What's the easiest way to create a challenge with lead generation? Simple, refer to every form submission and new contact as a "Lead".
When we refer to everything as a lead we lose sight and context of where the prospect is in the buyer's journey and what's important to them. We create confusion on how they should be communicated with and by whom.
Internally, this also creates a huge headache with sales and marketing alignment. How many of us have run into the finger pointing between our sales and marketing teams?
Sales: We never get any good leads
Marketing: We give you plenty of good leads, you just aren't closing them.
This infighting is caused by the lack of a formal lead terminology framework and the nurturing/communication process that needs to accompany it. And that my friend, is what we are going to cover today. The presentation below explores setting up a well define lead terminology framework and lays out the roles and responsibilities for nurturing and communication. Enjoy!
>> Don't forget to check out our definitive guide to lead generation! <<
Hi, everyone. It's Kevin D'Arcy, Chief Marketing Enthusiast with ThinkFuel Marketing. And today's topic is can we stop calling everything a lead. What we're looking to do today is to introduce a new framework in terminology that you, your sales and your marketing teams should be implementing to cut down on the finger pointing and better serve your clients and prospects. And by this what we're referring to is that typical scenario where sales like to say that we don't get any good leads from the marketing team, and marketing says, "Oh, we give you lots of good leads, you're just not closing them." This is an all too common battle that most companies have to deal with, and we want to get to the root of where that misalignment is coming from, put some clarity and shed some light on the situation so that we can ultimately just serve our clients better.
So, the challenge here is that when we call everything a lead without further refining that terminology or those stages, then we're mishandling them. We're approaching them with the wrong information, the wrong content, at the wrong stages potentially. Or we're pouncing on them too early and trying to be salesy with them. So, what we want to do is talk about a new framework for helping to clear this up and make it easier for companies to understand where a prospect is in that buying process and what we need to be aware of and how we need to work with them and who should be working with them to move them through that process.
So, a lead is someone who's come to your website and filled out a non-decision stage form. They haven't provided a phone number or any indication of pain or challenges or opportunities that they might be having. So by a non-decision stage form, maybe they just downloaded a white paper or a checklist on a high level topic that you might be working with. A marketing qualified lead, somebody who's filled out, again, a non-decision stage form, so they're not ready to buy or have a meeting or try out a free trial of your software, again, we're looking at eBooks, white paper, things like that, but they have given you their phone number and they have started to indicate pain or challenge or opportunity that they're currently facing. So this could come in a variety of methods. This could be if you're tracking what pages that they're on and that at more of pain-indicated pages on your site, or on your web forms, you might have a question that say, "What is your biggest challenge with X?" And X is whatever you sell. So people have to fill that in, and now we're starting to understand the challenges and the problem that this lead, this marketing qualified lead has.
So that's the initial framework that we want to talk about. We want to talk about leads, marketing qualified leads, sales qualified leads, opportunities, and customers. And it's important to use these terminologies, use these stages. You might have some different qualifying criteria that you work in at the different stages, but it's important to have these differentiated because what we're going to show you here in the coming slides.
So, when we look at all these different stages of leads or qualification levels of leads, the next thing we need to do is to look at whose role and responsibility is it for communication, marketing, and pushing them through these stages. When somebody's a lead, a marketing qualified lead, and they enter into the sales qualified lead stage, that's when marketing is handling the communication. They're focusing their messaging on nurturing that account, educating them, being informative, but still working them through that funnel to get them ready to talk to a salesperson. This is where tools like marketing automation, products like HubSpot all come into play. Because we can use the automation tools in those to help nurture these people along.
When we take a lead or an MQL and we pass it to sales too early, that's when sales says, "That person's not ready to buy. That lead was no good." Because they picked up the phone, called the person, and wanted to book a meeting, wanted to come in and give them a quote or a demo, whatever your sales process entails. And that's very off-putting to a customer who's not at that phase yet.
So, I'm going to put a little asterisk here at the end of the process, the customer phase, because at the end when someone becomes a customer and your customer success, your customer service team takes over, those people do need to come back into the marketing fold as well. One so that we get a complete picture on the marketing side on what was a good opportunity or a good lead that went all the way through the process, how did they interact with our brand and our content and all those things. But then we want to continue to market to them for upsell, cross-sell opportunities.
So with all that being considered, let's look at two statements that seem to be contradictory to one another. Research shows that 35 to 50% of sales go to the vendor who responds to that lead first. And prospects don't want to be sold to or pounced on right away. They need to go through their research phase and things like that. So how can both of these be true? Well, again, it goes back to those different stages and the buyer's journey. So let's take a quick look at the buyer's journey.
