Archive for the ‘Sales’ Category

Interview: Mac McIntosh Shares How Marketing Automation Can Impact Your Bottom Line

Thursday, November 4th, 2010

In the new era of marketing accountability, it is critical for marketers to adjust their marketing processes to reach farther across the funnel and help drive revenues. Marketing automation plays a critical role in helping marketers accomplish this. To help you gain some insight on what it enables you to do and how to use it effectively, I've invited BtoB Sales Lead Expert Mac McIntosh to answer a few questions about the value marketing automation can bring to your business.

How can marketing automation help marketers stay in tune with the multiple channels buyers use to make buying decisions?

One of the exciting benefits of marketing automation is its ability to help marketers communicate with buyers across multiple channels.  For example, you can:

  • Email via your marketing automation system with links that allow recipients to “tell a friend” or “tweet” about it;
  • Send direct mail using the same messages, offers and links as you emailed about, and then drive responders to the same landing pages with some hidden code that allows you to track the source of those visitors and form completers;
  • Blog, post in LinkedIn or tweet about the same content you are offering in your marketing automation campaigns to extend its reach;
  • Have all the forms on your website, blog, email landing pages bring responders into your marketing automation campaigns automatically;
  • You can enter all leads from your trade shows into your marketing automation system and create an automated follow-up campaign to further qualify those leads;
  • You can leverage your content and events as online “offers” in your marketing campaigns and track response rates;
  • And much more.

What's the #1 mistake you see companies making with marketing automation and what can we do to fix that?

Good question.  I’m thinking it is buying marketing automation then only using it for batch-and- blast emails. One-size fits all communications, especially emails, don’t get the job done anymore.  Segmented, well-targeted and relevant communications get much better results.

The real benefit of marketing automation is exactly that: the ability to deliver the right message with the right offer to the right prospect at the right time.  In other words, true one-to-one marketing to many--something that we couldn’t do to any scale before marketing automation came along.

What does sales struggle with that marketing automation can simplify?

If you consider the steps in the B2B buying process as described in Robert Jollies’ book, Customer Centered Selling (illustration below), you’ll see that sales spends almost all their time where buyers are spending only a small percentage of their time.  Marketing automation is an ideal vehicle for communicating with and engaging prospects throughout their buying process.

Marketing automation can also help sales overcome additional challenges, such as:

  • Staying in-sight and in-mind with lots of prospects at once, including those not yet ready or receptive to being contacted by sales;
  • Keeping in touch between sales calls;
  • Touching the multiple influencers and decision makers that are involved in the buying process;
  • Automatically scheduling the next touch or step in the sales process;
  • Delivering relevant information as prospects move forward in their buying process.

How does marketing automation help lower the cost of sales?

Research on the cost of sales calls by Reed Business found that the average cost of a business-to-business in-person sales call was $392 in 2001. (This is the most recent research I could find on the subject, so the cost of a sales call is probably much higher now.) The same research said that it took an average of 5.1 in-person sales calls to close a B2B sale. So the total cost of sales visits required to close an average B2B sale was just a hair under $2,000.

Want to lower your cost of sales?  Simply replace a couple of those expensive, in-person sales calls with lower cost-per-contact marketing-automation driven contacts, then do the math again, replacing two of the $392 sales calls with five marketing contacts at as much as $30 each for the prospecting and qualifying steps. The result? You've invested only $150 to complete the first two steps that otherwise would have cost your company $784 to accomplish with in-person sales calls, saving $634 and lowering your cost of sales by more than 30 percent.

Here are some other numbers to consider:

The research I referenced earlier also showed that the average salesperson spent less than a fifth of his or her time meeting with new prospects. This works out to be approximately one day of every business week. When you consider vacations and other time off, that works out to less than 50 days of new business development a year!

How many prospects do you think your salespeople can visit during a given week? Unless their territory is limited to the immediate neighborhood, I'd say they'll probably be able to schedule a maximum of four meetings a day and only be meeting with prospective clients one or two days a week. The rest of the time is used for things like telemarketing, sales meetings, training, paperwork, travel, writing proposals, entering orders and problem-solving for existing clients.

Assume eight meetings a week and you'll find that your average salesperson can complete 400 in-person sales visits a year at most (100 days multiplied by four visits). Divide the 400 visits by 5.1 (the average number of in-person sales calls required to close a sale, as mentioned earlier), and you'll find that if they close 100 percent of the sales to prospects they visit, they'll close a maximum of 79 sales a year. However, my experience says that average B2B close rates are closer to 30 percent, meaning that the average salespeople will only close around 24 sales from their 400 in-person sales calls!

How much more productive would they be if they only had to make an average of three sales visits to close a qualified prospect that was generated for them by marketing? The answer is 40 percent more productive at closing sales.  In this case closing 34 sales instead of 24. So instead of adding more salespeople to knock on more doors, use marketing automation campaigns to cost-effectively contact your prospects and fill the sales pipeline with qualified leads. Doing so will result in more sales-ready opportunities that your salespeople, reps, resellers or distributors can turn into new business, meaning greater sales revenue and profits for your company.

How can marketers use social media in conjunction with marketing automation to improve lead generation?

I’ve found that social media, as a stand-alone tactic, doesn’t results in lots of leads for B2B marketers. However, as an integrated component of your B2B marketing campaigns, it can help with initial awareness of, and preference for, your company and its products or services.  And, as I mentioned in my answer to your first question, it can be used to extend the reach of your marketing automation campaigns, content and influence.

