Marketing automation

Showing posts with label Marketing automation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marketing automation. Show all posts

Tuesday, 28 April 2015

Future Of Marketing Automation For Improve In Sales Qualified leads


Vik Singh is co-founder and CEO of Infer. Prior to founding Infer, he was an entrepreneur in residence at Sutter Hill Ventures. He has filed 13 patents in the areas of search, social networking, systems, and content optimization.

According to industry expert David Raab, almost 70 percent of marketers are either unhappy or only marginally happy with their marketing automation software. According to Bluewolf’s new “State of Salesforce” study, only 7 percent are seeing good, measurable ROI from those investments. There’s a lot of fragmentation and dissatisfaction in this category despite the huge potential benefits of automating marketing.


Future Of Marketing Automation For Improve In Sales Qualified leads

A key contributor to the current state of marketing automation is the fact that its roots stem from email blasting. As these systems layered in landing pages and forms, web activity data, triggers, etc. over time, they became bloated from trying to do too much and began to over-promise and under-deliver.

Take a look at the Eloqua screenshot below – these Jenga-like maps show just how complex and fragile the workflows are that we encourage marketers to build (and this isn’t specific to Eloqua – all the vendors have screenshots like this):



A Lack of Automation in Marketing Automation

The biggest problem is that these rules are hard-coded to specific user actions based on an aspirational understanding of what constitutes a good lead, versus based on what the data says.

For example, you might set up a flow like this: “If a user clicks this link and then clicks that link twice, then in two days send this email…” That is so hard-coded. If you change your website design, this workflow (which will likely be buried by many others) could break.

Such a low-level approach to configuration loses any chance of adaptability. And what if the person who developed these workflows leaves your company? Workflow hell can also cause serious performance problems.

I encountered one company where it took over eight hours for the marketing automation system to process all the workflows before passing a lead to the CRM system… that’s more than eight hours before a rep can touch that lead. Where’s the speed, simplification and automation that marketing automation promised us?

Which Marketing Platform Will Dominate in 2018?

It is time to reinvent marketing automation. Platforms should provide scalable, incredibly fast and responsive database and workflow systems. They should be thinner and optimize for tracking the data about your leads and customers. They should provide clean APIs (that are from the 21st century) so third parties can build specialized, best-in-breed experiences on top of them.

The good news is key ingredients are now coming together to prime a major shift in this direction – including vast external data sources, advanced data science and thousands of niche, more focused marketing apps. Over the next three years, we’ll see a new generation materialize. I predict that the prevailing marketing platform of 2018 will be predictive-first, will deliver full-circle recommendations and will embrace open platforms.

Predictive-First

Rather than trying to house everything in one monolithic marketing automation system, tomorrow’s platforms will be more intelligent and thinner, plugging in many smaller specialized applications. They’ll use a wealth of data to deliver relevant recommendations across your key customer touchpoints.

The data science available to decipher all of the signals out there has evolved dramatically through major advances in practical machine learning (think Netflix movie recommendations). And with cheaper computing infrastructure, modeling can be scaled and personalized to each individual company. Companies like Conversica, Lytics, RelateIQ and Infer are democratizing predictive analytics and offering more efficient and effective solutions to old marketing automation challenges like lead nurturing, campaign optimization, prospect qualification, etc.

Predictive intelligence is now table stakes for all businesses, and new platforms in combination with niche apps will make it more accessible and actionable end-to-end. They’ll be intuitive to use and will automatically adapt as your business evolves (with minimal manual effort or tedious configuration of clunky workflows), so you never have to worry about re-tuning or performance degradation. Predictive systems can learn, adapt and improve on their own with every customer action.

Full-Circle Recommendations

As opposed to fueling the sales and marketing divide by keeping people siloed in different systems, future platforms will depoliticize customer data and bring all the functions together. Companies like KnowledgeTree are starting to do this by leveraging complete visibility across the sales and marketing funnel to determine the next best action or content to share.

A customer prediction like this spans both sales and marketing. It learns from your historical sales data to model what a good lead looks like, and applies that intelligence to the top of the funnel, which cascades through your marketing programs and plumbs back down to sales to continue the cycle.

If you shape the objective function of your predictive model to be optimizing for lifetime value as opposed to conversion, then that prediction can be used all the way down the funnel to help customer success teams load-balance customers.

Embrace Open Platforms

Next-generation marketing platforms will offer powerful open APIs — like those we see from Autopilot — so any company can build very focused and insightful best-of-breed tools that are 10 times better than a non-intelligent version baked into one of today’s all-encompassing platforms.

For example, if you’re working on a nurture campaign, you’ll be able to run an app specialized in nurturing that leverages the predictive insights and scalability of this new thinner system to find leads in your neglected nurture database that score high or recently improved their score (due to recently visiting your web site, let’s say), and automatically apply a personalized email campaign or route those leads directly to sales reps.

There are now almost 2,000 different marketing technologies out there – thanks to the rise of SaaS CRM and marketing automation, and the launch of the Salesforce AppExchange platform. There have been billion dollar businesses built on AppExchange, but we don’t see major successes like that built on marketing automation platforms because their ecosystems and APIs are still in their infancy.

That’s a shame since there are so many best-of-breed apps out there that outdo the default or missing functionality in marketing automation. And I would contend that open marketing platforms hold the potential to be even more valuable from a data perspective than CRM, as they’re collecting information about your customers much earlier in the funnel and syncing bi-directionally with your CRM – giving you more data to party on.

