An effective inbound marketing strategy can work wonders for a business looking to grow. Two questions remain, however. How do you gauge the leads being generated and how do you move them through the buying journey? Lead scoring and lead nurturing are the answer.
What Is Lead Scoring?
Simply put, lead scoring is a way to assess the value of the online leads your business is generating. Lead scoring allows you to tailor your marketing to each individual prospect. It places a score on each of your leads based on who they are, and the level of interaction with your website. That means your sales team can get in touch with them at the best possible time, with the information most relevant to them.
You can capture the data of visitors to your site in a number of ways. These include using web analytics software, gated content, email subscriptions and even the odd Google search. They can all help you establish how valuable the lead is to your business.
Information fields such as the buyer’s job title, the size and location of the company they work for, whether they have the authority to purchase, and whether they have a need you can provide a solution for, all help to build a picture of the prospect.
How Do You Measure Your Leads?
You can measure the value of a lead by assigning a set numerical value to each field. For example, a Company Director (+5) at a firm with more than 2000 employees (+15) would have more potential than a Junior Manager (+2) at a local SME with under 20 employees (+3).
Another metric we can use in our lead scoring is the level of interaction and engagement with your business online. The amount of time spent on your website, the number of pages visited and the type of content that they are consuming are all good indicators to the quality of the lead. A visitor who has been on your website numerous times, downloaded an e-guide and read a case study is a viable prospect. Someone who has only spent 20 seconds on your home page is clearly not.
Why Is Lead Scoring Important?
Lead Scoring helps determine exactly where a prospect is in the buying process. Firstly, it lets you target your leads with content and marketing output that is more relevant to them. Once you know where the lead is in the buying cycle, you can provide them with the right content. Then, when they’re ready to make a purchase, you’ll be best placed to win the business.
Secondly, it helps your sales reps focus on those prospects that are much further into the buying process, and get in touch at the right time. It also means that leads that are less sales ready aren’t harassed with unwanted emails and calls that aren’t relevant to them at that time.
Best of luck with your lead scoring efforts. Finally, if you have any ideas or have put in place a system that’s working really well, leave a comment below and let us know!