| Warning; your lead pipeline is bursting! |
| Written by Anthony Verre | |
| Thursday, 21 October 2010 13:47 | |
The beauty of Just in Time LeadsLeads are a life-blood. We’ve all be been trained to believe that there can never be enough leads in the pipeline. And, without them, it’s extremely difficult for a business to grow, becoming stagnant and devoid of velocity. In other words, just a business floating in its own self-made inertia, neither growing and not being as profitable as it could be. But what if this adage has it wrong? What if cramming your lead-pipeline has the opposite effect on your business? It’s What Companies Have Come to Expect of SEMsIf you’re not SEO’ing or SEM’ing an eCommerce site, then you deal in leads. Leads from contact forms, quote forms, more information forms, etc. Businesses come to you wanting LEADS. Get them as many as you can possibly stuff in their pipeline. In essence, they want an entire email backlog full of Glengarry leads (and maybe even the speech to go with it). As an SEO or SEM, that’s exactly why they came to you: you strategize and optimize to maximize lead generation. Keep their pipelines gushing with leads, and in turn, keep them growing as business and generating profit.
Be Careful What You Wish ForGushing pipelines are a problem. Controlled-lead-pipelines, where flow is regulated and dispersed accordingly, are successful pipelines. With advancements in the way people retrieve information, the ubiquitous nature of the web, instant-consumer-gratification is no longer the exception, it’s the standard. What happens when you have an over-filled pipeline? Leaks. Bad leaks. And response times suffer, leading to the “cold, uninterested” leads. Each vertical and marketplace is unique, but overall, I would estimate that you have 24 hours to get in contact with a lead, providing actionable data. In fact, I’m probably giving too much time to respond. A Kellogg School of Management study in 2007 suggests that;
A Leaking Lead PipeThe scenario, from a purely SEO analytical viewpoint, plays out like this: You’ve been doing your job. Well. In a year of search optimization services, your client’s total and unique traffic numbers have increased dramatically. You’ve decreased their total site bounce rate by a good chunk of percentage points. And, as a reward, site conversions have increased steadily over the past year, let’s call 35%. You’re a hero, right? Wrong. The next time you meet with the client, they sound exasperated: they’re not seeing the benefit. You’ve shown the payoff: increases across the board at a 30,00ft view. Organic keyword traffic has increased for vital business-centric keywords. They are converting on the site better than they ever were. How can they not be in a better position than they were a year ago?
It’s Your Sales Process, DummyTruth of the matter is they are. Statistically speaking. In reality, they’re drowning in leads. You’ve done your job so well, that they don’t have the manpower or wherewithal to field them in a timely manner. It’s near impossible for them to qualify leads in a day or two, much less 5 to 10 minutes. In a world of instant-gratification, there simply isn’t a “wow” factor responding to a potential customer in 48 hours. 5 years ago, maybe? In twelve hours, that lead you furnished your client is as cold as an ice cube. I think the study above nailed it; if you can’t respond within five minutes, move on. And, no, I don’t think that’s a stretch. It is what’s come to be expected of companies online. That’s the reason your client’s not seeing the benefit. Their end of the sales process is jacked up. You’re cramming their pipeline to critical mass with as qualified leads as possible, and they’re drowning in their own saliva. Their solution? Throw money at it. It’s really a very nasty cycle. Death Cycle of the Web Lead
JIT (Just In Time) LeadsYour analytics data doesn’t fib. Your SEO and SEM efforts have resulted in tremendous growth. And, for months you’ve only heard how the leads aren’t great. Granted, spam is spam, and you’ll never get rid of it all, but the targeting and optimization in place all but guarantees fairly qualified leads. Once you pop the question about your client’s sales process you might discover that it’s not a question of quality, but a question of pipeline management. You might discover, the reason they don’t see any benefit is because their leads are dead the moment a potential consumer hits “submit”. The backlog of leads continues to pile up, and no matter the workforce you throw at it, you won’t qualify them in a timely manner. Biting Off What You Can Chew No one wants to hear it. No one is going to like hearing it, from a SEO/SEM side and client side, but it has to be said. If you can’t keep up with leads, if you can field them and service them in timely manner, then you need to get less leads. *GASP* And, if you need to restrict lead-flow, then you need to spend less money on acquiring leads. More Profitability, Less Leads What’s that mean? Exactly what you think it means. Stop spending more money on SEO/SEM to pile more into an already overworked lead pipeline. Maintain or get less leads than you already have, service those leads, create more profitability. Grow in measured steps; change is a violent endeavor and it never comes cheap.
A JIT SolutionIt’s manufacturing term, but it certainly applies here. Just In Time. I always ask my clients about the sales process, something I’ve learned over the years of being completely dumbfounded when I keep bringing stellar results to the table. Bursting a lead-pipeline isn’t great thing; it’s completely detrimental to the client relationship. Sometimes, there is too much of a good thing. More articles by this author | |
| Last Updated on Thursday, 21 October 2010 13:49 |
Home - all the latest on SNC
SEO - our collection of SEO articles
Technical SEO - for the geeks
Latest News - latest news in search
Analytics - measure up and convert
RSS Rack - feeds from around the industry
Search - looking for something specific?
Authors - Author Login
SEO Training - Our sister site
Contact Us - get in touch with SNC
| Digital Marketing; Weekly - Issue 3 YouTube Trends Map One of the coolest new Trends tools to be rolled out is YouTube Trends which o [ ... ] | Matt Cutts on upcoming changes for SEO 2013 Matt Cutts had a blog post and video (made in early May) about “What to expect in SEO in the [ ... ] |
Comments
At a company I worked with, the Sales VP instituted a policy of LIFO (last in, first out) for leads, for one section of his group. Seemed to work well for them. Conversions went up along with traffic.
What a timely article. I'm part of a lead generation team in the company, and it's always lead volume and lead quality that's on the firing line. Lead volume target for this year has increased to 100%, yet conversions are in a flat line.
How I wish I could present this article to the people up above the ladder.
RSS feed for comments to this post