How to Use Personalization to Shorten the B2B Sales Cycle
In a
world of mass emails and buyers reeling under stimulus overload,
personalization has become critical to B2B marketing. Buyers are becoming
harder to identify and increasingly like consumers: They want personalized
outreach and one-to-one interaction, every time.
Part of the reason for
this is that people have action triggers, and personalization with a variable
reward helps trigger a chemical reaction in the brain—a dopamine release—and a
response. The Coke bottle name campaign is a good example: People love to find
bottles with their own names; but, you won't always find one, so the surprise
of seeing your name makes you feel special.
That's also what makes you go back to Facebook or Twitter a
dozen times a day: The content is so varied, some extremely personal and on
target with your interests, and others slightly off-base; it's the anticipation
of what's waiting for you that's exciting—that variable reward causes a
constant loop of dopamine-seeking. And it's the same reason you
check your phone notifications all day long.
When
you personalize something in an unexpected way, it makes the person on the
receiving end to feel good and prompts them to react.
A second reason
is—particularly with enterprise sales—customers buy for one reason: It will
help them. So, they're always asking: Will this help me, and how?
If they
have a pain keeping them up at night and your solution can resolve it, they'll
consider you and your product or service. However, they're likely going to
research your company and solution—reading your website and materials several
times—before starting a conversation. With marketing tools like those from
Marketo, Eloqua, and HubSpot, you can now see what they're up to: There are
tons of tools that can show you who's doing what on your website.
Then
there are platforms that can change the content or messages on your site based
on what those people are doing and how many times they've visited, according to
where the tool presumes the prospect is in the funnel. By doing that, the tool
is essentially taking customers by the hand and digitally guiding them through
the funnel process. That's partly why personalization is so important. It leads
to quicker wins because subconsciously the customer feels that your solution is
right for them, even if they don't realize this process is happening.
And, third,
identifying the right buyers is becoming significantly more complicated: Today,
B2B purchases are often a group buy. You might know the key decision-makers,
evangelists, and the signer, but you probably don't know who any of the other
players are—and they're all important. There's no way to find out who they are
unless they come to your site and download something, or you use a strong
business intelligence (BI) tool.
That
means you need to build relationships, which happens only through
personalization. Your prospect isn't going to respond or confide in you if they
think you don't understand them. They don't want to feel like a name on a
spreadsheet getting a mass email "personalized" with their name.
marketers need to go far beyond that. They need to get to know their customers
and send them highly relevant content.
When you really
personalize outreach based on someone's industry, pain points, and other data,
a buyer sees it and thinks, "That looks like me. I must be their
customer—this product must be for me."
Tips for Personalizing the Experience
Personalizing
outreach and building relationships will absolutely elicit a better response
and help reduce the sales cycle. The question then becomes, How do you do that?
Here
are five tips.
1. Talk to the customer and listen
Ask how
they do things to achieve a goal, and look for gaps. Listen more than you
speak. If you can't talk to the customer, listen in on sales calls.
2. Lean on your sales team
They
are closest to the customers, and no one knows customers better. Work with
Sales to understand customer pain points, challenges, and other information you
can use to personalize content and marketing programs.
3. Send third-party content
It's not just about you: If you want to build a relationship,
don't just send stuff about yourself—especially during the trust-building
phase. You want to appear helpful and resourceful, so the more content you send
that's not about you, the
better.
4. Treat everyone
like a buyer
It's
tough to identify the right people to build relationships with. There are no
technologies yet that can effectively identify the right buyers or influencers
to help move deals forward—at least not independently.
Companies
doing account-based marketing (ABM) are identifying these people through back
channels and networking. Thus, everyone has to be treated like a potential
buyer. If you think someone is in a large account you're targeting, you have to
lay out the red carpet and make them feel like everything is there just for
them—the content you're sending, the messages on the website, etc.
Personalization
is so much more important when you don't know exactly who the buyer is, and
when it's no longer just one buyer making the decision.
5. Use technology to support personalization
The
ability to interact with people in a personalized way at scale is driven by
tech, and there are tools that can help with many pieces of the job, including
as follows:
·
They can automatically change your website based on how many
times someone has visited.
·
They personalize emails, outreach to influencers and bloggers,
and social content.
·
They develop personalized content and recommendations. Picture
those Amazon popups that say, "Hi Shira, we thought you might be
interested in X since you bought Y." There are now B2B platforms that send
custom-built content boards and might say something like, "Hi Joe, I built
this for you, and it has info you might like to check out." It gives
prospects that hit of dopamine and makes them feel special.
·
They help with retargeting. While it's not personalization per
se, behavioral advertising works wonders. It's amazing how effective it is to
follow someone online after they've visited your website.
While
technology is important, you need humans for it to work properly. These tools
work best when used by someone with strategic sense—meaning they shouldn't be
managed by a tactical junior marketer, but by someone who understands how to
leverage the information effectively.
The Time Is Now
Not all
our brain chemicals can be triggered digitally, but everything that can, like
dopamine, has been studied by B2C marketers and is already being put into
practice by Coke, Amazon, Netflix, and the like. B2B marketers have always
known this information is important, but we are only now starting to tap into
how vital it really is. And, with technology, we are now able to act on it.
The
marketers who take advantage of the opportunities afforded by personalization
will be the ones who succeed. They'll have shorter sale times, more closed
leads, and higher revenues. For those that don't, things won't go as well:
They'll be eclipsed by their competition.
If
you want to better engage your buyers and reduce your sales cycle, now is the
time to start personalizing your B2B marketing program.
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