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Tag: leads

  • Data is Marketing Gold

    Data is Marketing Gold

    “Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I don’t know which half,” said marketing pioneer John Wanamaker in the early 1900’s. That is why CRM software was invented and why it is used by every serious marketer. In today’s “Big Data” World, enterprises are making not just marketing decisions, but almost ALL decisions based on data analytics.

    “Big Data holds the potential to describe target customers with an accuracy and level of detail unfathomable only a decade ago,” said Jean Spencer on the SalesForce blog, who is a Product Marketing Manager at Microsoft and was previously the content marketing manager at Kapost. “While old-school marketing efforts were limited to things like tracking returns on direct mail campaigns, or number of subscribers to newsletters, modern marketers can have data on people’s exercise habits, digital clicking behavior, time spent on various sites, purchasing history, personal preferences based on social media postings, time awake, time spent in the car, caloric intake, and almost anything else you can imagine.”

    SalesForce is at the epicenter of data, marketing and sales. They offer this overview of the concept:

    Using Data To Make Better Marketing Decisions

    A report by the Aberdeen Group says that 44 percent of executives are dissatisfied with the analytic capabilities available to them and that they often make critical decisions based on inaccurate or inadequate data. That was in 2014 and fortunately CRM has improved dramatically since then and executives are now typically integrating CRM solutions into their marketing platforms.

    “No longer do we rely on conclusions based on vague and imprecise relationships such as “we advertised last week and sales increased so it must have worked” or the common one that I’ve heard many times, “the objective was awareness and clearly many people are now aware of us”, said Gerald Chait who is Director/CEO of Marketing By Objectives. “In today’s world, this just does not cut it anymore.”

    Chait added in a blog post, “Gone are the days when we would define roughly segmented target audiences and place an ad hoping someone would purchase something. Today’s marketing enables us to identify who to work with to make a sale, right down to the individual level. What’s more, we can personalize and customize our advertising and messaging to each specific person, no matter how many people there are. We can even customise and personalize website pages depending on who’s viewing them.”

    It’s often referred to as predictive marketing, gathering data to learn what is working and what isn’t using precise analytical strategies and technologies in order to finely tune your marketing.

    “Predictive marketing is the application of predictive technology to the entire marketing process, across the entire buyer’s journey, and across every channel of communication,” says Eli Snyder, Associate Technology Director of Strategy at Intelligent Demand. “It means not only having predictive insight into the future through predictive analytics, but also using that insight to make better decisions about who and how to engage, and then build better content, campaigns and programs.”

    “In order to execute your marketing strategy in the most effective way, you’ll need your business management platform (or CRM) and marketing automation tools to work together seamlessly; using one to generate leads, and the other to maintain them, so you can get a complete picture of your business,” said Mark Sokol who is the VP of Product Marketing and Branding at ConnectWise.

    The Intersection of Marketing & CRM is Leads

    CRM and marketing are now tightly integrated in order to make marketing more efficient and and successful. “In the past, the marketing campaign stops here in the CRM software system and the rest is carried out externally,” said Denise Holland, VP & Senior Analyst of Genesys Advisory in the CRMsearch blog. “In today’s world, the right customer relationship management system can create the message, compile your target list, distribute your messaging pursuant to an automated schedule, capture the replies and inquiries from these marketing placements, route them to the right sales person or department, track the sale opportunity progress, record the successful sale event and calculate the campaign ROI.”

    “This CRM system can also advise the best time to call or email your customers, what type of messaging will illicit the best response, if your customer is really serious or just shopping around, how you can improve your products and services, and what new products and services your R&D department should focus on next,” he says.

    “CRM has one common component to help you make marketing decisions, Leads, says Joe CRM on the PowerObjects blog. “Lead data allows you to gauge how healthy your marketing is, what works and what doesn’t, and lets you understand lead quality. In today’s post, we’ll provide some lead data sources from CRM you can use to help make marketing decisions.”

    Joe at PowerObjects says you need to know where your leads are coming from. “Some examples of lead sources include outbound cold calls, email, chat, website form submission, and events,” he said. “Keeping the lead source simple lets you use a different field, source campaign, to describe the lead source in more detail as needed.”

    He says that knowing where leads come from drives marketing decisions such as:

    • Number of employees needed for the inside sales team
    • Budget disbursement for paid advertising
    • Landing page success
    • P&L for events attended

    Create a Data-Driven Culture

    “To cultivate a data-driven culture within your organization, it’s important to remember that without data, you’re simply another person with an opinion,” commented MeetMe CTO Jonah Harris on the NGDATA blog. “All too often, with valuable data and insights in hand, people remain invested in their own hunches and intuition.”

    “Transitioning to a genuine data-driven culture is a challenge for many organizations, but one of the ideal first steps is to start leveraging the data your business has to guide evidence-based decision making,” added Vaclav Shatillo of Business Intelligence at Clutch. “When data reinforces or, better yet, contradicts the gut feeling, the conversation around the importance of a data-driven approach is bound to begin.”

    David Waterman, Senior Director of Earned Media/SEO at The Search Agency says getting in front of the data is key:

    1. How to get/collect the data,
    2. Specifically what data to use,
    3. How the data will inform business decisions,
    4. At what frequency the data is needed to make actionable decision, and
    5. How to package the data so it can be easily digested, analyzed and reacted to.

    Find other great advice from a variety of experts quoted about how to create a data-driven culture here.

    Darren Catalano, the CEO of HelioCampus offers some great tips on building a data-driven culture that can be applied to any business:

    Data is Marketing Gold

    “Data isn’t an overwhelming set of facts and figures,” said Megan Totka is the Marketing Director for ChamberofCommerce.com. “It’s marketing gold. It shows you what your customers want and how to get your customers to buy from you.”

