Posts Tagged ‘Sales Pipeline’

Thought Leadership Interview: Sue Hay and Cari Baldwin Expand on Their Demand Generation Trifecta

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

We’d all like to have the knowledge to supercharge our demand generation programs. In their section of The Quintessential Marketing Automation Guidebook, Sue Hay and Cari Baldwin discussed the importance of knowing your buyers and helping them get to know you through demand generation programs executed with marketing automation tools. I caught up with Sue and Cari recently and asked them to answer a few more questions about their demand generation trifecta—Right Message, Right Offer, Right Audience.

CD: Your Tip 5, “The Website is the Lead Generator,” talks about the need to ensure your website is providing education-rich content. What are some methods you’ve seen companies use to create more conversions from their websites?

Sue:Sue Hay
For prospects who have indicated their interest in a company’s products or services, smart marketing and sales team are focusing not just on the prospects themselves, but the problems they are trying to solve.  Showing that you truly understand a potential customer’s business and its challenges is the surest way to gain their confidence.  Of course, it’s not enough just to understand the challenges – you need to provide a solution.  Using email, banner ads, direct marketing, tweets, etc., the marketing and sales teams drive prospects to specific landing pages that provide education-rich content and with the aim of converting their status from either cold or unknown to warm.

At a more technically complex level, when prospects are unknown (i.e., they haven’t completed a registration form), they can still be located by identifying IP addresses used to access relevant pages. Based on their interests, dynamic content is pushed to the web page they are currently visiting.

For example, DemandBase has a tool that resolves the business identity of website traffic.  It identifies information about the firm -- company name, annual revenue, number of employees, industry, even the office location of the IP address.  It can then determine if the visitor is new to the web site, an existing customer or a highly desirable target account.

With this information at hand, relevant content can be pushed to the prospect instantaneously, which generally leads to higher click-through and conversion rates. Then that information is passed into your marketing automation tool so the prospects can be added to a relevant lead-nurturing program that has content specifically designed to suit their needs.

CD: What are some effective methods for encouraging sales to return disqualified leads to marketing for nurturing?

Cari BaldwinCari:  We encourage marketing and sales to create a Service Level Agreement (SLA) for the time that each lead stays at a stage (our mantra – stale is not a lead status!).  If you agree that a lead should be at the active stage for 45 days, after that time it either moves to pipeline or back to marketing.  Giving them an alternative to disqualify leads and return them to nurturing is going to produce future opportunities.

Sue:
Basically, there has to be a dialogue between sales and marketing to be sure there is a clear understanding of each other’s objectives.  Once objectives are understood, you can create a plan.

Trust between teams is also essential. There needs to be a frank exchange about what’s working and what’s not.  You also need clear ground rules for the engagement.  Only then can you create business processes which will move the sales engagement forward.

On a process level, there are many different techniques that would enable the sales team to return leads that are not sales-ready.  One might be to add “Needs nurturing” to the “Status” field of the lead in the company’s CRM system.  A report would be created by marketing that captures those leads and places them in a nurturing program.

Another process could be a lead scoring program, in which components tell both marketing and sales that a lead is not yet ready or is currently disqualified and needs nurturing.

CD: In your section, you provide a list of what marketing automation is not. What do you think is the biggest fallacy about marketing automation that marketers buy into and how would you dispel it?

Sue:  There are two things that constitute the biggest fallacy about marketing automation:  one is that it’s easy-to-use and the other is that it automates everything.  This leads to the false notion that marketing automation must make things easier.

Marketing automation tools are not a panacea for a marketing department trying to have more impact on the bottom line. As the name indicates, they are tools --they need to be programmed, and require time to produce results. What they don’t do is create a process. If you have a solid process in place, then the tool can be very effective.

But before you even begin with a marketing automation tool, you need to develop a rapport between sales and marketing.  You need to identify the lead management process, including a loop for constant feedback.  You also need to be able to qualify and score leads, and place them in nurture programs that are truly committed to bringing them along. Without all of that, a marketing automation tool will just be an expensive auto responder.

