Archive for the ‘Marketing’ Category

B2B Buyers Looking a Lot Like B2C Consumers

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

It wasn’t too long ago that marketers thought about B2B buyers solely in relation to the companies they worked for—almost as if they were part of the brick and mortar. The demographics of the company itself were considered the most important intelligence marketers could use to decide whom to market to as well as how to do so. Marketing was all about us finding qualified leads…or so we thought.

Roll the calendar forward a few years and we find ourselves confronting a very different reality. The ways in which our potential customers approach buying now looks an awful lot like how an online-savvy consumer buys.

Consider the following consumer purchasing behaviors and note how they’re being adopted with increasing frequency by B2B buyers:

Consulting Reviews: With the advent of user-generated content on product sites, consumers can now consult previous customers’ reactions to the products they’ve purchased with barely a click from the product page. Ratings and reviews influence many of us in our everyday purchasing decisions. We’re seeing evidence that B2B buyers are spending time online doing the same thing.

Asking Peers: If you’ve ever spent any time browsing the Answers on LinkedIn you can see a tremendous amount of questions and answers about solutions, products, processes and other interests that used to be offline conversations. Not that those conversations don’t happen anymore, but the point is that the sphere of influence encompasses a much broader scope than was ever possible before.

WOM Referrals: Word of mouth has always been considered influential, but now it’s happening with increasing frequency amidst our online networks. Have a question? Post a quick Tweet and you’ll have responses, links to resources and referrals within moments. Stop into an online forum and monitor a discussion thread on a topic of interest. Click through a Google Alert to a blog post and follow a suggested link for more information about a problem you’re trying to solve.

Interestingly, 80% of buyers will say they not only found your company, but contacted you on their own. This means that it’s even more important to monitor what’s being said about your company, where it’s happening and finding ways to help influence those conversations to guide more leads into your funnel.

Marketing automation technology provides a huge advantage for marketers involved in capturing the attention of today’s B2B buyers. Just culling short-term attention is not enough. With the ability to monitor a lead’s online behavior, marketers can assess origination sources, measure engagement levels and use that information to refine their programs on the fly--ensuring that once attention is caught, it’s kept.

With B2B buyers acting a lot more like consumers, marketers need to work even harder to address not only professional needs, but personal considerations as well. This is also one reason why storytelling can be extremely effective in persuading a B2B audience to proactively reach out to your company to learn more.

What other similarities between B2B and B2C would you add?

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Jeff Erramouspe

Dreamforce ’09 – Sharpen Your Marketing

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Next week marks the 7th annual Dreamforce Global Gathering, and we couldn’t be more excited. With 11,000 professionals, 300 speakers and 250 partners from 60 different countries, it’s an amazing opportunity to sharpen your marketing, collaborate with your teams and communities, and get all the best practices, networking, inspiration, and training you need to succeed. For those of you marketers, Dreamforce offers several power-packed breakout sessions to help improve your marketing by integrating a marketing automation solution with your Salesforce CRM. If you are considering implementing a solution, we’d love to meet you. Here’s how you can find us:

Visit us at Booth #1110 in the Expo Hall. We’re offering live tours of the newly released Manticore Technology VII – the first truly customizable marketing automation user-interface. Chat with one of our experts and get all of your questions answered. Don’t forget to pick up a scratch-and-win card for a chance to win one of our fabulous giveaways.

Attend Lead Management 101: Qualifying, Scoring and Routing Your Leads for Success. In this session, you’ll hear from Manticore Technology customer Stuart Robertson, Sr. Director of Marketing at ShareBuilder 401K, and 2 other panelists on how to convert more leads to fill the sales funnel. This session covers lead management basics, including lead business processes, techniques for web capture, lead routing, lead scoring, and conversion.

Set up a private demo with a sales rep. If you would like a deeper dive into Manticore Technology VII, please stop by our booth or email us to set up a personal demo. We have sales reps available on site to take you through a one-on-one demo and demonstrate how Manticore Technology can impact your business.

We look forward to meeting you. If you haven’t signed up for Dreamforce yet, visit the registration page on the Salesforce.com web site to register. Please contact us if you’re interested in going to the Keynote Session & EXPO Hall for FREE.

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Jeff Erramouspe

Marketing Automation: Lessons from the Trenches – Panel Discussion Highlights

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

Marketing Automation: Lessons from the Trenches Webinar Highlights

Last Thursday, we teamed up with DemandGen Report to host a Panel Discussion expanding on our latest whitepaper Marketing Automation: Lessons from the Trenches. The discussion prompted some great questions from the attendees and expanded on respondents’ comments and recommendations. If you’re looking at purchasing a Marketing Automation Solution in the next few months, I’d definitely encourage you to check out the on-demand version of the webinar. A few of the highlights from the discussion are:

How does ease of use and implementation affect user experience & what can users expect? 

Implementation is typically pretty painless. Most vendors have gotten pretty good at the process, and with the exception of one, most offer it for free. About 50% of users ran into hidden costs, such as building out new brand-approved templates and rebuilding forms so make sure you talk to your provider about this on the front-end to ensure you are accounting for those costs or have the ability to make those changes internally. Many organizations hit road blocks or begin to struggle after the first 90-120 days. At this point, they’ve typically done the basics of email blasts, landing page set-up, lead scoring etc. and are ready to get a little more complex. This is when usability, a solid customer support team and the flexibility of a system become critical.

How do you properly prepare your organization to be successful with a Marketing Automation Solution?

Many of the respondents cited the importance of properly adapting content as you gain more intelligence about your leads and then building a library of content that addresses different phases of the buying cycle.

Aligning Sales and Marketing before implementing a solution is also extremely important and a difficult task for many organizations. A good starting point is agreeing on what a Qualified Lead is and set up a lead scoring model accordingly. Marketing should ask for on-going feedback from Sales so lead scoring models can evolve, and they can really hone in on the highest quality leads.

What are some of the steps that survey respondents recommended to prepare your organization and align marketing and sales?

1. Sales and Marketing must work together create a starting point on what they consider a qualified lead and acknowledge that change is going to occur within the system on a regular basis.  

 

2. Database must be segmented and cleaned.  

 

 

3. Test, test and test again. Test the flow of your lead nurturing process, the effectiveness of your offerings, the capture rates of your landing pages. You should constantly be refining your strategy based on your results.  

What questions should people be asking vendors when choosing a solution that’s right for them?

It’s definitely important to ask the obvious questions around usability, extra training costs or fees, flexibility and customer support. Some additional questions that you might not think of are:

§ Dedicated or Shared IP Address? If you’re on a shared IP address, other people’s email might affect your deliverability if they’re sending out junk.

 

§ Are there any limitations or times that my emails will not go out as quickly? Some vendors have “busy” times, in which emails take longer to be delivered because of high traffic or a bottleneck in the system.

 

§ Customer Retention Rate? Don’t think because a company is signing up hundreds of new customers that it’s the best vendor – that’s just an indication of a strong sales organization. You should be more concerned with how well a vendor retains its clients.

 

§ Can I speak to 3 ex-customers and find out why they left? This may be difficult to do, but if you can get an idea of why customers are walking away from a vendor, you can determine if that same thing is going to be a big issue for you as well.

 

How did respondents feel about Marketing Automation overall?

Overall the feedback was positive and the respondents found value in their solutions. The majority of respondents felt that being able to measure and track campaign results was the biggest value-add marketing automation offered.

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Christopher Doran