Showing posts with label conversion rates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conversion rates. Show all posts

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Inbound vs. Outbound Marketing: 7 Decision Factors


How do you find the right mix between inbound and outbound marketing.  I have seen the wrong model  bring down marketing efforts, jobs and even entire companies.

Here are a few examples:

Example 1:  Two years ago I was having a lunch with a CMO of a small company claiming to generate 90% of leads of his company from trade shows.  They were working at 2-3 trade shows a week.  It is obvious why that model didn't scale - CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) was way too high. It required too many resources and time-to-revenue was too long.  A year later, that CMO was gone and now the company is almost dead.

Example 2:  A company called Intronis decides on the outbound-driven lead generation model.  It hires lots of cold callers and does tons of trade shows.  The lead generation model fails.  The whole company has to go through painful layoffs.  Here is a quote from an article that appeared yesterday:  "Marketing is non existent…..sales team gets axed…engineer in the drivers seat. Sounds and smells like a sellout…Keep the barebones to support the product but not the partners…not so channel focused anymore. "


Example 3:  On the opposite side of the spectrum, another small company I knew was generating most of their sales from blog entries.  The CEO was a Blog Black Belt.  It worked really well for a while.  Good news - his company got acquired.  The larger company added some outbound efforts.  Not so good news - they are currently having hard times with the number of leads, quality and customer acquisition costs - not being able to scale neither of models.

So, how do you find the right answer?

Before giving up to inbound marketing zealots or caving in to outbound lead generation agencies, you may want to take several factors into consideration:

1.  Your target buyer's persona.
    - Who are the decision makers for your product / service?
    - Who are the influencers?
     - What are their job titles?
     - What are the key challenges they are trying to address?

2.  Where do they fit on the innovation curve?
Are your target buyers innovators, early adopters, or laggards?  This will define to a large degree how to approach them.

Example: If you are marketing a revolutionary new product to innovators, you may want to start with an outbound networking-type campaign through your industry contacts to recruit your first customers.  Later, you can integrate a targeted social media-driven PR component, as well as an inbound campaign focused on people who are looking for relevant solutions.

3.  Channels where your customers find information and get influenced
Where do they look for information relevant to your offering?  Is it trade shows, industry forums, search engines, communities, newsletters, etc?

Example: If you are marketing to decision-makers that don't spend much time online or you are in an industry where the phone is still a more traditional communication method, an outbound model may be the appropriate one.  Conversely, if you are marketing to an audience that relies on social media and online communities for research, contracting a call center to generate leads would be an absurd idea! 

4.  The value of each sale and Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
At the end of the day, marketing is an economic tool.  If a certain lead generation model is working really well, but costs too much, then it is doomed to fail.  You have to find the model that works best for you - in terms of BOTH conversion rates AND costs.

Example: We were using PPC for lead gen and it was generating high quality leads that regularly converted into sales.  But the cost of each sale (the marketing part) was about 200% over our target.  And after trying to bring it down for a few months, we had to pause it.

Outbound call center leads generated sales that costed 500% over the goal.  So, we focused on the inbound marketing leads - search engines, communities, social-driven PR, etc.  This proved to be the right model, bringing down our costs significantly -- even below the target CAC.  

Eventually, we revamped the messaging, did complete keyword map revamp, rebuilt landing pages, and changed 3 PPC agencies (before we found the right one)-- and "voila!" CAC is tracking right around the target!

  

5.  Your sales team readiness

No matter how many good leads you bring, you have to make sure your sales team and channel partners are capable of converting these lead types into sales.  I have seen a mismatch here causing many failures.

Example: At one of my previous companies, we started generating lots of inbound leads that needed a moderate amount of follow-up before they closed.  However, our sales team had only channel experience - they did not have the skills or desire to follow-up directly with the prospects.  Result = failure.  Until we upgraded the sales team.

6.  How easy is it to scale?
Some programs can be scaled easily.  Others may require a major upgrade to scale, putting CAC out of whack, at least for a while.

Example: You may be able to scale PPC.  But to substantially scale search engine-generated leads, you may need a sizable investment and patience.  However, longer term results can be huge! 

7.  Mix and change.
My final suggestion is to constantly experiment.  Marketing has been undergoing a major change over the last 3-4 years.  What works today may not work tomorrow at all .  So it is critical to always look for new lead channels.

First, create the foundation with the proven channels.  Then, experiment with 2-3 new ones at a time. By the time one of your foundational channels stops working, you will have 2 new ones that generate even better leads!

And with that... Happy Hunting!



