In February, I shared the most effective model for B2B companies that are looking to accelerate and scale sales growth. A critical function in the model is the lead management function. Lead management is responsible for:
Done correctly, lead management turns visitors into sales ready opportunities – but, unfortunately, SMBs do several things that sabotage their lead conversion efforts. From my experience, here are the top five mistakes being made:
1. Ineffective Strategy (Failure To Understand The Funnel).
Successful lead conversion comes from understanding how the B2B conversion process actually works. A good strategy can only be derived when you accept how things work, and then design your systems and processes in accordance with those facts.
SMBs notoriously fight the marketing funnel. They’re always trying to skips steps, and the effort is killing their growth prospects.
Here is how the funnel is supposed to work:
And here’s how 90%+ of SMBs actually design their funnel:
The lack of strategy to build the middle of the funnel makes predictable growth virtually impossible.
2. Lacking of Nurturing
Only about 25% of the leads you create will be ready to buy within the next 1 – 2 years (source: Gleastner Research). Whether you meet someone at a trade show, they’re referred to you, or they’ve downloaded something from your website, the vast majority of leads aren’t sales ready.
Having a sales bias will KILL your nurturing process. We all have a tendancy to look at leads that are created and predict guess whether we think they’ll be a customer or not. Yet, if I were to look at the majority of my best clients, I would not have predicted they’d be good customers when I first met them.
Effective lead nurturing is critical to a successful growth strategy. Consider:
3. Focusing on the sale too early
The key to successful lead conversion lies in answering the question, “Why should a prospect talk with us,” rather than “Why should a prospect buy from us?” The vast majority of the lead nurturing that does take place is just glorified direct sales copy that fails to create value for the prospect.
Successful nurturing requires that you put the prospect’s needs before yours. You must map their journey and create content that is compelling for each phase of that journey.
4. Generic process
One size does not fit all. Successful conversion requires that you personalize your marketing approach to your respective buyer personas and within the context of their journey.
A monthly email that goes to you entire database is not the same thing as a nurturing process. Quite the contrary. Generic processes simply tell your entire database that there’s nothing special for them.
Consider:
5. Bad messaging
Don’t get me wrong, messaging is important; but it’s rarely the reason that conversion efforts fail. Remember your message is far more than the words you use. In most conversion efforts, when the messaging is bad the cause is typically one of the items listed above.
Patience is not only a virtue in life; it’s a virtue in sales. Slow down the process, cultivate and nurture your prospects and your sales growth will accelerate while your life gets easier.