Scoring: a leading priority for marketersToday, leads flow to marketing from ever-increasing online sources—email campaigns, the company website, Google AdWords and Google searches, webinars, online advertising, blogs and virtual trade shows—as well as from traditional marketing activities such as print ads, direct mail, trade shows and networking. This sheer volume of leads, or “suspects,” can be overwhelming. How does marketing prioritise all these suspects and determine which ones to:
Spreadsheets and calculators simply will not do. Marketers simply do not have time to crunch numbers as well as craft innovative campaigns with compelling messages and eye-catching images. A robust database and campaign management application helps marketing score every interaction by every lead, online and offline, and prioritise leads automatically for appropriate next steps. Scoring guides marketing actionLead prioritisation is a different discipline than the traditional A-B-C sales categorisation. It's more attuned to marketing action and comprises a set of levels for suspects, leads and sales-ready leads. Of course, the final action is moving a lead to sales, a lead that has attained an appropriate score threshold. Your company's specific scoring scheme will vary depending on your needs and processes. A very basic scoring scheme might look like this: Lead prioritisation
Of course, there's setup work to determine the overall scoring scheme and what score and process is appropriate for each action. Those interactions would include:
Next, determine how each interaction should be evaluated, what weight it deserves in the overall scheme. For instance, compare the scores below for someone who clicks a link from an outbound email, views your landing page for 12 seconds and downloads a white paper, versus someone who clicks the link, views the landing page for 20 seconds, views three product pages then two case studies, downloads a white paper, and remains on your website for five minutes. Scoring from email campaign
Leads move to sales only when they reach your sales-ready threshold. Leads in the lower scoring ranges are continuously engaged through e-newsletters and other marketing activities to nurture them toward the sales-ready threshold. Be flexible and adjust based on resultsSuccess in lead generation does not end with lead volume. The metric that matters, for both marketing and sales, is results. It's about sales, not just the number of leads passed on to sales. Lead scoring and prioritisation is the key moving the right leads to right stage at the right time, resulting in more efficient processes and, ultimately, more sales. About Lisa CramerLisa Cramer is chief sales and marketing officer for FirstWave in Atlanta, Georgia, US, providing on-demand marketing automation solutions that generate, score and nurture leads for B2B marketers. For more, go to www.firstwave.net, or call +1 678 672 3102. View my profile and articles... | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||