From Marketing Liability to Lead-Gen Asset in 4 Steps

(FYI…Republished and amended from a recent post while on the clock at Babcock & Jenkins on March 12)

This post inspired by The Fleet Foxes — Ragged Wood.

Being in the marketing department during a budget crisis is like being a cornered fox in a foxhunt. All eyes are on your next move. If you’re not faster and smarter, the dogs are going to get you.

Any time I’ve been the cornered fox (lots), the only way I’ve ever survived is by feeding the dogs something other than me. Only actionable leads will get them off your tail and help you be viewed as an indispensable revenue partner.

How you ask? 4 Steps: Assess. Target. Connect. Execute.

Assess
Reflect on your current situation. Assume you’re being watched. The leaders in the C-Suite and the sales team are waiting to see which way you’ll go. Innovative contributor or continued drain on the company? Don’t be tentative. Take control of your fate with campaigns that turn leads into sales.

Target
A quick look at your competition will reveal companies and people who are dissatisfied with their current level of service or quality of product. Go to Twitter Search and put the name of your competitor in the search bar to see who’s unhappy, why they’re unhappy and any bad news the company’s trying to hide.

You should also consider getting a Twitter account for yourself to enter some online discussions that center around your company or industry to build a stronger sense of the business challenges your prospects are facing. Bloglines is a great way to aggregate Web chatter and build a library of bloggers or people espousing opinions and influencing decisions in the blogging community.

And…don’t forget to mine your own network on LinkedIn!

Connect
When you have built out messages targeted by job role, perceived business challenge or industry vertical—or really any criteria that fits your research—then you can begin thinking about the most effective means of reaching your audience.

Recent work with Fortune 1000 clients, guidance from really smart co-workers and copious amounts of research all tell me that an integrated approach yields leads that turn into sales. As an example, my current employer deploys tactics that acquire, profile, convert or cultivate leads. We do this by tying together these outreach tactics through message and a singular call to action.

Execute
The components of a successful connected strategy that I’ve witnessed and participated in are below. The most important takeaway for you is don’t get mired in the tactics themselves. Just make sure they all work together and support each other in a logical, impactful way. A logical order example might be:

First touch: Direct mail—Despite its reputation for being a bit old-school in a Web-driven world, printed, tangible pieces that scream out from the mail stack still lead the day in terms of lead performance.

Second-Touch Follow up: Email
At my current company, some of our highest performing e-mails are links to breaking news or industry reports that are available for download.

Concurrent: Digital/social media cultivation
Go where the eyeballs are! In some venues, like virtual tradeshows or third-party publisher webinars, you can get guaranteed leads out of the experience.

Concurrent: Link-tracked microsite
This is the hub of all outbound, lead generation efforts. DM, EM and digital actions are fed into this media-rich, hyper-relevant knowledge center with a front-end that captures prospect data and a backend that tracks clicks so you know who’s acting and what they’re acting on.

Final interaction prior to sales hand-off: Telemarketing follow-up
Take the time to write a quick follow-up script to help your biz dev team further qualify the leads that will be immediately actionable by sales. Then hit the phones. Forget this step at your own peril. A bad lead delivered to sales will hurt you more than no lead at all.

The bottom line is, downturn or not, people need to buy products and services that help them do their jobs better, smarter and more efficiently, so they too can avoid a nerve-rattling visit from the CFO. If you can position yourself as their savior, you can feed your sales dogs the leads they need and live to see another foxhunt.

Here are a few more resources to keep you ahead:

Inspiration & Good ideas Terry Starbucker’s Ramblings from a Glass Half Full & MarketingProfs, respectively

Articles

5 Tips: Lead generation lift-off – DM News

Tips for b-to-b lead acquisition – Multichannel Merchant

B2B Marketing 2.0: How to Engage Social Buyers and Break Marketing/Sales Gridlock – CustomerThink

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10 Responses to “From Marketing Liability to Lead-Gen Asset in 4 Steps”

  1. Ben Waugh says:

    Nice writing style. I look forward to reading more in the future.

  2. admin says:

    Hey Ben…thanks for the compliment and for reading. I’ll keep it comin’ if you and others keep showin’ up!
    Now I’m off to check your stuff out.
    Looking forward to making each other even better.
    Cheers,
    Mark

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  4. admin says:

    Hey…kind words are always returned at the Cockeyed Pessimist. You’re more than welcome. Thank you for checking it out. If you find this topic interesting, be sure to visit the MarketingProfs site I point to above. Also, here’s a great article from Sonia Simone, that spells good news for a windbag like me….300 to 500-word blog posts!?!?!? Not on my watch! Kidding.

    Again thanks for reading and feel free to post interesting finds on the subject matter back here or at my twitter account http://www.twitter.com/EvAtWork.
    Cheers,
    Mark

    Why Long Copy Will Never Die

    by Sonia Simone

    http://www.copyblogger.com/why-long-copy-will-never-die/

  5. If you want to read a reader’s feedback :) , I rate this post for four from five. Decent info, but I just have to go to that damn msn to find the missed pieces. Thanks, anyway!

  6. admin says:

    Hey…the last two taste a little Spammy, but hey…I’ll play along. HRH…tell me the missing pieces and I’ll make a blog out of it. Giving you credit for the title of course. And MSN… Yer living in Google world, man. MSN’s like Driving a Model T. Seriously though, I’ll take the rating and work to add meat to the bones.

    Cheers and keep it coming.

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  9. Kelly Brown says:

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  10. admin says:

    Hey Kelly! Thanks so much for reading. If you like this kind of stuff, be sure to visit http://www.marketingsherpa.com and hit @marketingprofs on Twitter. Mine the heck out of my Twitter followers too at http://www.twitter.com/EvAtWork.
    Whatever you do…have fun with it!

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