Marketing Lead Generation: Low-Budget Ways to Get Qualified Leads

Marketing Lead Generation: Low-Budget Ways to Get Qualified Leads

Marketing Lead Generation: Low-Budget Ways to Get Qualified Leads

&Marketing, and marketing, outsourced marketing strategy

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When times get tough and budgets are tight, growing businesses are often quick to dub marketing as nonessential, making it one of the first things to go. Based on our experience, this is due to a common misperception that marketing is an expense, not an investment. However, many of these same companies are under pressure to improve customer acquisition, which is an uphill battle without a strategic marketing lead generation plan in place.

In an age of instant gratification, folks often immediately make cuts to the efforts that have slowburn success because they don’t see enough quick wins and immediate return on investments. Hitting all the right touch points and building relationships takes time, but when time equals money, business often make knee-jerk decisions to slash marketing budgets first.

Because marketing is an investment, not an expense, you can’t realize its full value based on short-term tactics and quick wins. But as we approach the end of the year, many companies are looking more at inbound marketing and trying to decide how to best invest their dollars for longterm success (spoiler alert: content is still king as 70% of marketers are actively investing in it). If you are working with minimal resources but know some of those resources need to be invested in marketing efforts, we have some low-budget ways you can improve your current marketing lead generation strategy. These three ways include: honing your strategy, leveraging content, and optimization through data.

1. Hone Your Strategy

Companies under a tight budget and timeline often make the mistake of skipping strategy and rushing right into tactics in their marketing lead generation efforts. Although perfection is the enemy of progress, preparation and thoughtfulness are not. Whether you’re trying to move quickly, do the bare minimum to preserve your budget, or a combination of the two, diving in blindly can lead to haphazard decision-making and will likely cost you more time and money down the road when you see minimal results and return. If it were that easy, everyone would be doing it, and everyone would be winning!

When you’re re-examining your strategy, take a closer look at who you’re trying to reach and how you can get in front of your ideal, target customer or client. A few things to consider when doing this are:

Conducting audience research

The more you know about your audience, the more you can grow it and convert it. Market and competitor research can help you understand what pains your target decision makers are experiencing and what solutions they’re currently looking for to help ease those pains. Use free tools like SEMRush and UberSuggest to help you identify actual terms your audience is looking for on Google, and poll your existing audience or survey your current customers to find out what’s on their mind. A short and scrappy Google Form can work wonders and doesn’t cost a thing.

Identifying where your audience spends the most time online

Knowing what to say to your audience is only half the battle. The other half is figuring out where to reach them. With a tight budget you may need to prioritize just one or two marketing channels to test, so it’s important to do a bit of research to make an informed decision on which channels will yield the best results. Does your existing content get more engagement via email or social media? Does your target audience use one social media platform more than another? You can use your own native analytics and data to help answer these questions (more on that later). For example, when doing this for one of our clients, we uncovered that they had a high email conversation rate despite only sending out occasional emails. By increasing their email cadence, we quickly increased conversions.

If you want to take this a step further, consider a tool we love called SparkToro, which dives deeper into demographic data and shows you:

  • the companies your target audience follows on social media
  • the articles they’re reading and where they get their news
  • the podcasts they listen to
  • their interests and skill-sets
  • their education
  • and much more!

If you want to go to the very next level, check out &Marketing’s Business Intelligence and Analytics (B.I.) projects. Our B.I. projects are designed to identify where your audience is most likely to discover information about and related to your business and then create a marketing roadmap  

2. Leverage messaging and content marketing

Now that you’ve zeroed in on your most engaged audience, their pain points and interests, and where they get their information, it’s time to start applying that knowledge. Here’s how:

Refresh your value proposition and key messaging

Hone in on your value proposition and key messaging specific to the audience you identified as most engaged. By referring to the patterns you identified above, rework your value prop and your brand messaging based on the pain points most relevant to them. This will ensure your message to them is relevant and consistent across all of your marketing materials and the channels you use. Make sure your brand persona and identity aligns with the kind of voice your audience is most likely to seek and trust—you can learn more about that here.

