Webinars are powerful because they support your sales funnel in several ways. Webinars are:
Unfortunately a lot of small and mid-market (SME) B2B companies completely overlook webinars as a lead generation or opportunity conversion vehicle. When I begin talking with clients about webinars, I’m often reminded of Jerry Seinfeld’s bit that people are more afraid of public speaking than they are of death.
The truth is that anyone can use webinars successfully. Here are four key points you need to consider when using webinars as a part of your sales and marketing mix.
There are basically two types of webinars that are effective in the sales process. If you’re early in the funnel, your webinar should be focused on highlighting important problems that you solve. This focus creates what I like to call a “hole of knowledge.” Your goal in these webinars is to challenge and provoke your attendees thinking and to change the paradigm they’re operating from.
If you’re in the late funnel, the focus should be on highlighting solutions and your capabilities. This is where demos are effective as well. A critical mistake to avoid is focusing on a late funnel webinar early in the funnel. A solutions oriented webinar fills a “hole of knowledge,” and if the pain/problem hasn’t been clearly established, it actually has the effect of reducing the perceived need to act.
You have a choice of whether you want to present your webinar live or if you want to record it and present it “on-demand.” If you’re just starting out I recommend you go with on-demand, as it takes a lot of the pressure off of your presentation (you can edit the program after its done to fix any mistakes or missteps), as well as on promotion.
This is probably the most frequent question I’m asked. The answer is that your webinar should be as long as it needs to be. I’ve seen effective webinars as short as 5 minutes (see video) and as long as two hours (which for most, admittedly, is too long).
The topic and the content should be the driving force in determining how long your webinars should be. That said, if you’re just starting out here is a guide for determining the length:
One other point on length, the longer the webinar, the more slides you want to use per minute. There’s nothing worse than a 60 minute webinar where the presenter stays on the same slide for 5 minutes (or longer). The goal should be no more than a minute per slide.
The most important thing to remember when presenting webinars is that you are telling a story, and the program needs to be structured as such. Stories have a plot, conflict and resolution. Your webinar needs to have those as well.
The structure that I’ve found to be the most effective is: