velocity in both windows.
Velocity changes sales strategy:
**High velocity:** The prospect is actively shopping. They're comparing vendors. They've identified a shortlist. They're moving toward a decision. Sales should be aggressive. Move quickly through the conversation. Identify next steps and timing. These deals might close in weeks.
**Medium velocity:** The prospect is interested but not yet in active evaluation mode. They're researching and educating themselves. Sales should focus on building relationship and providing education. Give them space to move at their pace. These deals might close in 2-3 months.
**Low velocity:** The prospect has shown some interest but isn't actively engaged. They might be years away from buying or might have abandoned interest. Sales should nurture, not push. Periodic check-ins. Valuable content. But don't expect a close soon.
Most sales teams focus resources on high velocity prospects (where deals are most likely soon) and medium velocity prospects (where they can influence timeline). Low velocity gets nurture and periodic attention, not aggressive pursuit.
ABM teams use velocity to prioritize accounts:
You have 100 accounts on your target list. You can't pursue all 100 with equal intensity. Velocity tells you which accounts are most urgent.
This prioritization lets ABM teams focus limited resources on accounts where they have the highest probability of closing soon.
Most companies track velocity through platforms that aggregate signals:
**Account intelligence and ABM platforms** like Demandbase, 6sense, and Abmatic track multiple signals and score accounts by velocity.
**Intent data platforms** like Bombora track buying signals and show velocity over time.
**CRM and marketing automation systems** like Salesforce and HubSpot can track some signals natively and can be enhanced with integrations that bring in third-party signals.
**Custom dashboards** built in business intelligence tools (Tableau, Looker) can aggregate signals from multiple sources into a velocity score.
The best approach combines multiple signal sources. Website behavior shows research. Email engagement shows interest. Intent data shows category research. Account signals show organizational focus. Combine them and you have a comprehensive velocity picture.
Most teams set thresholds that trigger actions:
**When velocity crosses a threshold (low to medium):**
**When velocity crosses a threshold (medium to high):**
**When velocity is consistently high:**
**When velocity drops (was high, drops to medium/low):**
Velocity is a good indicator of buying urgency, but it's not perfect. A prospect might show high velocity in a short burst (e.g., researching to write an article, or evaluating but with no budget). A prospect might have low velocity but still be in-market (slowly researching, planning a purchase 6 months out).
Best practice: Use velocity as one signal among many. Combine it with:
Velocity tells you who's actively moving. Human judgment tells you who will actually close.
Intent signal velocity separates prospects who are passively interested from prospects who are actively shopping. Sales teams that prioritize based on velocity close deals faster because they focus energy on prospects most likely to close soon.
Track velocity. Prioritize by velocity. Win more deals.