Repurpose old content

Before creating new content, consider what you already have. Do you have old blogs, eBooks, or landing pages that speak to trending topics in your industry and the priority pain points you uncovered? Start repromoting this content via the channels you identified earlier. For blog posts in particular, ensure you optimize them for marketing lead generation by adding a clear call-to-action. Readers need to be directed to make a move once they finish consuming your content. Make sure your calls to action make sense, and provide both a primary and transitional option for each content piece.

Create a new content cadence

Use your research to identify topics that would resonate most with your audience. Be strategic about the content you create and give your audience a pathway that leads them on a journey straight to your services or products as their solution. You can do this using the traditional marketing funnel, which categorizes content as:

  • Top Funnel: This is the awareness building stage and where you engage your audience using empathy and acknowledge their problem.
  • Mid Funnel: This is where you focus on helping your audience figure out how to actually solve their problem. Most “how to” content falls here, and the middle of the funnel is the perfect place to offer value-packed content that’s gated. Essentially, that means there’s a gate, aka an entry fee to get the content, like an email address. You’re giving them tremendous value, so they’re willing to give you their content information and access to their inbox to grow the relationship.
  • Bottom Funnel: This is the closest your audience gets to buying from you and where you can start to make the direct ask. They just want proof you can provide results at this point, so case studies, statistics, and detailed sell sheets fall under this category. 64% of marketers who launch case studies find them to be effective in generating leads because the increase credibility.

We’ve put together a robust eBook on exactly how to be intentional about creating continue that actually helps you grow your business. See how we’re practicing what we preach here?

3. Optimize through data

The more data you have, the more you learn about your audience, and the better you can cater your content and overall marketing to their needs. By reviewing native analytics and data from your email marketing, website, or social media platforms, you can determine which of your existing customers or prospects are most engaged with your brand.

From there, you can identify valuable patterns. Does your most engaged audience share similar demographic information? Are certain pages of your website receiving the most traffic? Is your audience clicking primarily on top-funnel content (content focused more broadly on a pain point versus your company)? Or are they actively engaged with bottom-funnel content (case studies, free demos, company video tutorials, etc)?

Sometimes you have to throw marketing spaghetti at the wall to see what sticks, but at a certain point you need to study what stuck and what didn’t to figure out where to continue to spend your limited resources. Rely on your data to tell you a story, let it speak to you, and listen. Then shuffle your dollars around to learn into what’s working and step back from what isn’t.

Ready to implement some of these low-cost strategies for marketing lead generation in the new year? Grab our marketing planning workbook below to help you get started.

We also recently held a webinar with an expert panel where we discuss how you can develop a marketing strategy that directly aligns with your business goals. You can watch the replay here

Want to talk to someone on our team about how you can put all of these ideas into practice? Just fill out the form below.

About the Author

Marketing Director Paul Ferguson helps clients develop fully integrated marketing solutions that make impressions and drive results. Whether it be design-oriented campaigns or digital market execution, Paul skillfully creates strategies to effectively reach client’s desired audiences. Follow Paul on LinkedIn.

About &Marketing

&Marketing provides the robust outsourced marketing department growing companies need without the high overhead costs of big agencies or full-time employees. Our variable model empowers businesses to reach their growth goals through access to the guidance and expertise of senior level strategists and a flexible execution team.

Are you facing challenges of your own in generating leads and meeting your business’ growth goals?

We’d love to learn more about your challenges and how a coordinated marketing approach might help take your organization to the next level.

New Google SERP Features: What You Need to Know

New Google SERP Features: What You Need to Know

New Google SERP Features: What You Need to Know

&Marketing, and marketing, outsourced marketing strategy

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On September 29, 2021 Google announced major updates to its search engine platform and Search Engine Result Page (SERP) features coming in the weeks and months ahead. Like most things in life, Google is ever evolving their platforms to offer users the best experience and help them easily discover the most relevant information while searching. While the user benefits greatly, many businesses must learn to adapt their content and SEO strategies in order to take advantage of the latest and greatest features being launched.

Google was able to initiate and fast track these new features because they have been utilizing their Multitask Unified Model, (MUM for short), an AI system, to help them understand search information and intent. The information MUM has provided is the foundation of some awesome new Google SERP features being rolled out.