Thursday, January 17, 2013

Inbound Marketing - Lead Generation, Metrics and Growth Hacking

Marketing and Sales have been growing closer together in many areas over the past few years.  One such area is lead generation.

Lead Generation itself has recently morphed into growth hacking -- finding new sources and channels for high quality leads and nurturing lower quality ones into opportunities that indicate "near-buying" behavior.

NO MORE COLD CALLING!  Today, marketing can completely relieve the sales team from majority of lead gen tasks, such as cold calling, dialing for leads, "pounding the phones," etc.  The idea is to get prospects educated and sold online - before they even speak with a sales rep.

Unlike the interrupt-driven outbound model, by implementing inbound marketing, you are reaching a completely different type of prospects.  These prospects are more qualified, since they have a specific need and they are actively looking for a solution.  By providing them a variety of relevant tools and information, you are helping in their decision-making process.  By the time they decide to contact you, they are well educated on the product and are most likely willing to take the next step.  Contrast that with a sales rep cold calling and trying to pitch a product to people that don't have a problem they are trying to solve in the first place.

Implementation.  This approach significantly shortens sales cycles, increases conversion rates and drives down cost of each sale.  But how do you implement it?  The first step is lead classification -- understanding what are the most and least desirable leads, as well as all types in between.  Here are some recommendations:



1. Lead Types.  Find out what kind of leads are you getting today.  For example:

- Demo Requests
- Free Trials
- Phone calls
- White paper downloads
- Email contact requests

Brainstorm with your sales team to see what works for them best and worst, as well as what other types of leads you may want to be getting moving forward.

2. Analytics.  Look at your metrics for the last 12 or 24 months.  Even though you can build some very complex models, I would start with basics:
     - Conversion rates - lead to opportunity, opportunity to deal, lead to deal
     - Time to conversion - same as above
     - Costs -  per lead, per opportunity and per closed deal
     - Effort - how much time does your sales team invest in converting these leads?

3. Trends and scalability.  How did these numbers change over time?  Can you grow them easily? Would scaling costs be linear or would they require a significant investment -- to take to the next level? Can your marketing team handle the growth (team size, budgets, skills)?

4.  Pyramid Map.  Next, build a pyramid like the one on the left, as a visual representation of types of leads you are going after.

5.  Lead Inclusion / Exclusion.  Decide on which types of leads you are going to focus moving forward.  At this point, you may decide that some types of leads are too expensive.  You may find out that some low quality leads are even not worth pursuing due to the effort required. 

For example, after this type of analysis, we have decided that leads generated by an outsourced lead generation agency were too expensive and required too much effort from our sales team, making them completely ineffective in comparison with other lead types.  Instead, we shifted our focus on higher quality leads that required significantly less effort from our sales team.


6.  Planning.  Once you have the lead metrics, analysis, lead map and your sales plan, it is very easy to put together weekly, monthly and quarterly plan of how many and what type of leads you need.  Knowing the cost per lead and conversion percentages will help you accurately forecast marketing budgets - in terms of their size and timing.

7.  Metrics.  Finally, I suggest monitoring lead metrics daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly and annually - to measure how you are executing against the plan.  Sometimes, you may need to to adjust activities - due to market changes, competitive moves, opportunities, etc.

You can add more advanced metrics later, like lead scoring, heat map, etc. But it is critical to intimately understand the effectiveness of each lead type before implementing these, otherwise lead scores are useless and the sales team will stop taking them seriously.

We have created a daily lead generation report that gets emailed to marketing, sales and relevant executives at the end of each business day.  This report covers number of leads in each category, broken down by source, type, relevant lead details, etc.  The same group of people receives a weekly lead composite report that looks not just at weekly numbers, but weekly and monthly trends in each category, enabling us to discover very interesting and useful micro and sometimes macro trends.



In my next blog entry in CMO Guide to Inbound Marketing, I will discuss the lead gen mix: outbound vs. inbound.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

It's all about content... and metrics

How important is content quality in your marketing efforts?  Lip service aside, many organizations treat it  secondary at best.  Yet, in the modern world of online marketing, content is one of the most important components of your success.

Let's take an example of email nurturing.  Last week we were planning an email campaign with a very strong article written by an expert and a decent landing page.

We wrote the email and were thinking about the subject line.  My team member had it as "7 ways to ..."  To me, it seemed a little too "fluffy."  So after some more brainstorming we came up with another line that was more informative (at least IMO), like "xx  xx failure rates."