Cari:  I agree with Sue. The biggest misconception about a marketing automation tool is that it’s fast and easy.  Most marketing departments lack extra time and resources therefore marketing automation is added to an already overflowing “to do” list.  To effectively optimize an implementation, there are four steps:

  1. integration
  2. building the assets
  3. rolling it out to the organization
  4. enhancing the functionality

Most companies get to step 2, which is where they get stuck just using it as an email marketing tool.  To effectively roll it out to an organization (change management) and to enhance the functionality (lead nurturing, scoring) requires process development and hard work.

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Christopher Doran

Marketing Automation + CRM = Higher Customer Acquisition

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Several of our latest enhancements to Manticore Technology VII involve improvements to the way the system interacts with Salesforce.com. For today’s post, I thought I’d take a dive into why a strong integration between your marketing automation system and your CRM system can accelerate your sales cycles—especially when used in support of a defined process.

Integrating marketing automation with CRM serves to connect both sides of the marketing-to-sales cycle. This consolidated visibility enables both marketers and salespeople to become more responsive and more relevant given their expanded access to pertinent information about the prospect.

Today’s B2B prospects don’t have a lot of patience for irrelevant dialogue. Funnily, just as your prospects don’t want to be “stalked,” they also expect vendors to be mind readers, delivering just the information or interaction they need—exactly when they need it. Thankfully, technology is enabling the insight required to perform this feat gracefully.

A few of the challenges that are answered by integrating marketing automation and CRM include:

  • Improved lead disposition. Lead scoring is a powerful tool for ensuring that your salespeople are not chasing prospects who aren’t yet ready for sales conversations. The ability to score based on both CRM fields and those housed within marketing automation improves the evaluation of a lead’s readiness, regardless of whether the lead was generated by sales or by marketing. This way, your salespeople are spending their time with opportunities, not tire kickers.
  • Connecting salespeople with prospects at the right time. With rules-based sales alerts that marketers can create on the fly—in response to defined behaviors—salespeople can be notified when a conversion event happens. They then receive the background information they need so they can connect with a business reason, not a “checking in” call. With this structured process in place, more initial calls result in productive conversations instead of dead ends.
  • Proof of marketing contribution to customer wins. The ability to build reports based on any field—default or custom—within Salesforce.com provides marketers access to the information they need to prove their contribution to all stages of the buying cycle—including deals. Accountability for marketing is the new imperative—and often quite the challenge.

Tracking the disposition of marketing leads from start to finish has been a leading challenge that kept marketers from proving impact to revenues. The alignment of marketing and sales has also been difficult. Improvements to the integration of marketing software with sales software is enabling the two departments to work together—hand-in-glove—to drive improved levels of customer acquisition.

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Christopher Doran

Spotlight: Jep Castelein Shows Marketers How to Avoid Follow-up Failure

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Jep Castelein - Lead Sloth

Jep Castelein is a long-time marketer, a thought leader in the area of lead management and marketing automation and principal of LeadSloth. We’ll bet you don’t know why Jep chose this name for his company. “Lead” is for “Lead Management” and “Sloth” is for the animal. Many people think sloths are lazy, but they are actually very efficient and successful creatures. LeadSloth creates efficient lead management programs that make smart use of automation—Jep guarantees it!

There’s been much research conducted that shows a high propensity for longer-term leads to buy a product they’ve shown interest in within 2 years. Unfortunately, many companies skim the shorter-term opportunities off the top of the database and ignore the rest.

In his section, 6 Steps to Find Untapped Revenue in Your Marketing Database, Jep Castelein will show you how to avoid turning those revenues over to competitors. To whet your appetite, here are a few things you’ll learn from this section of the Guidebook:

  • Segmentation exists for a reason. Use it to your advantage.
  • How to get under the “skin” of your prospects to create higher-value dialogue.
  • How prospect needs differ by buying stage.
  • Types of offers your prospects can’t refuse.
  • How to simulate conversation with storyline.
  • Why to collaborate with sales—before the campaign.

After all, as Jep says, “Marketing's effort in nurturing prospects is only worth its time and money if Sales takes the qualified leads and closes some deals.” Not to mention that marketing needs the visibility to prove their influence on won deals.

Click here to download Castelein’s section, 6 Steps to Find Untapped Revenue in Your Marketing Database

OR

Download your copy of the complete eGuide today.

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Jeff Erramouspe