“We’ve been experimenting with using MUM’s capabilities to make our products more helpful and enable entirely new ways to search. These new features are the latest steps we’re taking to make searching more natural and intuitive.”

Google

What is MUM?

In short, MUM helps Google understand how to simplify searches based on user intent. It’s multimodal, which means it can understand information from different formats like webpages, pictures, and more—simultaneously.

Some of the new features being rolled out for MUM include:

  • Combining words and images: Google will combine words and images using Google Lens to give you better results.
  • Video: A new feature is coming that identifies related topics in a video.
  • Things to know: Users will be able to explore topics by seeing related subtopics. This will be similar to People Also Ask but allow you to see subtopics that can be selected
  • Refine and broaden searches: These new features will effectively allow you to refine or broaden a search from your initial starting point.
  • About the result: This will be a panel that offers up more information on the website that shows up in search results, such as how a site describes itself and content about it pulled from across the web.
  • Visuals: Available now in the US, Search has a new aesthetic for topics where people are looking for visual inspiration, such as “Christmas decorating ideas.”
  • In stock filters: Google is making it easier to shop by allowing users to filter their searches to only see items that are in stock.
  • Instant shop: For shopping queries, Google Lens will make it easier to instantly shop what you see on a page from the Google app on iOS and from Google Chrome.
  • Shopping Graph database: More than 24 billion listings are teed up for a more browseable shopping experience in Google Search.

What do these new Google SERP features mean for you?

It appears Google is leaning heavily into more visual based searches. Although it remains to be seen how business can take advantage of these new features, we’re certain there will be opportunities to enhance your content, your site, and your products/product descriptions/feeds to highlight your business through these new features.

Google’s core mission is to connect people to information, and these new announcements are all about enabling users to find exactly what they are looking for more easily. What’s more, is Google is continuing to refine and provide new, intuitive ways for users to search. These features may present businesses with the opportunity to get in front of users by connecting a search to another related search, making it crucial for you and your business to properly set up and categorize content.

If Google makes the data available for exactly what features searchers are using to find and visit your website or content (such as “refine this search” or “people also ask”), you’ll be able to gather insights you can leverage to optimize your customer journey and better learn how to reach your target audiences.

As more information becomes available, it will be interesting to see if certain schema (or structured data) codes will be needed to add this functionality on your site and search listings in order to make the most out of the new visibility opportunities these features have to offer. Be sure to continue to follow our blog for the latest information as we these details unfold.

In the meantime, you can learn more about how all of this data should be used as your compass to direct your marketing roadmap through our Business Intelligence & Analytics eBook.

Reach out to our team with any questions you have about the new Google SERP features, your own analytics, or how to use them to make decisions and create content your audience is looking for.

About the Author

Marketing Director Paul Ferguson helps clients develop fully integrated marketing solutions that make impressions and drive results. Whether it be design-oriented campaigns or digital market execution, Paul skillfully creates strategies to effectively reach client’s desired audiences. Follow Paul on LinkedIn.

About &Marketing

&Marketing provides the robust outsourced marketing department growing companies need without the high overhead costs of big agencies or full-time employees. Our variable model empowers businesses to reach their growth goals through access to the guidance and expertise of senior level strategists and a flexible execution team.

Webinar: 2022 Planning:  How to Develop a Strategy that Aligns with your Business Goals

Webinar: 2022 Planning: How to Develop a Strategy that Aligns with your Business Goals

Webinar: 2022 Planning: How to Develop a Strategy that Aligns with your Business Goals

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It’s often been said that failing to plan is planning to fail. This adage holds especially true in this current landscape of supply chain issues affecting most every sector, labor shortages, and an ever-changing social media environment.

Watch the 2022 Planning: How to Develop a Strategy that Aligns with your Business Goals Webinar led by Paul Ferguson, Steve Pepe, Tim Walters, Christine Miles, and Rajat Kapur

Watch our webinar to discover planning strategies for the coming year that align with your business goals while learning how to keep an eye on the ever-changing landscape and reinforcing proven business fundamentals.

