How can you convert anonymous visitors to your website into actionable leads? A combination of cloud-based services and a good partnership between sales and marketing is the critical first step.
My clients typically use opt-in email campaigns to market offers to their open leads, newsletter list and other opt-in lists they may be managing. We use cost-effective and powerful tools to monitor the effectiveness of our campaigns (see last week's blog). Our tools allow us to track email opens, click-thrus, and landing page hits. Using this information we are able to determine the strength of a buyer's interest in our offers, even if we don't get a conversion (i.e. the online form submitted).
This is tremendously powerful. But what if we could take our analysis further and actually track the progress of the buyer's hits to specific pages on our website? Using this information we could see what information resonated with the buyer and perhaps where our content was not viewed. To put together this picture of visitor behavior, we could likely use the reporting from our CMS and Google Analytics, but it would be an extremely laborious process.
One of my clients decided to close this gap without the manual effort and is conducting a trial of a service called
LeadLander. My first impression of the service is very positive (and no, they are not compensating me in any way to write this post).
First I will show you how we are using the tool and then describe the potential benefits.
The purpose of
LeadLander is to track the companies or ISP's hitting pages on your site. You insert the
LeadLander code into your pages, much the same way you insert the Google Analytics code. I have inserted the code into the site pages and also into Unbounce landing pages. It does not seem to degrade performance of the pages as near as we can tell.
We have noticed that about 80% of the visitors to our site are reported to us as companies, while the other 20% are reported as ISPs. This makes sense as this client sells a B2B offering primarily to large and mid-sized enterprises.
When you enter
LeadLander you enter via the dashboard. On the left of the screen you will see a running list of the hits to your pages. It looks like the picture below. You may click on any of the links to see the detail of the company's visits. If you click the search term link in the lower box, you will see the companies who arrived at your page(s) via that specific search term.
On the right of the dashboard page you see a summary of statistics as shown below. There are some very useful stats about the most active companies on your site, number of unique companies visiting your site and what State or Province they are visiting. This helps you to get a picture of who is active on your site.
We have used this information to correlate the activities of accounts in active campaigns, in our sales pipeline or on our open lead list. As you might expect, this has been very revealing. We have also noticed a high degree of activity from companies where we have had no recent contact (or maybe not ever). More on that later.
When you follow a search term link from the dashboard you are taken to the company detail page. You will see the information below on the left of the page, which is the list of companies using the specific search term to find your site.
On the company detail on the right of the screen you see information about the company and the pages visited by that company.
LeadLander has a few standard layouts which are very useful, one of which is the most active visitor page. This tells you how many times a company has hit your pages. We find this to be very interesting when compared against our sales and marketing activities for campaigns and sales. This is the left side of the page.
And on the right we have the detail for any company selected on the left of the page.
When using a service like
LeadLander, it is critical (like every other tool), to integrate it into your periodic processes - daily and weekly. This is an extremely valuable tool for synchronizing the activities of sales and marketing. Often these two groups will work at cross purposes and
LeadLander can help to get them working better together. Depending on the volume of activity on your website, a periodic meeting (and daily might be the right frequency) between sales and marketing to compare the website company visit activity from
LeadLander to your active campaigns, open leads, sales pipeline, and companies who are completely new to you, should produce action plans which will lead to proactive conversion of eyeballs, leads and opportunities.
We also think it is important to be ethical in your approach to using the information in
LeadLander. All the principles of permission-based marketing still apply. When you find a new visitor which you want to pursue you will need to approach them and gain their permission to begin the sales process.
For your existing target companies,
LeadLander can validate their interest. More progressive conversational websites (instead of pure brochure sites) can exploit the knowledge
LeadLander provides that much more.
To summarize a few of the benefits:
- Validate the interest of active buyers (in a campaign, open lead, or active opportunity) and focus your efforts to convert/close them quicker
- Determine which content gets used the most on your website and develop more of it and get rid of less-used content to streamline and improve the buying experience
- Take your sales campaigns further by tracking the click-thru patterns of email targets and others within the same company to obtain a better return on campaign spending
- Create leads from eyeballs. One of my clients receives about 5,000 visits per month to their website. Of those, about 500 open the registration page (our permission to sell to them), and of those 500 less than 10% sign up (or convert from an eyeball to a lead). If we could successfully target another 50 of those in a month we could double our eyeball to lead conversion rate!
LeadLander has a lot more functionality that what I have discussed here today. It is configurable, can provide alerts, and also sends out daily summary emails. There are a number of other vendors offering solutions in this arena. Assuming you can build a service like this into your processes, it is worth evaluating.
I would not recommend implementing a solution like
LeadLander in a chaotic sales environment where you have not first implemented good processes for permission-based marketing, email and landing page campaigns, and good sales execution, including lead and opportunity management. It will simply add more "todo's" in an environment where things are already not getting done.
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