So the first step of the buyer's journey is awareness. And this is where somebody might be visiting your blog, they might interact with your brand through social media. They'll download high level content that addresses their challenge or of an area of interest to them. Maybe you have an eBook that says, "Are IT departments still relevant in the age of cloud computing?" Doesn't necessarily speak ... well, the title doesn't at least speak to specific area or challenge that somebody's having. It talks to sort of a higher level problem or challenge. And when somebody's at the awareness phase, they're looking to do research on their own. They want to collect information. They haven't defined the problem that they have yet. They haven't given it a name. And no, they don't want to talk to a salesperson at this point because they don't know what questions that they should be asking. They don't even really know what they're looking for yet. But the awareness phase I always like to say that there's multiple solutions to the problem that they're looking for.
The consideration phase is when somebody has put a name to that problem that they have. They're still conducting the research, but now what they're trying to do is understand their different options that are available to them. And they still don't want to talk to your salesperson. So this person's going to visit more of your product or service related pages on your website, benefits or feature guides that you might have, your about us, and any of your area of expertise content, so blogs, white papers, things like that. They're going to download what we call middle of funnel content that explores how the solution that you sell will address their pain or challenge. So, that might be a free checklist called Managing your Cloud Subscription Services. Because maybe I sell a tool that helps people manage their cloud subscription services. So I'm giving them a free checklist on things that they need to explore. Again, I'm not saying here's specifically our product and service. Here's a checklist to help you through that research phase.
So, we'll come back to the original question of how can both of these statements be true. Well, the reason that they are and the way that you need to manage them all come back to when we lay the buyer's journey over that lead terminology framework. So, a lead is somebody who's typically going to be in that awareness phase. A marketing qualified lead is going to be in the consideration phase. And a sales qualified lead will be at the decision phase. So, when we say that we need to respond to them in a timely manner, and the number is actually under five minutes in terms of how quickly we want to respond to them, but we need to respond to them with the content that's relevant to the stage that they're at. So, responding to somebody who's downloaded that high level awareness eBook that we have is not ready to be responded with, "Hey, let's book a five minute call and I can walk you through our software and show you a demo." They're not there yet. They don't even know if your solution is right for them.
So what we need to respond to somebody at that stage with is information that might push them towards being a marketing qualified lead. Maybe we're going to send them out a link to download that checklist that we talked about as a consideration tool. So this is where we're going to respond to them and push them towards content that will help push them into a marketing qualified lead. And same with sales qualified. Again, once we've established that pain or that need that they have, or we've identified that through their actions with our digital content, we want to push them into being a sales qualified lead by encouraging them to sign up for a free trial, things like that. Where now we've qualified them as far as we can from a marketing perspective, and we're going to turn it over to a salesperson to take them into that sales process role. And again, at each one of these stages when somebody moves through, we need to trigger an action that's going to respond to them in a timely manner.
If all of your communication is educational, informative, and helpful, and it's deployed in a lighthearted kind of fun way to the end users, and then when the sales rep finally picks up the phone and calls them and they're deadpanned and very matter of fact and just trying to aggressively push them into a sales cycle, that creates a huge disconnect and it breaks the trust and credibility that that lead has built up with your brand.
When they get to that consideration phase, this is where we might have more solution based articles, white papers, checklists, guides, things like that. So things like how robotic process automation is reshaping the way your finance does business. Or seven reasons why your accounts payable automation is here to stay. So things that take your solution, your services or products and overlay them on their relevant problem or challenge that they're having.
And then when we get down to the decision phase, this is when we're going to have bottom of the funnel type conversion points, so things like is RPS right for you? Request a free evaluation. Or schedule an AP demo today. So, again, things where when they're ready to now engage with the salespeople, we have tools in place for them to do that.
And to wrap everything up today, a couple takeaway items is let's all promise one another that we're going to stop calling everything a lead. We're going to implement that framework, that's lead, marketing qualified lead or MQL, sales qualified lead, SQL, opportunity, and customer. We have to own these terms, we have to define them within our organizations, and we have to do everything possible to make sure we stick to using that terminology. We need to put systems and tools in place so that we understand where our prospects are in these frameworks. We need to formalize the nurture process so that people get timely, relevant, and on brand content and communications sent to them. We want to make sure that we put the right message in their hand at the right time, so somebody who's filled out request a demo, we're not going back and sending something to them that's very high level, top of the funnel type content. And we need to respond with velocity and relevance. So again, first communication should be within five minutes of them filling out the form, be relevant to them, stop calling everything a lead, and go out there and happy selling.