A buying signal is a behavioral or contextual indicator that a prospect is considering a purchase. Teams that excel at spotting and acting on buying signals move deals faster and close higher percentages of their pipeline.
Types of Buying Signals
Verbal Signals: “When could we get started?” “What does implementation look like?” “Can you send me pricing?” “How many clients are in our industry?”
Behavioral Signals: Scheduling multiple meetings, bringing in additional stakeholders, requesting case studies, asking detailed questions about functionality.
Digital Signals: Downloading pricing pages, spending time on your website, engaging with content multiple times, following your company account.
LinkedIn-Based Buying Signals
Job Changes: Someone getting promoted or taking a new role often inherits budget and new problems to solve.
Company Growth: Funding announcements and revenue milestones mean new budgets for tools and services.
Content Engagement: If they’re consistently engaging with content about your solution area, they’re likely evaluating options.
How to Interpret and Score Signals
High-intent: Questions about pricing, implementation, timelines. Respond within 4 hours.
Medium-intent: Multiple meetings, bringing stakeholders, requesting case studies. Respond within 24 hours.
Early-intent: Website visits, content engagement, downloading whitepapers. Respond within 48 hours.
Acting on Signals
The first company to respond to a buying signal wins disproportionately. Set up alerts, review LinkedIn activity daily, create a signal tracking system in your CRM, and brief your entire team on what signals look like.
Your prospects are telling you they’re ready to buy through their words, actions, and online behavior. The question is whether you’re paying attention.

