You've got dashboards. You've got reports. You've got a deal pipeline that looks busy. But when...
HubSpot lifecycle stages are not deal stages, conflation can be costly
This is the single most common structural error in HubSpot implementations. It seems minor. It isn't.
Lifecycle stages and deal stages are two different constructs that answer two different questions. When they get conflated — which happens in the majority of portals we encounter — the downstream effects ripple through your reporting, your automation, your segmentation, and your attribution.
Here's how to understand the difference, why it matters, and how to fix it.
What Lifecycle Stages Are For
Lifecycle stage is a contact and company-level property. It represents where a person or organisation sits in their relationship with your business as a whole — not in relation to a specific deal.
The progression looks something like this:
Subscriber → Lead → MQL → SQL → Opportunity → Customer → Evangelist
(With variations depending on your GTM motion — some organisations insert SAL between MQL and SQL; others collapse stages depending on their sales velocity.)
The key point: lifecycle stage is owned at the entity level. A contact can have one lifecycle stage. That stage reflects the most advanced position they've ever reached with your business — not where they are right now in a current deal.
What Deal Stages Are For
Deal stages are deal-level properties. They represent the status of a specific sales opportunity — not the contact or company behind it.
A contact who is a Customer might have a new deal in the Proposal stage. The contact's lifecycle stage is Customer. The deal's stage is Proposal. These are independent.
Deal stages answer: Where is this specific opportunity in the buying process?
Lifecycle stages answer: What is this person's overall relationship status with our business?
What Goes Wrong When You Conflate Them
Reporting breaks. If lifecycle stage is being set based on deal stage (e.g., "move to SQL when deal is created"), your lifecycle funnel report stops measuring what it's supposed to measure. You're no longer seeing the lead conversion story — you're seeing deal creation activity, which is a different metric.
MQL definition becomes meaningless. If SQL is set when a deal is created rather than when a contact hits a qualification threshold, you've lost the ability to distinguish between marketing-qualified and sales-qualified signals. Your MQL→SQL conversion rate becomes 100% (because SQL is being triggered by the same event as opportunity creation), and your marketing attribution is gone.
Automation fires incorrectly. Workflows triggered by lifecycle stage changes will fire at the wrong time, for the wrong contacts, with the wrong content. A nurture sequence designed for MQLs will enrol contacts who are already mid-deal.
Segmentation becomes unreliable. Lists and smart content based on lifecycle stage will pull in the wrong audience. Your "never been a customer" segment might include active customers whose lifecycle stage was never updated post-close.
The Correct Architecture
Here's a clean way to think about lifecycle stage design:
Lifecycle stage should be:
- Set automatically, based on defined criteria
- A forward-only property (contacts don't move backwards — a Customer is always a Customer, even if a deal falls through)
- Owned by a specific team at each stage (Marketing owns up to MQL; Sales owns SAL/SQL; CS owns Customer and beyond)
- Linked to SLA rules (e.g., an MQL must be worked within 24 hours, or it triggers an alert)
Deal stage should be:
- A reflection of the sales process, not the contact relationship
- Defined in terms of buyer actions, not seller actions ("Proposal sent" is a seller action; "Proposal reviewed and questions raised" reflects buyer engagement — the latter is more useful)
- Independent of lifecycle stage, but connected through reporting (so you can see how deal activity maps to lifecycle progression)
The Fix: Decouple the Logic
If your HubSpot has lifecycle stages being set by deal stage changes, the first step is to audit every workflow and property-setting rule that touches lifecycle stage. Map out what's setting it and when.
Then rebuild the logic from first principles:
- Define what each lifecycle stage actually means for your business
- Identify the specific triggers that should move a contact from one stage to the next (form fills, score thresholds, manual sales qualification, deal creation where appropriate)
- Build the workflows to enforce those triggers — and only those triggers
- Set up the funnel reporting to verify the logic is working
It's a few days of work. But it unlocks clean reporting, accurate attribution, and automation that actually fires at the right time — which makes everything else you build in HubSpot dramatically more effective.
The foundation matters. Get it right, and everything stacks cleanly on top of it.