    Joe CRM says that the “data you receive from leads that turn into opportunities and then end up as customers is a goldmine.” He says, “This data alone can give your company direction and help you find your niche. That’s why when you use your closed as won accounts it should be for a macro view of your marketing processes. This is the data executives want to see from marketing because it helps prove ROI or that the money spent was worthwhile.”

    Data that can power your successful marketing strategy is sometimes found in places that you don’t expect. “New marketing technology, measurement platforms and other advances have greatly expanded the sources that marketers can sift through for nuggets of information,” said Eva Rohrmann, the director of solutions and customer lifecycle marketing for PR Newswire. ”

    Rohrmann says that the “most useful data that will turn strategic, positioning and tactical efforts into gold oftentimes is hiding right under your nose: with other teams within your organization.” She believes that ideas and data are “streaming” from many directions, “from sales to product to customer support.”

    “Every team within your organization has a treasure trove of actionable marketing intelligence waiting to be discovered,” she says.

    The marketing landscape is changing and that should make every CMO’s job easier because they are using justifiable logic instead of just gut intuition. In order for a company to reach their maximum sales potential they must utilize data-driven CRM strategies.

    “Marketing is currently undergoing a metamorphosis from a once qualitatively measured art towards a quantitatively driven science,” said Eamonn O’Raghallaigh, the Managing Director of Digital Strategy. on the company’s blog. “This paradigm shift will indeed lead to significant impacts on the competitive landscape; with the bias towards companies who adopt and embrace a data-centric culture within their organization.”

  • Facebook Lead Ads Get New Features, CRM Partners

    Facebook Lead Ads Get New Features, CRM Partners

    Facebook made Lead Ads available to all advertisers back in October. Since then, it has added some new features.

    Lead Ads enable users to fill out forms and advertisers to see reduced cost per lead. In January, Facebook announced a new context card, a carousel format, and the ability to reach both desktop and mobile users (they were only available for mobile previously).

    On Wednesday, Facebook announced some additional updates including the ability to duplicate forms, new CRM partners, video, customizable disclaimers, and Ad create tool support.

    Form duplication saves time and effort. Advertisers can duplicate forms and edit specific fields across ad sets and campaigns.

    With the video addition, advertisers can use video messages to engage people before they click through to the form. Advertisers also have additional options in the disclaimer portion of their lead ad form. This includes a new checkbox to give permission to share info. Facebook says the feature may be helpful in countries where double opt-in may be required.

    Finally, lead ads are available in the ads create tool in addition to the Power Editor and API.

    New CRM partners include Constant Contact, InfusionSoft, Sparkroom, and Salesforce Marketing Cloud. Facebook has also partnered with Zapier and MailChimp to develop a solution that can automatically ad Facebook leads to advertisers’ MailChimp lists.

    Image via Facebook

  • Facebook Lead Ads Get New Features

    Facebook Lead Ads Get New Features

    Facebook announced some new features for its lead ads including a new context card, a carousel format, and the ability to reach both desktop and mobile users.

    Lead ads were first made available to all advertisers in October following a limited launch in June. Facebook has touted a 4x reduction in cost per lead and a 54% more efficient cost per lead for different companies.

    With the general launch in October, Facebook added CRM integration, real-time response, and customizable questions. Now, the ads can do more.

    The context cards are optional titles that pop up after someone clicks on a lead, but before they get to the form. This, Facebook explains, gives businesses a place to offer more details on the information people are signing up for.

    The carousel format lets businesses showcase three to five images and headlines before people click through to the lead form.

    “Lead as are now available on desktop as well mobile, making it easier to reach people on any device,” a spokesperson for Facebook says. “Additionally, advertisers have insight into what devices their audiences use most and can tailor information to those particular devices.”

    Since the October launch, Facebook says email newsletter TheSkimm saw lead quality improve by 22% with the addition of a context card while Mazda saw 5x more leads compared to ads linking to their website. Mazda also saw cost per lead drop by 85%, the company says.

    Facebook talks more about the ads here.

    Image via Facebook

  • How Century 21 Utilizes Social Media to Connect with Consumers

    It’s always interesting to hear how brands, especially very traditional brands, utilize social media. Century 21 is one company that has embraced it extensively because, according to Matt Gentile, the Director of Public Relations and Social Media for the company, it is vital for businesses to embrace social and mobile platforms.

    For Century 21, a lot of first-time homebuyers are between the ages of 25-34, which is a group that is known for its social media activity. Gentile told us that Century 21 must follow these “digital natives” and reach them in the medium in which they spend most of their time – the social Web.

    “I think, for brands, it’s essential that you learn how to communicate effectively in those channels to reach the consumer,” he said.

    Gentile admits that, although social is significant in this day and age, it can be challenging for brands. He compared it to when brands first began to pull their advertising campaigns from print outlets and started advertising online. The challenging part for Century 21 is keeping the system members informed on the reasons for its decisions. However, Gentile believes that communication helps to overcome this challenge.

    Many brands also struggle with finding ROI in social media. Gentile told us that Century 21 has been able to turn many “likes into leads” by attaching a custom Bit.ly link to every piece of content it puts out in the social space. By doing this, it can track a lead from wherever it originated, be it Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, etc., and see what the pattern of the consumer is.

    Century 21 also recently released a new Facebook application that allows brokers to optimize their offices’ Facebook business page to better engage with consumers. Through the app, brokers can incorporate home listing info, Twitter feeds, blog posts, and more.

    Gentile told us that Century 21 would continue to embrace social media in order to improve connections with not only its more than 112,000 sales agents, but also consumers.