TOPICS

Marketing Qualified Account for Travel & Tourism

DIRECT ANSWER

A Marketing Qualified Account (MQA) is an account — a company or buying organization — that has demonstrated sufficient intent signals across one or more contacts to be deemed ready for sales engagement, in an account-based marketing (ABM) framework. Unlike an MQL (which qualifies an individual), an MQA reflects aggregate interest across the buying committee and is a better fit for complex B2B sales. For Travel & Tourism companies, this matters because OTA dependency (Booking.com, Expedia) cannibalizes direct booking margin — direct channel marketing is chronically underinvested.

What marketing qualified account means for Travel & Tourism

Abandoned booking recovery sequences are the fastest-payback automation — the average hotel loses 80%+ of search sessions without a conversion. AI-CMO can trigger personalized email and retargeting sequences within minutes of an abandoned booking, with dynamic pricing pulled from the PMS (Opera, Mews, Cloudbeds). Secondary: loyalty program re-engagement campaigns that trigger based on lapsed visit recency, upcoming birthdays, or newly available room categories.

For Travel & Tourism teams the relevant marketing pains are: OTA dependency (Booking.com, Expedia) cannibalizes direct booking margin — direct channel marketing is chronically underinvested; Highly seasonal demand requires campaign calendars planned 6–12 months out but executed with real-time pricing and availability context; Post-COVID traveler segments (bleisure, multigenerational, solo female) require distinct messaging that one-size-fits-all creative can't deliver; Review response management across TripAdvisor, Google, and Yelp is manual and inconsistent — damaging trust signals; Loyalty program marketing is sent in generic batches rather than personalized to member tier, travel history, and stated preferences; DMOs and CVBs struggle to demonstrate economic impact of marketing spend to local government stakeholders. FTC endorsement guidelines for influencer partnerships; GDPR for EU guest data (most hotel groups have significant EU guests); CCPA; accessibility requirements for digital booking flows (ADA); honest pricing requirements (DOT rules for air; FTC scrutiny on resort fees); PIPEDA for Canadian operations

MQA vs. MQL: Why the Account View Matters

In B2B with multiple stakeholders in each deal, a single contact's engagement is often insufficient evidence of organizational interest. An MQA threshold aggregates signals from multiple contacts within the same account — multiple page visits, content downloads by different roles, or intent data spikes from third-party tools — to confirm that the account as a whole is in an active evaluation cycle.

MQL-based funnels often create misalignment: marketing passes individual leads who are interested but lack budget authority, sales follows up and gets stuck, and both teams blame each other. MQA frameworks reduce this by ensuring sales only receives accounts with documented multi-stakeholder engagement, which correlates more strongly with actual purchase authority.

Running marketing qualified account for Travel & Tourism with CoMo

CoMo's agents apply marketing qualified account across email, paid-search, paid-social (Meta/Pinterest), OTA partner marketing, influencer/UGC, metasearch (Google Hotel Ads), loyalty/CRM for Travel & Tourism companies — tuned to VP Marketing at hotel management company or independent resort; Director of Marketing at DMO/CVB; Head of Growth at online tour operator or travel SaaS and run under your approval, alongside every other marketing function.

FAQ

Marketing Qualified Account for Travel & Tourism — common questions

Do we need a full ABM platform to implement MQA?

No. You can implement a basic MQA model using your CRM and marketing automation platform by defining account-level scoring rules that aggregate contact-level activity. Full ABM platforms add orchestration, intent data, and ad targeting features but are not required to shift from MQL to MQA qualification logic.

How does marketing qualified account differ for Travel & Tourism companies?

The fundamentals are the same, but Travel & Tourism marketing carries specific constraints — OTA dependency (Booking.com, Expedia) cannibalizes direct booking margin — direct channel marketing is chronically underinvested and FTC endorsement guidelines for influencer partnerships; GDPR for EU guest data (most hotel groups have significant EU guests); CCPA; accessibility requirements for digital booking flows (ADA); honest pricing requirements (DOT rules for air; FTC scrutiny on resort fees); PIPEDA for Canadian operations. CoMo adapts execution to that context automatically.

BUILT BY COMO'S AGENTS

This page was written by CoMo — the autonomous CMO.

CoMo runs every channel of your marketing on your live data. See it work on your brand.

Book a live demo