In this information packed session, our team of experts discussed how to:

  • Discover real pervasive market needs in contrast to ‘one-off’ customer requests that can steal efficiencies in your business.
  • Learn how data can be fully leveraged to be a foundation for modern digital marketing and sales.
  • Garner the power of dynamic websites and the need for SEO that delivers high quality content that provides an influential community for your business.
  • Understand the importance of creating plans for long-term goals while acknowledging intermediate milestones achieved through a number of short-term activities.
  • Revisit the age-old pillars of listening to customers, asking the right questions, and knowing when to scale your team to achieve maximum results.
About Paul Ferguson

Marketing Director Paul Ferguson helps clients develop fully integrated marketing solutions that make impressions and drive results. Whether it be design-oriented campaigns or digital market execution, Paul skillfully creates strategies to effectively reach client’s desired audiences.

About Steve Pepe

Steven Pepe is a marketing expert who has studied more than 30 audiences over his marketing career. From pumpjacks to ultrasounds, his focus is on communicating value propositions that resonate for the B2B customer. He is the Vice President of Global Marketing for Oliver Healthcare, a leader in packaging for medical devices and pharmaceuticals.

About Tim Walters

Tim Walters is the founder and CEO of BoomCloud Consulting. Through his passion for sales and helping companies grow, he created BoomCloud to provide outsourced sales services for small to mid-sized businesses. His firm is expert in designing sales strategies to help grow, scale, and generate more revenue for their clients. Prior to this, Tim brings 12 years of successful B2B sales experience working for Sabre, IBM, ADP, and Nestle.

About Christine Miles

Christine Miles is the founder and owner of EQuipt, a consulting and training business for medium-sized to Fortune 100 corporations. Considered a world-renowned expert in the field of listening differently, Christine also hosts the number one business radio show on the East Coast, Executive Leaders Radio, and is the author of What Is It Costing You Not to Listen, and the co-author of The Art of the Nudge. Christine is the creator of The Listening PathTM, a game changing approach to transform how people listen, empathize, and understand.

About Rajat Kapur

As the Founder and Managing Director of &Marketing, Raj strives to provide growing businesses of all sizes unparalleled marketing strategy and execution services. Raj brings two decades of professional experience in marketing, sales, and strategy development experience spanning B2B and B2C Fortune 50, mid-sized, and startups.

 About &Marketing U

&Marketing U is a modern marketing course for busy solopreneurs and one-person marketing departments. This course provides all of the marketing tools, education, and accountability you need to grow your business, all in one place and for a fraction of the cost of hiring an agency or new employees.

 About &Marketing

In today’s fast paced world, many growing businesses are struggling to modernize their marketing approaches because either they don’t have the expertise or the bandwidth to do it themselves.

&Marketing provides seasoned marketing strategy professionals and a nimble execution team to help our clients achieve their goals. Our unique partnership model allows us to augment our client’s existing teams or outsource the entire marketing function in an affordable, flexible, and transparent way.

Account-Based Marketing Strategy for SMBs: Learning the ABCs of ABM

Account-Based Marketing Strategy for SMBs: Learning the ABCs of ABM

Account-Based Marketing Strategy for SMBs: Learning the ABCs of ABM

&Marketing, and marketing, outsourced marketing strategy

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Years ago, I developed what I believed was an innovative sales prospecting and marketing approach by strategically targeting a small wish list of potential dream clients with a highly personalized campaign. I identified the top decision makers in those firms to receive a series of targeted, integrated marketing direct mail pieces and email communications that incorporated highly-focused, customized, and personalized messaging that addressed the client’s pain points, passions, and hobbies. If my sales and research intelligence indicated one of our targets loved camping, my marketing team would research and package a sleek, Top Camping Sites in America book with a special, handwritten note. At the time, we simply called this targeted campaign our top prospects campaign. Today, we’d refer to it as an account-based marketing strategy.

As part of the campaign, we also emailed specific instances of case studies showing our business’s services in action – ones that we knew would help propose a solution for a problem they had. This provided a one-two punch that customized their experience with our outreach, so they knew we meant business in how we customized solutions for their needs. The campaign performed very well with a 25% conversion rate, defined as successfully ascertaining a face-to-face meeting with the prospect.

