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Betsy: Good morning and thank you to everyone joining us on this call today. My name is
Betsy Crozier and I am here with Robb Bailey, the co-founder and CEO of PageLadder Incorporated,
a San Diego based inbound marketing firm. Thank you for joining me Robb.
Robb: Oh, thanks for having me, Betsy. Appreciate it.
Betsy: Robb, if it's okay with you, I'd like to take about ten minutes of your time or
so and talk a little bit about lead nurturing and mapping the buyer's journey.
Robb: Yeah. Absolutely.
Betsy: So to start the conversation, I think we both have seen a stat stating that nurtured
leads make 47% larger purchases than non-nurtured leads.
Robb: Mm-hmm.
Betsy: You're familiar with that one, right?
Robb: Yeah. We were just discussing a little bit about why that was so.
Betsy: Perfect. So I was hoping you could talk about that stat and see how it revolves
around mapping your buyer's journey and what that process really looks like and why you
do see such greater success when you nurture those leads.
Robb: Yeah, definitely. So that's really compelling, because what I think a lot of people have
websites for in the first place is to have their website be their best sales person.
Although, I would say that most business owners look at their website and they're like, "Ugh,
it's the bane of my existence," right?
Betsy: Absolutely.
Robb: They're not really using it as their best sales tool, at least not yet. But it's
definitely possible to do. You'll hear me say this over and over again, one of the things
that we really encourage our clients to do is marry their marketing and sales and use
the website as a sales assist tool and get their sales teams active and talking about
the content on the website with the clients when they're speaking with them over the phone
or meeting with them in person. And the reason that we do that, encourage that, is because
-- and this ties into this stat a little bit -- when there's a need for information in
order to make a buying decision, the content on your website is probably the most important
piece of the pie. Because what happens is the person who's kicking the tires and looking
around and talking with your sales team, they don't understand the topics that you're an
expert at nearly as well as your sales team, as you are, as the owner of the company is.
Betsy: Absolutely.
Robb: And so the better that you can communicate that stuff online, the better they can then
take that information and go home and read it, or re-read it, or maybe read it when they're
not as distracted or they have more time. Or, this is another thing that happens a lot,
they have to justify it to somebody else. They're like, "Oh, I get it. I get it enough
to understand it and make a decision, but I have to justify it to my colleague, or my
boss, or this or that." And so, all those things lend to creating a more educated buyer
overall. I think anyone's whose got a longer sales cycle would agree, that the more you
can educated the buyer about something, the more likely they are to understand your product
and service. And that's why they spend more when they get nurtured over a longer period
of time. So, when you talk about a non-nurtured lead, that just means that that person has
had fewer touches with you or your brand, fewer opportunities to get educated, they've
digested less information, they maybe don't understand your process or your product as
well as they could. So, all those things affect buying.
Betsy: Is it safe to assume then that nurtured leads are actually more sales ready overall?
Robb: Oh, absolutely. Yeah, that's the point of nurturing the leads, is to create more
sales ready leads, right? So, when you talk about your sales funnel, the two metrics that
you want to improve the most are your opportunities and your sales, or we call this closed, you
close as a customer, right? So when you close them as a customer, in our industry we call
that closing the loop. So that person went from hearing about your company, that [isn't]
some information on your site, to learning what the differences are between you and all
your competitors out there. And then finally getting down to raising their hand and saying,
"Yes, I'm ready to be contacted by sales, or pull the trigger, or go ahead and buy something."
What happens after that is you look at the next step down and you go, "Okay, well regardless
of what action they took, based upon my industry, I have an opportunity to fulfill some work
for them or book some business with them." And then, only finally once you've done that
with them can you close them out as a customer. And what nurturing the leads does is it creates
more sales ready opportunities, which is the step right before the chance where you get
to speak with them directly, or interact with them directly, or fulfill on the order they
just purchased from you. So, those two are so close together. It's a really fine line.
If you can improve the conversion rate from the sales qualified lead to the sales opportunity,
even just by 10%, for some companies that's tens of millions of dollars, right?
