B-to-B : Focus on Quality
Six tips for managing leads and improving quality
August 2010 By Craig StoufferE-mails should remain short with clickable links to additional details because people—particularly in a business environment—don't interact with e-mail the same way they read a letter. They skim key points and headlines, and only drill down to read more if the content is of interest.
Video is the exception. Video in e-mail still has a coolness factor, and a well-produced, short and relevant video clip can communicate information more efficiently than words or (blocked) images.
4. Have Measurable and Meaningful Objectives
For marketers, the days of fluffy objectives and basing marketing ROI on "marketing spend divided by revenues" are over. We have more marketing automation tools at our fingertips to measure, monitor and track results than ever before. So let's learn and use them.
How does a sales manager determine a new sales rep's quota for a new territory? She makes a good guesstimate; sets a number (quota); and measures against it. Then, she adjusts each quarter based on results (raises the quota). A quota is both measurable and, for most businesses, very meaningful.
5. Ready. Fire. Aim … Not!
B-to-C marketers have tens of thousands to millions of prospects at their disposal to use for target practice, and they often have the patience, discipline and, at times, longer product life cycles to hold feedback sessions, run surveys, track respondents' digital footprints and monitor feedback on social sites. B-to-B marketers rarely have such luxuries.
Instead, B-to-B marketers can make the time to test their marketing messages on relevant audiences before going broad. Will you be running e-mail campaigns to market products and services? Keep in mind that most e-mail service providers offer easy to use split-testing or multivariate testing tools that can be used to try out campaigns before rolling out to larger populations. It's unwise to pull the trigger before aiming a pistol. Equally, don't push the send button on your e-mail campaigns without first testing to check if the message is on-target.
6. The Customer Isn't Always Right
However, the right customer is always right. As marketers, we're often measured, in part (or at times in full), by the number of qualified leads that come into the sales funnel—a yardstick that tends to change in proportion to the number of days remaining in the fiscal quarter. Have discipline. Know the ideal "customer-product match" and optimize the business, including "funnel building" and sales strategy, around that ideal matchup. The sales team will see fewer leads initially. But over time, they'll appreciate that they have to work less to generate more revenues (and higher commissions) before each quota-resetting dance.
A wise board member (and extremely successful venture capitalist) once said to me, "The No. 1 reason startups fail is lacking the discipline to know when to say no to a customer that isn't an ideal customer-product match." Get the right prospects into the sales funnel and turn them into the kind of happy customers it's easy to say yes to.
Craig Stouffer is chief evangelist at Pinpointe, an SaaS e-mail marketing solution provider based in Santa Clara, Calif. He can be reached at cstouffer@pinpointe.com.




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