While I am a (HUGE) proponent of inbound, there are two key fallacies lies with this data.
The rationale further infers that if you generate more leads from inbound methodologies, you’ll lower your cost of customer acquisition even as your growth rate increases and you hit scale. Anyone who has successfully executed high-growth inbound marketing at scale has the financial statements that will illustrate just how big a lie this is.
Let me explain, using one of the most common tools that inbound marketing agencies and advisors use to demonstrate the ROI of working with them.
Last week, I got an email from an inbound marketing agency offering me a free download of their lead generation calculator. I hadn’t received one of these offers in a while, so I was curious to see much had changed. I was disappointed to see that it hadn’t.
The calculator makes a pretty simple and compelling argument. The argument is that if you can increase the conversion rate associated with your website, you’ll increase sales and lower costs.
The calculator works something like this (note: for the example, I literally just picked numbers from the air, so please do not read anything into them. The illustration applies regardless of the numbers.):
This is where the calculator gets fun, and the lie gets damaging. What would happen if:
These are relatively modest improvements with BIG impacts. After all, if I were to tell you that our services could create the second scenario and our services cost, say, $20,000/month; well, you’d be foolish not to hire us. You’d break-even on your investment with us on the 11th day of our 2nd month working together. (I better raise my pricing.)
Of course, we know, it’s not that simple (or lucrative). Let’s look at the three components of this lie:
All leads are not created equal and as your lead velocity increases, the quality of that lead pool (as measured by predisposition and timing to a buy decision) will increase. The reason for this is that intent is the critical element for this type of lead quality and, at any given time, the number of potential leads with intent is finite and limited.
High-intent leads are also the most likely (and easiest) to convert, so as you increase site traffic and conversion efforts, your lead pool will increase with lower- and low-intent leads at a faster rate than the growth of your overall lead base.
This is not inherently bad but it does mean that you can’t simply calculate higher sales as a result of higher conversion.
I will admit that I have always hated one of the most sacrosanct reports used in sales. The waterfall report presumes to create predictability by highlighting the “conversion waterfall” of your revenue acquisition process.
The problem with these reports is that they rarely bring time into the equation. Just like the lead generation calculator I highlighted above, it illustrates a flow and ROI that is instantaneous.
A typical waterfall report highlights the myth that fast growth solves everything. Yet anyone who’s been involved in a high-growth business (and especially one that accelerates growth) knows that growth eats cash. Customer acquisition cost is an important metric, but it’s only a small piece of understanding your real economic model.
You must also calculate and account for the timing of those costs (often heavily front-loaded and fixed) and time to revenue. The ash heap of business history is filled with companies that got killed because of their growth, not despite it.
As you generate more leads, your time to revenue will increase and if you don’t account for it, it can kill you.
Your focus should not be on revenue or even gross profit. The number one business health metric is the ratio of lifetime value to the cost of customer acquisition & retention. When you solve for this, your decision-making, judgment, and analysis can change dramatically.
Growth is a complex beast that is easily misunderstood. The reason for this is that so much of the impact of growth are intangible and virtually invisible. To make sense of it you must identify the three key processes that drive lifetime value:
These three processes operate at different rates and each have variabilities and constraints. Intelligent growth is focused around optimizing these three distinct, dynamic process to maximize throughput while controlling the costs associated with them. You must solve for the whole, not their individual parts.
If you don’t effectively manage the constraints/bottlenecks that exist within and between them, you can easily find yourself doing all of the right things only to run out of money before your profit engine kicks into high gear.
If you take this Lifetime Value Manufacturing approach, you’ll gain much greater clarity, you’ll pick up tremendous efficiency and velocity and you’ll achieve sustained growth with much, much less effort and cost.