The theory behind it was that the "email receiver" would click on it because it would appear to be more of an informative email vs. "push my products" one.  We spent about an hour on the subject line debate.  Most organizations I know would have considered this as wasted time.  Was it though?

We conducted A/B test during the next few days.  Same email, same call to action, same landing page.   Different subject lines.

Results:

Subject Line 1: "7 ways..."   Open rate: 4.4%, click through rate: 0.2%
Subject Line 2: "...rates"  Open rate: 7.0%, click through rate: 0.5%

As you can see, there is a huge difference in these rates, which translated to 12 (SL1) leads against 50+ (SL2).  This is one of the best demonstrations (supported by metrics) of the difference that content quality makes.

The next A/B test will be this week.  We are going to be testing the email text.  We tuned it on Friday.  Given we see interesting results, I will blog about it later.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Marketing to SMBs: Lead Generation, Conversion Rates and Sales Tools

This post is the continuation from 8 Key Elements for SMB Marketing (Part 1).  In this entry, I would like to focus on effective lead generation and nurturing practices, sales tools, as well as an integrated sales and marketing approach.


Lead Generation.  With small deal sizes and large number of customers, enterprise-style 1:1 marketing is usually ineffective.  Instead, I have seen great results with marketing into communities, such as Spiceworks.  Many IT professionals from SMBs use such communities to exchange ideas, to learn about new offerings and ask questions to peers.  It is important to identify and establish presence in these communities - engaging participants, answering questions, working with customers and prospects, as well as running cost-effective marketing campaigns.

Another very effective way for generating high quality leads is creating unique and relevant content.  You can use it for blogs, IT community posts, social media, and PR.  In my experience, this has been one of the most cost-effective and sustainable sources of strong leads with very high conversion rates.

A lot has been said about the importance of PPC and SEO.  I usually like to experiment with PPC for SEO messaging before putting lots of effort into SEO.  This way I can get good results from a small PPC effort short-term, while SEO is gaining strength.  Once SEO is strong, I still keep a small budget for PPC for experimenting with new keywords, ideas and marketing messages.

Call center lead generation campaigns can work well for certain offerings.  However, to make these campaigns successful, there is typically a sizable upfront time and money investment - finding the right vendor, creating training materials and scripts, training agents, listening to calls and having an ongoing QA process.

One huge benefit of listening to lead generation and sales calls is the ability to witness your marketing and sales messages in action, see what works and what not, change as necessary and try again in real time.


Lead sorting and nurturing.  With thousands leads from different sources and at different stages of buying cycle, it is virtually impossible to keep up with all of them manually.  I have had success with designing a "funneling logic" for lead nurturing, where the leads get identified and categorized based on various factors and how far down are they in the sales funnel. Some types of leads get matured and closed using online tools (landing pages, content, emails, online store, chat, etc.) with minimal human interaction, saving sales lots of time.  Other types get passed to the sales team for closing.

I have been using Marketo for lead nurturing.  However, we quickly ran into the need to customize landing pages for further lead nurturing and "heating" to drive prospects closer to the purchase decision before handing them to the sales team.



Marketing and Sales Tools.  I try to have a minimal set of marketing collateral with an emphasis on online tools, especially for cloud-based services.  Many SMB IT folks don't have time to read through complicated materials.  They prefer seeing and experiencing the actual product.  Tools like screenshots and sandbox environments have been extremely useful for me, providing very high conversion rates.  I also use podcasts, brief videos, blogs, datasheets, customer testimonials, and industry press articles as necessary.



Patience.  With all these elements built properly, SMB sales can indeed be lucrative.  However, these efforts require a dedicated team that is experienced in marketing and selling into this space, willing to stay engaged and transform along with the industry.

It also may take some time to get the messaging and programs right, people trained, see what works and what not in your environment, before you can start seeing results.  However, the results can be great in terms of a strong revenue stream, high customer satisfaction rates and lower marketing costs.

Monday, August 15, 2011

8 Key Elements for SMB Marketing (Part 1)

Mysterious SMB market.  For many years, I have been hearing the same story, "SMB market is lucrative and really fragmented.  It represents a tremendous opportunity for us."   Yet, I have witnessed many companies enter this space over and over, just to fall short of their expectations.  So, what gives?

The challenge is that neither enterprise, nor consumer programs alone are effective in this market.  I spent last 1,5 years on finding effective approaches for marketing and selling IT products and services into SMB.  Here are my findings:

1. Market Definition.   First, how do you define SMB?  I break it down into 4 segments:
     
           a. Small Office / Home Office (1 - 5 employees)  Consumer-like buying behavior.
           b. Very Small Business (6-30 employees).  No dedicated IT.  Use of consultants.
           c. Small Business (31 - 250 employees).  1-3 IT employees.
           d. Medium Business (251 - 1,000 employees).  1-5 IT employees.  More sophisticated network / apps.  Elements of the enterprise IT.