Just as the rise of cloud computing has ushered in the “end of software,” predictive platforms are poised to revolutionize the marketing automation category. In the future, marketing will be about much more than managing campaigns and tracking prospects’ behaviors.

New platforms will help you reimagine your workflows, programs and actions in the context of increasingly powerful predictive insights. They’ll bridge the gap with sales by bringing CRM and marketing automation closer together with predictive as the glue.

Our best shot at changing the game is to make predictive a layer in a thinner, more scalable data platform, and to tie in best-of-breed applications that are optimized to drive more conversions and wins. Predictive-first software is eating the world, and it’s about to sink its teeth into marketing and sales. Get ready.

FEATURED IMAGE: ISMAGILOV/SHUTTERSTOCK

{{ The Guest Post Blogger organization was not involved in the creation of this content. - Dalvi Prabhakar B, Founder & Digital Manager (SEO,SEM,SMO) }}

Tuesday, 19 August 2014

Answers to Marketing Automation FAQs for Marketers


The automation industry is growing rapidly as more and more B2B marketers realize the benefits of a system that can cut down on manual marketing and sales processes, sync with their existing CRMs, and put time back into their days. In fact, last year's B2B Marketing Automation Vendor Selection Tool report predicted that revenues for B2B marketing automation systems would reach $750 million in 2013. With numbers like that, marketing automation is pretty hard to ignore.
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For those new to marketing automation, you may be wondering what all the fuss is about. What can marketing automation do for you? Is it really worth the price tag? Let’s start by going through a few key features and benefits, so that you can see what a beginning automation user’s path might actually look like.

what is marketing automation?
Before we get into some of the cool things you can do with marketing automation, it’s a good idea to have a solid understanding of the platform itself. Marketing automation is a powerful marketing and sales tool that automates many of your communication programs, lead generation campaigns, and lead nurturing programs, so that you can move prospects through the sales cycle with minimal time and resources. Simply put, marketing automation is email marketing, reporting, lead generation, social media, search marketing, and prospect tracking — all in one integrated system.

What can it do? -- The capabilities of a marketing automation system range from simple landing page and email creation to in-depth visitor tracking and reporting. Let’s take a look at a few core functionalities below:
  • Email marketing. With marketing automation, you can build emails using a drag-and-drop builder or HTML (if you are so inclined). Emails can be targeted to specific segments and tracked so that you know if they were opened, clicked on, or unread. More advanced email reporting can even give you insight into the devices and email clients that your recipients use to read their emails.
  • Lead generation. By using forms and landing pages to “gate” content on your site, you can collect prospect and visitor information that can be passed along to sales reps for follow-up. Targeted email campaigns can also drive traffic to your landing pages, helping to improve lead generation efforts.
  • Sales intelligence. Marketing automation benefits more than just the marketing team; it benefits sales teams as well. With prospect and visitor tracking, real-time sales alerts, CRM integrations, and insight into prospect social profiles, your sales team will always be up to date on prospect activities and interests, giving them the ability to tailor their sales pitches accordingly.
  • Reporting. Marketing automation systems offer the benefit of closed-loop reporting, which allows you to attach revenue from closed deals to the original campaigns where they were created. This improves marketing accountability by providing additional insight into campaign performance and ROI.
  • Social media. Many marketing automation platforms also give you social media posting capabilities. Post updates to multiple platforms at once, then monitor performance using tracked links. No need to hop between social platforms!
These five bullet points sum up some of the main ways that today’s marketers are using marketing automation platforms to increase revenue and marketing productivity. If you’re just starting to familiarize yourself with the tool, these are good areas to focus on throughout your product search and implementation.

What other features or benefits do you think beginning automation users should be aware of? Let us know in the comments. - exacttarget.com

{{ The Guest Post Blogger organization was not involved in the creation of this content. - Dalvi Prabhakar B, Founder & Digital Manager (SEO,SEM,SMO) }}

Wednesday, 21 May 2014

How to Close Leads for Better Business in Inbound Marketing


How to Close Leads for Better Business in Inbound Marketing


You’re on the right track. You’ve attracted the right visitors and converted the right leads, but now you need to transform those leads into customers. How can you most effectively accomplish this feat? Certain marketing tools can be used at this stage to make sure you’re closing the right leads at the right times.

Closing tools include:


Lead Scoring

You’ve got contacts in your system, but how do you know which ones are ready to speak to your sales team? Using a numerical representation of the sales-readiness of a lead takes the guesswork out of the process.


Email

What do you do if a visitor clicks on your call to action, fills out a landing page, or downloads your whitepaper, but still isn’t ready to become a customer? A series of emails focused on useful, relevant content can build trust with a prospect and help them become more ready to buy.


Marketing Automation

This process involves creating email marketing and lead nurturing tailored to the needs and lifecycle stage of each lead. For example, if a visitor downloaded a whitepaper on a certain topic from you in the past, you might want to send that lead a series of related emails. But if they follow you on Twitter and visited certain pages on your website, you might want to change the messaging to reflect those different interests.


Closed

Loop Reporting- How do you know which marketing efforts are bringing in the best leads? Is your sales team effectively closing those best leads into customers? Integration with your Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system allows you to analyze just how well your marketing and sales teams are playing together.