Betsy: Yeah.
Robb: And then sometimes that's only a handful of interactions. So it might just be five
more opportunities. That's not typical, but for high enough per transaction value companies,
that's definitely possible. We've seen some cases where it's been like that.
Betsy: So what do you think the process looks like when you're mapping that buyer's journey
to get them to the point where they're a nurtured lead? How do you establish that?
Robb: That's a great question. So, what does mapping the buyer's journey mean, right? Mapping
the buyer's journey just means that before they get to that sales qualified lead segment,
where they've raised their hand and said, "Yes, I want to speak with someone from your
company," you basically want to map out a path starting with the first visit on your
website that they take, the first action they take. And you want to map that journey that
they go through when they're digesting the information all the way from just information
qualify, which means they just need helpful answers to their questions, all the way down
through the marketing qualified stage, which is where they're saying, "Okay, I'm considering
service providers. So I need to know the differences between what you guys have, whatever everyone
else out their has." So it's another great educational opportunity. It's a very powerful
sales tactic to talk about points of difference, right? That happens in all sales. What's the
difference between Verizon and AT&T? Difference between Honda and Toyota? Difference between
Nike and Adidas, right?
Betsy: Yeah, absolutely.
Robb: So, what you're try to do is you take this buyer's journey and you try to optimize
it. So instead of saying, "Okay, our marketing department is full of smart people and maybe
we have an agency that we're working with like PageLadder to help with inbound marketing.
Let's put our heads together and decide what we think, as marketers, is a good message
to push out there." Instead of doing that, mapping the buyer's journey is way more customer-centric.
So what we do is we say, "Okay, we're going to marry our sales process, based on all of
the things that you know about your customers from talking with them day in and day out
for however many years you've been in business. We're going to do our best to map out what
you guys think are the three main stages that your customers are going through." And this
is all before they contact your sales department, right? So, they ask these types of informational
questions. In other words, "I'm not ready to buy, I just need helpful answers." So we
write blog post content to answer those questions. They say, "Well what are the differences between
your brand and the next guy down?" So we make a white paper that basically explains the
differences between our company and all the rest of the competitors out there. And so,
mapping the buyer's journey is looking through that from the customer's eyes and then publishing
all this content and seeing where they get stuck in that journey. And this happens almost
every client we get. 99% of our client base has never done inbound marketing before, so
we have to start with our best guess. And then we can actually see, based on their behaviors,
like, "Oh, you know what? Out of 100 people, only one person took an action to go to that
next step in the sales process, in the buyer's journey. So, we might want to rethink what
our value proposition is as a company, or at least just for this maybe one product or
one persona, because we're not striking the chord well enough to get them to take that
next step." For example, we have a client who's an industrial manufacturer and they
have a very, very technical product. There's a lot of specs involved. It's very architecture
and engineer heavy. There's a lot of acronyms, and [inaudible 09:34], and graphs involved
educating in the sales process. And one of the things that we found is that they really
need a ton of information on the front end. 80% of their buyer's journey is getting educated
about what this product does and how it helps.
Betsy: Okay.
Robb: And that might be a four or five month period where they're digesting all this information.
And then finally at the very end, they just want a really quick comparison. It might only
take 15, 30 minutes for them to understand, but that's the middle of the [fall off] for
the marketing qualified one. They're just like, "Okay, well there's a few players in
this space. I just want to know the differences between them." So that happens really fast
and then they want to talk to sales right after that. To compare and contrast that,
we have also seen other industries where people shoot through that process almost all in one
day sometimes. Or they digest just one or two small pieces of informational content
and then when they're looking at providers it's twice as long, right?
Betsy: Yeah.
Robb: So you have to customize their experience to play to where they're at and what they
want to see. And that's how you can really move the needle with how many sales qualified
leads you end up getting and more sales opportunities you get, is by making it customer-centric
and having it based on their behavior, if that makes sense.