2.  Analyzing Strengths.  If you already have presence in this space and analyze your historic sales, you probably will discover that sales have been coming from one or two of the sub-segments above.  This exercise will point to success in certain types of your activities or channels.  And, visa versa, you may see opportunities in sub-segments that are not performing well.  You can also define which of these sub-segments are best matched for your product / sales force / channel presence.  This is critical, because even if you have the best product, but lack the right sales force type, your efforts may stumble.


3. Different Target Audience.  IT folks in SMB find, purchase and consume products differently than their peers in large enterprises.  SMB IT employees are typically generalists.  Having to compete with much larger companies, IT departments with only a few people have to take care of everything from fixing computers to maintaining the network infrastructure and deploying applications.  This often means no time for a deep dive into any area.  This also means no time to read fancy white papers, or try every product feature, or attend industry IT mega shows.  These characteristics make enterprise-type marketing fairly ineffective.


4.  Product Approach.   Ease of use is the name of the game here.  I have seen many simple and easy-to-use cloud services beat out complex, difficult-to-use and deploy, yet feature-rich products.  When building a product or a service for SMB market, it is critical to keep ease of use in mind.  It is a somewhat difficult concept for enterprise software vendors, who customize products to the needs of very large customers.  For these vendors, it may make sense to have a simpler and cheaper offering with reduced functionality that is easy to use, fast to deploy and doesn't require lots of support.  That is one of the reasons behind success of many cloud services in SMB space.  It is a worthwhile exercise for product managers, especially the ones with little SMB experience, to hold several focus groups to understand the simplicity requirements.


5. Messaging.  Since simplicity is so important, most of the enterprise (complicated and long) messaging approaches won't work.  SMB IT folks have absolutely no time to translate complicated technology of fluffy marketing messages into benefits.  Product Marketing has to create a message that connects quickly and uses their target market's language.  The reward can be huge - quick decision-making process and faster time to revenue.  A successful example of such messaging is what we did for Panda Security: www.forgetsecurity.com


More... Not to bore you with too long of a post, I broke it down in two entries.  In the second part, I  discuss lead generation, lead sorting and nurturing, sales approach and channels, and marketing / sales tools.

Friday, August 5, 2011

8 Steps for Creating an Effective Main Message

 It's a familiar situation.  A company or division is formed.  It develops a product, then races to launch.  Somebody throws together an initial message and a web site.  Product launches.  Revenue starts flowing.

It's time to hire a marketing exec and build a team.  Founders emphasize leads and conversion rates.  Good things like SEO, lead nurturing, online marketing get implemented. But one fundamental is often missing.

Sin #1.  Positioning / Main message.  Let's look at the main message from two companies web sites:

-  Zoho

- Workday


Are these accurate and good in the eyes of these companies?  Probably.
Is this the way their customers think?                                      Probably not.
Do these miss a chance to communicate the true value?          Yes!

A strong main messages gives the best opportunity to grab prospect's attention... the right way. It also flows into the rest of messaging, impacting  PPC, SEO and the conversion rate.  In fact, vague main message  results in wasted money and ineffectiveness of marketing campaigns.  This is especially painful for startups with little brand recognition.

Here are examples of effective and clear messages from Pandora and AppAssure:







How do you develop a strong main message?  Here are some key principles:

1.  Grab attention.  It has to be unique enough to grab visitors attention and encourage further browsing.
2.  Differentiate.  Has to communicate at least one unique angle or a customer benefit.
3.  Specific. The benefit has to be specific.  Statements like having "all-in-one," "complete," "best" are often subjective and indicate vendor's point of view.  In the examples above, the word "complete" may have a very different meaning for target customers vs. the vendor.  It can discredit the message.  What I like about the message from AppAssure is that is specific.  "Recover in Minutes" sets a pretty specific expectation.
4.  Believable. It is important to keep the balance between reality and outrageous statements that prospects discount as zealous or exaggerated.
5.  Language.  The message has to be in the language used by target customers, which is often different from the vendor's language.  If your target customer is CIO, too technical of a message may be a mistake.  If you are targeting sysadmins, you may want to be fairly technical and specific.
6.  Easily understandable.  The prospect has to be able to quickly grasp the message.  Don't make them think too long - often people don't have time or desire to do that.  They will just leave the site.
7.  Customer tested.  It is critical to test the main message with a number of customers and prospects before going live.  You can start with a qualitative test via customer conversations.  Then, you can finish with an online survey.
8.  Not Perfect.  It doesn't have to be perfect.  You don't have to spend months on this.  It OK for some internal folks to struggle with it.  It can be work in progress, however you don't want to change it very often.  It just has to be effective.