What is Account-Based Marketing?

ABM is a sustained, coordinated approach that uses personalization to target the decision makers within one account. ABM is quickly becoming a regularly integrated execution to compliment a wide scope lead generation focus, or as I like to call it, the grass seed approach; that is, you throw a lot of seed down and hope some relationships grow and, with proper care and nurturing, turns into business.

Why Use Account-Based Marketing?

Whereas widespread marketing to place leads at the top of the funnel works, hand selecting the cream of the crop prospects and targeting those with a personalized experience can produce better results and stronger clients. In fact, this pivot and integration of focusing on targeting the decision makers within select accounts has become much easier in the last few years with the evolution of new platforms, channels, and tools that enable a deeper understanding of and better access to our clients.

In Demand Gen Report’s 2020 ABM Benchmark Survey, 73% of the marketers surveyed said ABM has led to an efficient use of marketing resources and 37% saw a clearer path to ROI. That’s probably because the developed and targeted client personas are much more inclined to benefit from your service or product, and as such, your outreach and messaging may strongly resonate with them, significantly increasing the lead to conversion time. In other words, you are providing something of value to your prospects. And your approach, cadence, level of personalization, and delivery of this information are key to driving a successful ABM campaign.

Take LinkedIn and Sales Navigator, for instance. Ten years ago, LinkedIn was still in the adoption mode. However, a recent report shows LinkedIn members have surged 900 percent since 2010, increasing from 78 million to nearly 800 million members today. And, with the advent of Sales Navigator in 2014, social sales prospecting and selling have become an effective and cost-effective way of sourcing new business.

With other sophisticated tools, platforms, and automation systems that streamline processes, marketers now have a blank canvas to create a personalized experience of their brand for each client or prospect. Further, when you integrate an account-based marketing strategy with traditional marketing tactics and also consider that many companies have more mature customer databases and tools that provide insights and triggers, the ABM strategy has quickly emerged as a preferred method of targeted business development.

When Should Companies Use Account-Based Marketing?

An ABM strategy can be especially effective for smaller and mid-size businesses that don’t have the resource bandwidth and available tools to integrate a robust and sustained traditional lead generation program. In this situation, it may make better sense to develop a customized strategy by selecting and targeting those prospects where winning one or two of their accounts business would move the needle. But even an ABM campaign at this level needs a scope of resources to support its success, including, but not limited to, research data, content, and creative, and should have tangible criteria to determine return on investment (ROI). And although ABM takes more resources and time for results, it has the potential to time to nurture and make the prospect ready for outreach, it has a much higher potential for return in producing longer-term, better quality clients.

How Should Companies Create an Account-Based Marketing Strategy?

A successful ABM strategy begins with the critical work of developing your client persona, one of six important steps that serve as the pillar of your efforts. Your persona must hit the mark to ensure your campaign is laser focused on the right prospects. But that is just the beginning. There are five other notable steps outlined below for small and mid-size businesses to develop and execute a successful ABM marketing strategy.

1) Define and shoot for the bullseye with your client profile development.

Using available data, web analytics, past client characteristics, and insights from your sales team, you can create an accurate archetype of your ideal account with confidence.

2) Identify the company’s top decision makers you plan to target and understand.

Outline the problems you will solve for with your strategy. Address a pain point and provide a solution along the campaign journey.

3) Define your specific ABM campaign goals.

Map out what you expect to achieve related to each goal – specifically and cumulatively – using your overall business’s established key performance indicators (KPI’s) for the company or department. True alignment between the business needs and molding your ABM strategy to support your business’s goals are critical.

In a business that has a front-facing sales team, the only way to make certain your campaign is positioned for victory is to collaborate on goals, determine measurements of success, execute customized outreach, and ensure the sales team follows up timely and appropriately with key targets. This alignment is often the hardest challenge, but it is key to ensuring the goals are mutual, the measurement of success is consistent, and the expectations are parallel. Otherwise, if marketing believes increased engagement and deeming an account ready for outreach defines success, but the sales team believes immediate new business makes the campaign a win, this misalignment could cause disappointment and lack of future buy-in by both sides. What will deem the strategy and campaign a success? Close rate? Pipeline? Impressions? Sales meetings? Content engagement rates? Sales cycle length?

