|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Solve the Mystery of Lost Leads: Part IIFollow up on leads you hand to your salespeopleBy Greg Wilkinson This is the second half of an article on managing sales leads effectively. This half will focus on holding your sales force accountable for following up on leads, as well as analyzing your company’s performance in this area. According to the first half of this article, up to 80 percent of leads you pass to sales fall through the cracks. Manage sales performance with easy follow-up and clear expectations. When designing a system you should place lead details and follow-up tools right at the salesperson’s fingertips online, on-demand, including: The entire lead detail, with supplemental data to help salespeople understand the opportunity and urgency before contacting the prospect. For example, D&B data may show that an unknown company is actually a division of a much larger corporation or you can use your own database to show current customer status. Having this knowledge before making a sales call can be very helpful. Sample responses to assist a rep and ensure communications which are clear, consistent, on message, professional and offer relevant resources such as whitepapers and e-newsletters. These should be tailored to the source of the lead. Sample email templates salespeople can use to send the prospect for follow-up. Telephone talking points salespeople can use to assist with follow-up calls. An instant link that connects to a Web form salespeople can use to enter information and notes on the lead status on the spot. This will significantly increase reporting compliance, especially for third-party selling channels where it would be impractical to load special software from your company to track leads. To identify the most cost-effective marketing programs, marketers need to know what happens to every lead – and be able to track each lead back to a specific campaign. This means they need salespeople to follow up and report on lead status. In other words, to solve the case, salespeople must share information with the marketing team. To make this a reality organizations need to make it easy for sales people to report on each lead in 30 seconds or less; track each sales organization’s ability to follow up, create a pipeline and close sales; and make sales and marketing reporting transparent and fast. Offer no place to hide with sales reporting. As you design this transparency, you should generate automatic reports distributed via email to sales and marketing managers with breakdowns by sales district, distributor, rep or other relevant sales category on all follow-up activity on leads, by lead classification. At a glance, sales managers should know what percentages of leads have been followed up, plus the answers to these questions:
From the big picture, managers should have the ability to drill down to view performance status on an individual organization or salesperson. They can learn which salespeople are taking better advantage of marketing programs than others. With the right answers, they can build best practices based on the successful behavior of top sales performers. Mystery solved: Analyze and improve performance to maximize ROI. Many executives wonder what they’re getting for their marketing investment. Yet often, marketers can only provide a superficial level of response analysis, such as response rate by campaign, creative approach and list. To be truly effective and accurate in analyzing marketing ROI, they need to tie leads from campaigns directly to sales. This is the primary missing link that keeps the mystery of lost leads alive. To make smart decisions on how to spend the company’s marketing dollars, marketers need to know the response rate on specific campaigns, by offer, creative approach and list sources; lead quality by campaign, offer, creative and list sources; how well the sales team responded and how quickly; what percentage of leads, by source, are turning into sales; which lead sources produce the most sales volume; which follow-up methods and sales tools are being used most effectively; the cost per lead/sale for each campaign being executed. Marketers need these answers so they can improve ROI performance. You must create reports that are near real time showing cost per lead and cost per sale performance by campaign, with details on revenue generated as well as what’s in the sales pipeline. With reports that show lead quality and sales pipeline data early in a campaign cycle, marketers can make informed decisions much faster than if they had to rely solely on closed sales numbers. This early performance data is important, especially when dealing with long sales cycles and campaigns. Results: Achieve major savings and increase sales. By ending the guesswork, sales and marketing can team up to achieve major savings and increased sales at the same time. They’ll have all the clues they need to:
Greg Wilkinson is the co-founder of GrowthPoint Inc., a marketing and business consulting company that combines measurable marketing campaign development, project management, lead management and nurture programs which deliver returns on marketing investments. To contact Wilkinson, email gwilkinson@growthpoint-inc.com, go to www.GrowthPoint-Inc.com, or call 262-264-0458.
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||