To summarize, a strong main message could drastically increase the effectiveness of your marketing campaigns and ROI of your marketing spending.  I will discuss the sin #2 in the next Hack Marketing blog entry.

Here is an example of a message that we developed about 6 months ago: www.forgetsecurity.com

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

5 Practical Steps For Increasing Website Conversion Rate

Congratulations!  Your web traffic is good!   Now what?  How do you convert visitors into business?  The 5 approaches below came as a result of my own experience of running marketing in several companies, as well as from the practical feedback from my marketing colleagues.


1.  Understand your traffic.  Most likely your web traffic is coming from many different sources.  For example, some people may be visiting your site as a result of reading a blog; some - from a banner ad at a community forum; some may be responding to an email.  Each traffic type has unique characteristics that are important to understand:

  • Function.  IT Manager vs. CIO vs. BU Manager, etc.
  • Buying cycle.  Research phase (traffic source: just read a magazine article, realized had the same challenge) vs. shopping for a solution (source: read a customer testimonial at an industry forum while looking for a solution to a known problem) vs. ready to buy (source: responding to a price promotion.)
  • Topic / Trigger.  Visitors came to the web site after reading a blog entry on a nasty Trojan Horse vs. an article about disaster recovery vs. a  promotion on your product, etc.  



2.  Multiple landing pages.  Each traffic type requires a unique conversation with a category of prospects  (based on function, topic, etc).

For example, let's say you have a group of IT managers that came to your web site as a result of reading a blog entry on the complexity of managing file servers.  Sending them to the main page may disrupt that conversation.  Most of them may feel tricked and will probably end up leaving.  Instead, a simple landing page continuing the discussion, perhaps explaining how this complexity can be solved with a practical implementation, would retain them and encourage to continue exploring the site.

It is important to have as many landing pages as necessary for a meaningful traffic segmentation (based on unique types of conversations) and driving them to a logical conclusion (more info, trial, contact, purchase, etc.)  Many content management and marketing automation tools (like Marketo,) can help in accomplishing this quickly and easily.



3.  Unique messages.  Each landing page requires a specific message to continue the unique conversation started at the lead generation phase.  The message should take into account all the factors from above.

For example, if visitors are coming as a result of reading an article on the risk management in CIO Magazine, you want a landing page with an "executive" look and feel, focused on best practices for solving this problem, and not getting into too many technical details.  It is also a good practice to speak to several of your CIO customers to craft this message.

For a number of webmasters coming from a blog entry on solving Apache web server performance issues, you may want to have a landing page that is be fairly technical and specific.  Again, I would suggest talking to a couple of webmaster customers to craft the message.




4.  Unique elements.  You probably already have a collection of elements, such as videos, podcasts, white papers, blogs, customer testimonials, etc.

Each landing page needs the elements that are appropriate for its audience.  The best way to find right elements is to talk to your existing customers fitting the profile.  This can be an eye opening experience.

For example, one of my customers told me that most of the elements we were planning were irrelevant for him.  He told us that many SMB IT Managers typically look for product screenshots first.  If they like them, they continue browsing.  After verifying this point with a few other customers with the same profile, we ended up giving screenshots a very prominent position on the page.  Very quickly it became the most visited element for the whole site.  The landing page ended up having a great conversion rate.

Another very successful element we added as a result of a direct customer feedback was a "sandbox" for a cloud product we were marketing, where IT managers could play with the product in a "sandbox" environment.



5. Unique call to action.  For this step, it is important to understand prospects' phase in the buying cycle.  If they are just researching, a big red "BUY NOW" button will most likely turn them off.  However, "watch a video" or a "free trial" may work well for them.  Alternatively, if the traffic is coming as a response to your "30% off" promotion, you may want to have the "buy" button in a more prominent location.



These are just 5 ways of increasing your web site conversion rates.  These steps require a bit more planning and execution from your marketing team than usual.  However the conversion rates and revenue results are well worth it.  

There are important steps like monitoring, measuring, and adjusting pages and campaigns that I did not discuss in this entry.  I will try to cover these in a future hack marketing blog entry.

Please feel free to leave your comments and suggestions of other conversion approaches that have worked for you.