4) Create and define the experience with a detailed journey and messaging.

Understanding your client’s obstacles and their level of interest in your product or service will help you determine what content and messaging is presented along their engagement path. Incorporate calls to action through an offering like a free analysis or something that will attract attention and engagement.

5) Debrief, refine, and repeat the campaign by measuring your results through data.

Leveraging data to understand what is resonating with your targets will help you improve your strategies. Understanding content performance as well as how and where clients prefer to receive information allows you to create better personalization and increased engagement that will help you glean when the accounts are ready for outreach.

Bottom line, it’s all about the BOTTOM LINE and ABM helps businesses of all sizes see that line more clearly when they target real prospects that fit within the parameters of their client profile who are more apt to bring you business. With targeting real prospects that best match your business offerings, an ABM approach MAY support shorter sales cycles. Its highly targeted approach ensures dollars are spent more wisely, all the while providing a better customer experience, which as we know, is a key competitive differentiator in today’s business world.

Want to see how ABM can grow your business?

We can help! Get in touch with us below for a free initial marketing assessment (IMA) and from there we can discuss the value an account-based marketing strategy could bring to your business. 

About the Author

Bonnie Habyan is a Chief Marketing Officer and author with more than 25 years of experience in the financial services and energy sectors. She specializes in brand development, growth marketing, and acceleration strategies. She can be reached at bonniehabyan@gmail.com and found on LinkedIn here.

About &Marketing

&Marketing provides the robust outsourced marketing department growing companies need without the high overhead costs of big agencies or full-time employees. Our variable model empowers businesses to reach their growth goals through access to the guidance and expertise of senior level strategists and a flexible execution team.

Creating Our Core Values: The &Marketing All-Time Hits

Creating Our Core Values: The &Marketing All-Time Hits

Creating Our Core Values: The &Marketing All-Time Hits

&Marketing, and marketing, outsourced marketing strategy

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Culture Eats Strategy For Breakfast
Peter Drucker

I’ve been known to share sentiments like, “It’s not what we do, it’s how we do it” and “it’s a great privilege to choose the people you work with.” When I say these things, I risk sounding like a broken record, but it’s so true! Despite regularly having discussions about the importance of our culture, our approach, and “who we are,” we lacked a formal set of core values.

We easily agreed on the basic tenets of being honest, communicating transparently, and adhering to a ‘no games’ policy, not only internally but also with our partners and clients.

A differentiating factor at &Marketing is that we pledge to measure ourselves by our client’s success and always use data to drive our decisions. We know that the best path is typically not always the easiest or smoothest. When we really push the envelope and innovate to find the better solution, we appreciate a healthy debate about the tactics and strategies needed to succeed. Sometimes this results in tough conversations, which we approach head on.

Ultimately, and most importantly, is that we wanted to highlight that we are not “yet another marketing agency.” We strive for amazing results for the client, and do not just check boxes. We have a unique and tight knit culture, where we value work-life balance, and we appreciate trustworthiness. Finally, we look for partnerships that embrace this unique culture. We look to partner and win together….thus our name – “&” Marketing. It’s not just our clients out there- it’s us too- taking the new path, having honest conversations, and measuring our success continuously as we go.

After we completed our exercise, I reflected on the old Peter Drucker quote – “Culture Eats Strategy for Breakfast” and realized that it’s playing itself out in our business. It’s our culture that makes us unique- it’s the how we do it that makes the it special. But, best of all, it’s the people who make this my privilege.

About the Author

Rajat “Raj” Kapur is the founder and Managing Director of &Marketing. He strives to provide growing businesses of all sizes unparalleled marketing strategy and execution services. Raj brings two decades of professional experience in marketing, sales, and strategy development experience spanning B2B and B2C Fortune 50, mid-sized, and startups.

About &Marketing

&Marketing provides the robust outsourced marketing department growing companies need without the high overhead costs of big agencies or full-time employees. Our variable model empowers businesses to reach their growth goals through access to the guidance and expertise of senior level strategists and a flexible execution team.