What are some sources of ROI delivered by marketing automation systems that help marketers do more with less?

As I see it, these are the big ones:

  • Lower marketing costs (once it is up and running);
  • More qualified, sales-ready leads;
  • Lower cost of sales;
  • Increased sales efficiency;
  • More closed sales.

Mac McIntosh is a b-to-b marketing and sales consultant and writer of the popular blog Sales Lead Insights. With 20 years of advertising, marketing and sales experience, Mac specializes in helping companies get more high-quality B2B sales leads, turn them into sales, track and measure results, and prove a favorable return on investment. He has earned a enviable reputation for getting results for his clients.

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Jeff Erramouspe

Marketing Automation Puts an End to Wasting Leads

Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

In many companies, generating any kind of an inquiry is considered a lead and sent over to the sales side, heaped onto the pile that sales reps must dig through in search of someone with a pulse that may have the potential to become a customer in the short term. This is but one example of why marketing and sales don’t get along.

According to Marketing Sherpa, 79% of leads never become sales opportunities. This percentage can either indicate that marketers are not generating the right types of leads, or that the leads sales doesn’t select for short-term pursuit fall into a black hole, never to be seen again—or a combination of both.

The problem with this approach to lead management is that marketing is wasting the majority of the budget they spent to acquire leads, as well as giving viable leads over to competitors without a fight. How long can your company afford to continue this practice?

Instead, consider the advantages of changing the way you manage leads. Marketing automation can eliminate waste and improve the use of sales rep’s time by:

  • Doing the cherry picking for them.
    Lead scoring measures fit and tracks activity so that only the leads that express high velocity, founded on concentrated interest will be routed to salespeople for follow-up. Instead of losing leads into a black-hole database, marketers can better ensure that funnel leakage is reduced while better-qualified opportunities are generated.
  • Disqualifying leads that lack ideal customer traits.
    Armed with an agreed-upon definition of a qualified lead, marketers can remove, or disqualify, leads that do not fit the customer profile your company serves. Not only will this keep your database clean, but it will reduce (hopefully eliminate) fruitless activity for salespeople. All contacts are not leads. Continuing to treat them like they are is a waste of your time—and theirs.
  • Using trigger events to transition leads at the right time.
    Tracking activity across the buying process enables marketers to identify patterns of behavior that result in forward sales momentum at the handoff. Marketing automation provides the ability to set rules and responses to those key behaviors so that salespeople don’t miss the chance to engage at the appropriate time.

Research conducted by SiriusDecisions finds that prospects are 70% of the way through their buying process at the time of sales engagement. The better able companies are to continue a content marketing dialogue from the first identification of a lead until sales readiness is indicated, the higher the potential to turn leads into customers. Nurturing leads over the longer-term buying process increases the odds that your pipeline will be more consistent, especially with evidence that a majority of leads that express interest will buy a solution from a vendor within a year or two.

Marketing automation software gives B2B marketers the tools they need to reduce lead waste and leakage and help salespeople to focus on pursuing the best opportunities for customer acquisition.

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Christopher Doran

How Marketing Can Help Sales After the Handoff

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

As companies work to establish processes that embrace and support the buying journey from contact to close, an interesting result occurs. Marketing and Sales become unified around one process, instead of each focusing only on their respective ends of the revenue pipeline. Marketing automation integrated with CRM helps to bridge that chasm that used to serve as a dividing line between unknown entities and qualified leads acceptable for sales pursuit.

The key is that buyers don’t care which side is communicating with them, they care about what’s in it for them as they work toward solving business problems.

Recent research by Demand Gen Report found that, “…58 percent of B2B marketers believe the role of a marketer ‘never ends’ even when the lead has been transitioned to sales…” Marketing automation helps marketers add value to buyer relationships even after those prospects have begun to interact with salespeople.

Take a look at 3 ways marketing automation can be used to help salespeople after the handoff:

1.       Post Handoff Scoring: Once a lead’s score reaches the qualification threshold for transition to sales doesn’t mean that their activity with your website and content ceases. In fact, it could even accelerate as they get involved in the complex details necessary to validate that your solution will actually serve their specific situation. With visibility into just which content your qualified leads are accessing, marketers can provide salespeople with additional content and collateral that matches buyer activity to help keep the momentum toward purchase moving along.

2.       Continuous Nurturing: By creating a post-handoff nurturing program jointly with your sales team, marketers can continue to provide late-stage “touches” that help to prove the value sales reps bring to the conversation. Because marketers know which content leads have viewed to date, they can continue to build the relationship on behalf of salespeople. The integration with CRM will help salespeople choose when to interact as well as provide them with fodder for relevant follow-up conversations.

3.       Growth in Interest: Anonymous Web Visitor ID can help marketers identify website visits from additional contacts at the qualified lead’s company. With B2B buyers involving more influencers and stakeholders, sharing this insight with sales reps can help them gauge the true level of buying interest and spot opportunities to extend conversations and offer additional information that may help the buying committee take next steps.

The above are only three suggestions for how marketing automation can help companies establish a seamless end-to-end buying process, facilitated by sharing the insights to prospect behavior that sales reps can act upon to expedite the purchase decision. Marketing automation software generates the data marketers need to provide new levels of support to sales. The challenge is in developing the processes for sharing the data in ways that help salespeople have better conversations and more relevant interactions that serve buyers’ needs.

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Jeff Erramouspe