Hubspot’s State of Inbound 2018 report revealed a bunch of interesting things about the challenges businesses, both big and small, are facing when it comes to their marketing and sales activities.
Some of them were pretty obvious.
Like the fact that:
That is good news. It means that they believe in their strategies and know that they produce results.
This is particularly true for inbound marketers. 75% of them were confident that their inbound strategies were effective while only 62% of outbound marketers thought that their outbound strategies were effective.
This isn’t really that surprising because one of the primary benefits of inbound marketing is its ability to prove return on advertising spend (ROAS), an essential metric to measure the effectiveness of marketing efforts.
What was surprising is the revelation that:
We often look at marketing and sales as two competing forces within a business.
They can never agree on what constitutes a lead and the one is always blaming the other for missed targets and lost deals.
The State of Inbound 2018 report revealed that the top marketing priority for 69% of businesses is to convert leads into customers:
Now let’s take a look at the top sales priority for the year:
The top sales priority for 75% of businesses is to close more deals.
Essentially, sales and marketing want the same thing - more customers.
The challenges they face though are slightly different.
For marketing, the journey to achieving their goal starts with generating traffic, converting that traffic into leads, and then finally into customers.
The quality and volume of visitors coming in the top of their funnel directly impacts the number of customers coming out of the bottom.
This means understanding their buyer personas and then building out quality content to attract and nurture visitors into leads.
To increase the effectiveness of this process, marketers have started looking at ways of improving their content distribution strategies.
This seems to be the natural progression of blog content.
Leveraging that content and converting it into formats that are easier to consume, like video, expands its lifespan and puts it in front of new audiences - essential if you are trying to drive more traffic.
This shift is an important move for marketers embracing inbound methodologies, especially when you consider that:
Paid media has for a long time been a strategy employed by businesses to create awareness but the mass media approach is ineffective at creating long term value.
It’s hard to measure ROAS and even harder to reach ideal customers and deliver a targeted message.
Creating high-quality content and delivering it across mediums, like video and audio, has, therefore, become an essential weapon in the inbound marketer's arsenal.
Similar to the difficulties faced by inbound marketing teams,
With the pressure faced by sales teams to meet ever-increasing targets, they have been forced to expand their reach in search of new prospects.
The result is a reduction in the quality of prospects which inevitably leads to a reduction in response and engagement rates.
Interestingly though;
Direct channels of communication, like calling and sending emails, are still at the heart of a sales team’s communication.
This is inline with generally preferred methods of business communication.
Finding ways to make communication more effective and automating parts of the process could help sales teams close more deals.
This would however also depend on the quality of leads being added to their sales pipelines. A strong focus on bottom of the funnel (BOF) content could help nurture leads more effectively.
Businesses would also benefit from investing in customer service teams to make sure their service delivery is aligned with their goals.
The State of Inbound 2018 report showed that customer referrals produce leads that are 2x better than leads generated by sales teams and 4.5x better than those generated by marketing.
That is further reiterated by the fact that:
Let’s consider this for a moment…
The current trend is to increase the size of sales teams and push harder to find new prospects.
So although it might lead to an increase in prospects, those prospects are lower quality and come at a higher cost, due to an increase in overheads.
The alternative though, is to invest in the quality of service being delivered, converting customers in advocates for your business who are willing to recommend your business to their networks through reviews and direct referrals.
This brings us to our last insight from the State of Inbound 2018 report.
Despite the rivalry between sales and marketing, in the end they are both working towards the same goal. The key is to create alignment with a service level agreement (SLA):
Marketing teams believe they produce better leads when they are tightly aligned with their sales teams.
And sales teams agree.
SLAs clearly define what is considered a marketing qualified lead (MQL) and a sales qualified lead (SQL), ensuring that potential customers who still need to be nurtured aren’t handed over to sales team prematurely and that prospects who are ready to purchase are handed over to the sales team in time.
This clarifies expectations between marketing and sales and ensure that they are working closely to meeting their goals.
The State of Inbound 2018 report has a lot of data points to draw insights from but our main takeaway was that the most value can be derived from focusing on your BOF activities.
Align your marketing and sales teams with an SLA and delight your customers with exceptional service.
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