Betsy: Yeah. Is it safe to assume then that using marketing automation software plays
heavily into this? Into finding the bottlenecks and to not just creating the buyer's journey,
but making sure you're really optimizing it?
Robb: Yeah, absolutely. So the marketing automation is what customizes their experience. In other
words, with inbound marketing, it's much more of a pull than a push. So we're pulling the
person along based on them voluntarily moving through your sales funnel. So if they're at
the information stage and they want to stay there, they'll keep digesting informational
blog posts and whatnot for as long as they want to. And then when they're ready to move
to the next stage, which is like, "Hey, I need some help differentiating between service
providers," then they'll go ahead and do that, right? But the marketing automation takes
care of that for us. You have to set it up right. You have to have a plan and a strategy
that mirrors the sales process in order to do all this, but the marketing automation
direct feeds the appropriate email at the appropriate time based on where the person
is at in the buying cycle. And it's customized. So it's, "Hey Robb, here's another great blog
post that answers a question that we always get. Here's a link to the blog post. Hope
you enjoy." That's one of the [inaudible 12:13] emails. But if someone moves past that stage,
they're not going to get those emails anymore. They're going to get something that's much
more product-centric and brand-centric if they move to the next stage. It's more of
like, "Here's a case study about how our product helped somebody who used our product instead
of the other guy's," right?
Betsy: Yeah. Well it's interesting. Correct me if I'm wrong, I think there's a common
misconception that using marketing automation software is for your benefit -- so you're
getting better statistics, you're leveraging your time by reducing the content -- but there
actually seems like there's a huge front end application where it really, back to what
you're saying about it being customer-centric, allows you to really customize that content
for the customer, delivered on a time schedule that they want.
Robb: Exactly. You hit the nail on the head. And that's something that we're passionate
about over here. You might be able to go to a different inbound marketing agency and get
a different story on that, but if you work with us, you have to be able to do it that
way. You have to allow us to create a customer-centric campaign, because if you think about it, they're
the ones with the wallet.
Betsy: Yeah.
Robb: So, you should really be tailoring your online marketing to their wants and needs
first and then introduce your agenda a little later. Your agenda should come secondary to
theirs because, again, we're not doing this just to be fancy and be trendy, we're doing
this to generate more sales. And the happier you can make the buyers through their buying
journey, that becomes your selling process, right? So, I know that we're making twice
as many people happier on the front end, and that's literally being tracked through our
software. And we can see that more people are moving through the funnel, because we're
giving them what they want. And that's how this stuff works. This is the age we live
in today. People want to be well informed. They expect it to come to them when they want
it and not a second before, not a minute after. So the better that you can cater that experience
with these tools and these strategies, the more online leads you're going to get. That's
just how it's working today.
Betsy: Wonderful. Well Robb, I think that was hugely helpful. So to recap, I think we
started with the nurtured leads make 47% larger purchases than non-nurtured leads. And I don't
think anything we said today negates that at all. It just drives the point home that
it's customer-centric and you're really getting them sales ready.
Robb: Yeah, so there's that stat, right? You get a better lead quality, that's what that's
saying. If we're getting ten opportunities a day, if we nurture our leads, we'll probably
be able to get the most out of those opportunities that we have, right?
Betsy: Yeah.
Robb: But the stat that we didn't talk about today as much was you also get a higher volume
of leads. So, if you've tried content marketing before and you haven't had an increase in
lead quality, which is a qualitative measure, right; and also the quantity, which is a quantitative
measure. It does both of those things if you do it right. So, those are the two main things
that you can achieve. If your content marketing campaign maps the buyer's journey, it's very
easy to achieve that. If it doesn't, if you're putting your agenda first, it's very easy
to strike out.
Betsy: Excellent. Well Robb, this was hugely helpful. Thank you so much for your time.
And for anyone who's listening, if you want to know more about Robb or see some of these
other Google hangouts, we do have them live at our blog. It's pageladder.com/blog. Thanks
so much, Robb.
Robb: Thanks for having me. Appreciate it.