Thursday, May 8, 2008

"No Leads Are Qualified If You Haven’t Talked to Sales" - Pre- and Post- Event Marketing, the Keys to Getting ROI on Your Event

Today I had lunch with the CEO and Chief Sales and Marketing Officer for a leads development and management company called FirstWave. Naturally the conversation turned to the quality and results associated with leads produced through events and thoughts on how the two topics identified in the title of this post are inextricably linked.

In marketing, our job is to create sales opportunities and improve the probability of sale. Good sales opportunities are only those that involve the right people, i.e. those that can buy or those who are influential in the buying process. The truth is we waste a lot of time and money on the incidental visitors to an exhibit at a trade show or the disinterested participant at a festival event. Why, because we have always done it that way. Today, more than ever before, we have effective, inexpensive means of identifying and attracting those who are most qualified.

At lunch my friends from FirstWave told me something interesting. We all know how confounding it is when event organizers will not divulge detailed contact data on your targets. After all, we are paying for the event as sponsors and exhibitors! Guess what? (and you need to keep this among us) FirstWave routinely identifies email addresses with only a name, title and company. That level of information is often provided by event organizers. Now, last year’s list can become part of this year’s pre- event, direct marketing database. Why only part of the base?, because you will add you own updated contacts collected from all other marketing tactics. Why not identify and market to everyone who fits your target profile that could conceivably have an interest in the event, even if they will not attend. An event provides a reason for focused contextual contact, regardless of intent to attend. The post- show list becomes part of your post- event follow-up base. This is great stuff, if you are one of the smart event managers actively focused on pre and post event marketing work.

Back to the conversation with sales - if you don’t know what your sales team considers a qualified lead to be, you are doomed to have your leads disregarded, and perhaps your own lineage impugned. Worse, these leads are not going to produce any ROI.

According to Marketing Sherpa, only about half of marketers surveyed worked directly with sales to define a lead. If your sales management defines a qualified lead as a person who fits a particular profile (by company type, company size, functional responsibility, and title), who is committed to a specified step in their sales process and includes the necessary contact information, your job is considerably clarified and your planning refined. Your key measure becomes how many committed leads did you provide to sales. And, they can tell you the worth in eventual sales for those leads immediately upon receiving them, based upon historical close ratios and average value of sale. Voila! You can report that you contributed $XXX thousands (or millions) of dollars in sales opportunity, and the sales team will back you up!

So before your next event, consider a conference with the sales team and define two things, 1) Who do we need to see?, and 2) What do we want them to do during and after the event? Use those answers to design your event strategy and also to drive the creative brief. Why?, because you only need to show and tell your participants that which is necessary to gain their commitment to act. You can leave the kitchen sinks at home.

Dig deeply on these questions. Ask sales for a very detailed description of who they can sell most easily and or most profitably. What are the titles or departments in what type of companies where they are having the greatest success, etc?

Also, ask sales what you can accomplish at the event or trade show that will eliminate one or more sales calls in the field. After all, when you get the right person into your chair or in front of your demo at an event, you have already by-passed a considerable amount of effort required to simply to identify and make initial contact with that person.

Keep track of the leads you hand off to sales and keep track of those you have seen at events. You might be surprised how often you see the same people. This can be a good thing if the relationship is maturing in the process, or a bad thing if people are simply mooching on your hospitality. Using the types of leads maturation and development services we discussed with FirstWave at lunch, you can keep a lot tighter tabs on how your leads are progressing. Also, by tracking who visited you throughout the year, random sample research can tell you exactly how many of your leads converted to sales and for how much revenue.

Establishing a continuous post event communications stream and contact maturation program is considerably easier using electronic media, such as newsletters, on-line, interactive presentations, education, briefings, resources such as white papers, and tools such as configurators or evaluators.

Finally, Marketing Sherpa recently published the following survey data on inquiries and leads:

• 17% of inquiries are designated qualified leads
12% among best practices companies (yes less if more)
• 34% of qualified leads turn into prospects
40% among best practices companies
• 16% of prospects end up as closed sales
20% among best practices companies

If you do the math, on average, according to those marketing managers who responded, 9.25 sales result from every 1,000 inquiries, or from 170 qualified leads. That is approximately 1% (.925%) of inquiries or 5.4% of qualified leads. For best practices marketers, .96% of inquiries will close (about the same) but 8% of qualified leads result in sales. Quite an increase. Marketers who use target marketing techniques and have a tight definition of a qualified lead take fewer leads and close more sales. There is less clutter added to the pipeline and less work overall.

To sum up, there are three main ideas here regarding how to make money on leads generated from events:

1) You have to get the right people into your event, pre-identify, invite and attract them. If you don't you are holding some expensive open house parties.
2) You must have a tight definition of a qualified lead, one that is ordained by the sales team, and
3) You must work the "market" as much as you do the event logistics. Use the great new tools available to do your pre- and post-event marketing. Digital tools make prospecting, targeting, attraction, post- event lead re-qualification, and contact maturation and conversion a structured process that requires less effort to accomplish. (Lead re-qualification is a good topic for a future post!)

Thanks for lunch to FirstWave!

Call me if you have questions or would like to discuss this or anything about event measurement. 770-391-0015 or visit Constellation Communication Corp..

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