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5 Practical Steps to Increase Lead Generation as You Scale Your Business

Steps to Increase Lead Generation

Steps to Increase Lead Generation

Is your lead generation stuck on neutral, or worse, while your scale-up planning is in high gear?

After a couple of years of the initial product-market-fit phase, you’ve probably made some gains but you’re now left wondering how to deliver those early encouraging results at scale.

You may have even decided to bring in new sales and marketing executives to help you achieve your goals.

But it still feels like a shot in the dark. Lead generation efforts are not delivering desired results and you feel the momentum slipping from beneath your feet.

Let’s run through a few practical to-dos to get things moving along.

1. Sales-marketing alignment: the revenue team

Is your marketing engine plugged in to deliver on your sales goals? Does the sales team follow up on the leads delivered by marketing? Do the sales and marketing executives work together to deliver on sales targets?

If all you see is finger-pointing, it’s time to get the teams to align on revenue goals, or make changes until the sales and marketing factions see themselves as the part of the ‘revenue team’.

Set up a process around these key areas:

Working this closely with the sales team helps with alignment on the revenue funnel. Of course, marketings sales enablement activities should also extend to sales collateral that is required to close the deal.

The chance of a scaling up successfully is high when the sales and marketing machine is well aligned with business goals.

2. Double-down on main lead acquisition channels

Often, the reason sales and marketing don’t get along is because the sales team is often unhappy with the volume and quality of leads, while marketing feels that the sales team is ignoring leads coming from marketing.

Marketing may have to take the first steps to earn the trust of the sales team. At 20% sales conversion rates, the sales team is dealing with rejection 80% of the time. It is the responsibility of the marketing team to provide better leads so this rejection rate does not get any worse if not better.

The first thing marketing has to do is double down on what works. If your organic traffic is what is bringing in the best leads, put more effort into SEO. If it is PPC that keeps the kitchen fire on, that’s the channel you have to optimize or scale up.

3. Monitor and improve conversion rates

If you are assiduously tracking conversion rates through the funnel, from MQL to Closed Won, you must dig into the data to make:

4. Uncover new lead acquisition channels

The focus and increase in lead quality and volume from the previous steps should give you enough room to initiate experiments on other lead acquisition channels.

While most of the above marketing efforts improve your in-market customer targeting and optimize lead acquisition, you also need to think about lead channel diversification. This will ensure that you are never at the mercy of the idiosyncratic vagaries of a Google or Facebook algorithm update.

Ideally, the new channel efforts will have some overlap with your existing channels to improve conversions on those channels. For example, the new traffic from your new influencer marketing campaign could be retargeted by a uniquely tracked PPC campaign.

5. Develop scalable processes through standardization

As you proceed through the above steps, establish processes that are easy to follow and are sustainable at scale.

If your content marketing team regularly builds their content calendar based on client outreach for case studies and blog articles, create templates that will standardize the process. Create a template not only for the case studies but also for the email series that solicit collaboration, question sets for interviews, research process suggestions, etc.

These templates will offer a rough blueprint on the processes to be followed. These ‘suggestions’ will also make onboarding new talent much easier as you scale the team.

Speaking about templates, download the popular one-page digital marketing plan template.

Of course, it goes without saying that all of the above steps should be nested under the branding umbrella. The brand vision, mission, and values should inform the creative DNA of your marketing efforts. These should resonate not only with the personas you target, but also be soundly entrenched in the company culture.

Seldom can you build a strong brand without a culture to support it.

After all, the long-term goal should be to build brand awareness, credibility, and recall that lifts up conversion rates as you scale existing and experimental lead acquisition channels.

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