Connecting marketing to sales remains a challenge for firms in all industries and sizes. For smaller MSPs and VARs with small or outsourced marketing teams, it poses an even greater challenge: how to get the right information flowing between both groups so leads don’t grow cold.
Most firms create a chart highlighting the information needed to move forward. Here’s an example for MSPs and VARs:
Based on this chart, you’ll need to think through a few things to ensure leads don’t grow cold once they enter your marketing and sales ecosystem. When marketing and sales work together well for an MSP or VAR business, web visitors flow from leads to brand advocates in record time, shortening your sales cycle and speeding your revenue growth. Here are a few things to consider as you align sales and marketing for your firm.
First, you’ll want to be aware of the information each group (sales and marketing) needs to move the lead through the sales funnel. To do this, you’ll need to:
With this kind of clarity, you have a chance to track results and improve on them, to boost conversions and shorten the sales cycle.
When a visitor downloads a content offer, signs up for your blog, or fills out a contact form, that shows the person is somewhat engaged with your brand. With proper lead scoring, you’ll be able to determine what actually makes a lead “marketing qualified.” That can sometimes mean the person has visited more than five pages (and has stayed on those pages for more than a few minutes, indicating they’ve read the content), or it could mean they’ve downloaded several of your content offers.
Whatever your criteria for turning a visitor into a marketing qualified lead, the information you gather during the initial stages is critical to the success of your engagement with your online lead.
Information marketing should be gathering in anticipation of a sale includes comprehensive contact information, aside from the basics such as first name, last name, email address. A few other items to consider collecting include:
You may be concerned about collecting this much specific information would send a lead running. Sometimes that’s the case, and sometimes these are welcome questions that help the lead think through their needs prior to moving forward with your business. Asking the right questions on a form prior to giving access to a valuable content offer may provide the turning point in qualifying a lead that’s worth the time of your sales team.
Note: Consider holding off on in-depth questions for your “lighter” content offers and use them for your heavy-hitting, high-value offers that could be game-changers for your ideal customer. Your leads will jump through as many hoops as necessary to get to solid content offers. That’s why you want to:
This all gives you the right to ask pointed questions as you move the lead from simply a visitor to marketing-qualified and then sales-qualified.
Some may wonder what role sales plays in information gathering during the sales cycle. After all, by the time the lead gets to them, it’s conversion time, not note-taking time. Nothing could be further from the truth. If done well, marketing qualification makes the chances of a sales conversion much higher. Yet during the sales process, we want to turn our eyes to brand advocacy. That process starts during the final stages of conversion.
A few points to consider:
When this process begins to yield results, both sides become even more open to information sharing and develop a stronger commitment to accurate lead identification and conversion. There’s one tool that makes this process a breeze.
For some firms, this may seem daunting. With a solid marketing automation system, it’s quite doable. Marketing automation systems facilitate proper lead scoring, integrate with your CRM tool, and prompt users to collect information at the right stages in the sales cycle – plus much more. With a commitment to using the system, MSPs and VARs can ensure leads don’t grow cold due to a disconnect between marketing and sales.
Point to consider: Work with an agency that understands the IT channel, partner marketing, digital, and overall vendor engagements. With a qualified marketing partner by your side, you can achieve the results you’ve often dreamed of. Let’s have a conversation about next steps.