B2B Leads: In-Market Is the New Inbound these are the important steps
We perceive them to be the quickest and most effective leads to
convert, so we idolize them: We view them as the ultimate way to showcase all
of the time we've spent optimizing content and crafting killer CTAs to hook
prospects.
But
when you filter out "leads" stemming from partnerships, job seekers,
and college students and researchers, is what you have left really
"hot" inbound leads? Are they truly at that sweet spot buying stage?
Did they follow the content path you've laid out and respond to call to actions
and contact forms you intentionally placed for them to find along that path?
It's
pretty likely they just stumbled onto your company at some random point and
added you to their list of potential vendors. Worse, you may have entered their
consideration set while they were already negotiating with someone else and
just needed one more bid to secure a competitive offer.
It was once said, "Even a blind squirrel eventually finds a nut." As
marketers, let's not be blind squirrels sorting through inbounds until we
eventually find one solid lead.
Reality-check: Inbound
is too late
By the time buyers virtually raise their hands, they've already
done research and they have a pretty good idea of which solution they're going
to pick. So, if you're waiting around for them to fill out a form before
engaging, you're already behind.
As marketers, we have to understand what buyers value and what
they're searching for before they raise
their hand. That information empowers us to greet accounts with the right
content, at the right time, through the right channels, and spend more time
focusing on "in-market" accounts—the ones with the highest buying
propensity.
The ability to analyze which accounts are in-market offers a
sense of control over our leads and eliminates the arbitrary need to wait for
them to come to us. No more missing "hot" leads because we didn't get
there soon enough; instead, we'd have the power to effectively influence their
entire buying journey.
However, the process of determining when a buyer is in-market
and contacting them at the ideal time is easier said than done.
The good news: intent
signals and predictive analytics offer insight into the full
prospect journey and which personas play a role in executing purchasing
decisions at every stage. That "pre-pipeline" journey includes five
stages: Target, Awareness, Consideration, Decision, and Purchase.
- The Target stage
is when you've classified accounts in your Ideal Customer Profile, but
they haven't yet demonstrated buying activity. Therefore, it's best not to
waste valuable sales and marketing resources here.
- The Awareness stage
features accounts starting to realize they have a problem. They haven't
put the pieces together on how to solve that problem or even really
thought about solutions. So, our goal here is to ensure they know us. We
want them connecting solving their problem with our brand and approach.
- Things
really liven up in the Consideration stage.
Accounts here know they have a problem and want to figure out possible
approaches to solving the problem. At this point, we want them to learn
from us: Ideally, we want them consuming our high-value commercial
teaching content.
- Next,
in the Decision stage, accounts move
"in market." They go from wanting to learn how to solve their
problem to actually engaging with potential solutions. When an account
goes from Consideration to Decision, a critical window of opportunity
opens up for us as marketers, and we want to be the first to engage.
- Engagement could be email exchanges,
event attendance, high-value content consumption, chat, or webinar
attendance. Ultimately, though, we want accounts to progress from Decision
to Purchase, which means meeting and becoming qualified pipeline.
Using buyer insights, we can follow prospects throughout this
entire journey and develop a connection with them through high-value outreach
based on insights about the account, buying team personas, their buying stage,
and the keywords they care about most.
Treat in-market like
inbound
When an account is considered in-market, it's not a guarantee;
it's not pipeline. It's an indicator of the best place to focus your time.
These accounts still must be worked, which is why business development rep
(BDR) or sales development rep (SDR) teams are critical.
Take the following steps to reach buyers "in the
pocket," so you can optimize resources and set your BDRs up for success:
- Construct
a service level agreement (SLA) for in-market outreach. Most marketers
consider their marketing and sales teams as non-aligned. The key to
closing the gap between the two departments is to construct an SLA. This
contract defines expected deliverables from the two parties; 65% of
marketing departments that have implemented such a system have achieved
higher ROI on inbound efforts, according to HubSpot.
- Prepare
BDRs with content and talking points using insights on what you know about
the account, persona, keyword searches, and buying stage. Understanding
why the account is in-market is the first step to apply intent signals in
uncovering the who, what, and why. BDRs can then use this information to
match relevant, timely content to accounts.
- In
our new account-based world,
you need to reach out to the correct personas at the right stage. That
means you must prioritize more than just one persona by setting up an
opportunity model that continues to be refined and redesigned over time
using customer feedback. These resources update the buying team on when accounts
move through the stages of the buyer's journey, cueing them to align
information with Marketing and engage with customers.
- The
nature of inbound marketing is defined as an approach to attract prospects
to a company rather than spending large sums to go find them. No matter
what business you represent, take strides to implement in-market inbound
tactics. Effective avenues include personalized emails, optimized
keywords, videos, calls, and social outreach.
The process of adjusting your marketing approach may seem like a
lot of extra work, but the benefits make the time and effort invested more than
worthwhile.
Again, the blind squirrels eventually find a good nut—but the
process is not predictable and it's not going to get you double-digit growth
numbers. Instead, we need to take a page out the early bird's playbook to
secure that worm before anyone else.
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If you need help with your email, web site, video, or other presentation to promote your company, product, or service, please give me a call at 440-519-1500 or email me at john@x2media.us.
X2Media can help you target your content and get your message to the audience in a way that it not only seen and heard, but remembered.
Until next month. . . .remember. "you don't get a 2nd chance to make a 1st impression." Always make it a good one!!
From X2Media I would like to thank you for your time.
John E. Hornyak
X2Media, LLC
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If you need help with your email, web site, video, or other presentation to promote your company, product, or service, please give me a call at 440-519-1500 or email me at john@x2media.us.
X2Media can help you target your content and get your message to the audience in a way that it not only seen and heard, but remembered.
Until next month. . . .remember. "you don't get a 2nd chance to make a 1st impression." Always make it a good one!!
From X2Media I would like to thank you for your time.
John E. Hornyak
X2Media, LLC
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