Understanding Your Prospect’s Buyer Journey Is Critical To Orchestrating Marketing And Sales Activities
The problem with the waterfall is that gravity is involved, and the journey down the falls is straight and without interference. It’s also fairly predictable, as the water continuously flows all day, every day.
This is where the challenges with today’s buyer journey start. Nothing is predictable in today’s buyer journey, and more variables are interfering with it than ever before.
On the other hand, the cyclone is unpredictable. The winds are constantly influencing the direction of the buyer journey. The better you plan your sales and marketing execution, the better you can influence those winds to drive the buyer journey toward its completion.
What’s even more specific about our version of the Cyclonic Buyer Journey™ is it has eight mini-cyclones instead of one massive cyclone, making navigating a buyer journey even more complex and challenging.
You have to take into consideration the added complexities associated with today’s chaotic buyer journey to produce better results and more significant business outcomes for your company.
Here’s what you need to know about the new cyclone vs. the traditional waterfall funnel, and how to plan accordingly for both marketing and sales in 2019.
The funnel has almost always been a sales-related visual, but to truly get a handle on how to drive revenue, you have to start looking at the prospect’s buyer journey as a continuous set of experiences that start before a prospect even knows they have an issue and finishes when they become a customer.
But keep in mind that the experience continues even after they sign your paperwork, because their customer experience drives reviews, references and referrals.
All of this means you must be prepared in 2019 to take a more holistic approach to the strategy behind revenue, one that runs all the way through the time they are an active customer at your company.
When you start putting together your marketing strategy, make sure you have a deep understanding of your prospect’s buyer journey. Here’s a quick checklist to make sure you have all of the strategy elements locked down:
If you can’t put a check in the box next to these six elements of revenue strategy, you should hold on any tactical execution and go back to finish your strategy work.
If you can check each of these boxes, you’re ready to move into the tactical planning part of optimizing your prospect’s buyer journey and mapping tactics to each stage of the Cyclonic Buyer Journey your prospects find themselves in.
The tactics are the easiest aspect of this entire effort. It might make sense to you when I explain that everyone knows what tools to use. The tools are not the mystery here. Everyone knows you need a great website, content assets, email campaigns, social media amplification, events and video assets to help tell your story.
Some people even now about advanced tactics, like influencer marketing and account-based marketing (ABM) campaigns, but what most people don’t know (and where the waterfall funnel continues to fail) is when to apply what tactics, how to orchestrate the execution and what to expect in terms of results.
Looking at the eight stages in the Cyclonic Buyer Journey gives you a map for how to apply tactics at each stage. ABM is perfect for the Pre-Awareness Stage. Content and conversion rate optimization tactics fit the Education Stage. Organic search engine optimization and paid search are ideal for the Awareness Stage. Sales process design works for the Evaluation, Rationalization and Decision Stages.
While the funnel used to be fine, it’s not specific enough to give you the insights you need to create the highly complex, omni-channel multi-touch marketing and sales experience you need to bring on today’s prospects.
Here’s another checklist to make sure you have all of the tactics you need for both marketing and sales to help you meet or even exceed your revenue goals:
If you can’t put a check in the box next to these seven elements required for successful tactical execution around revenue growth, you should rethink your selection of marketing and sales tactics, and perhaps get some additional guidance from more experienced executioners.
If you can check each of these boxes, you’re ready to move into the actual execution work, including building the dashboards required to keep tabs on your daily, weekly, monthly and quarterly performance metrics across your entire buyer journey.
How do you currently track your wins and losses when it comes to marketing? What about sales? How about revenue growth in general?
Chances are you have sales goals and you track progress toward those goals. You probably have some vanity metrics for marketing, like visitors, conversion rate and social media followers.
This is why you’re not hitting your revenue goals month over month. Whether you know it or not, your strategy is hope. You hope you’ll hit your goals this month. But hope isn’t a strategy, and you probably won’t hit them.
If this is how you measured your progress last year, what makes you think this year is going to be any different? You know what they say about doing the same things and expecting different results.
Leave the funnel behind, and leave the siloed tactical analytics behind, too. Start looking at your metrics at each stage of the buyer journey to uncover insights rarely seen when you look at the individual performance of specific tactics.
Here’s a third checklist to make sure you have all of the analytics, dashboards, metrics and scorecards you need for both marketing and sales to help you meet or even exceed your revenue goals:
If you can’t put a check in the box next to these six elements required to measure the ongoing performance of your revenue growth efforts, you should consider delaying any additional investment until you have the measurement mechanisms in place to track how you’re doing and ensure you can optimize your program performance over time.
If you can check each of these boxes, you’re ready to move into the stage where you look at additional technology, software and tools to help you gain efficiency and accelerate improved performance.
With over 7,000 marketing and sales technology products on the market (and more coming online every day), it’s important to assess these tools with a solid strategy. When clients are looking for guidance around tech products, we apply the same buyer journey methodology and look for tools to automate, improve efficiency around the execution and analyze performance. Most importantly, we want tools that help improve performance.
Everyone needs platform software to do the basics associated with marketing and sales. Marketing automation like HubSpot or Marketo/Adobe, CRM like Salesforce or HubSpot and Zendesk or HubSpot for customer service are non-negotiables. Everyone needs them.
Then use the stages of the Cyclonic Buyer Journey to see where you need to focus.
For example, if you’re investing heavily in marketing and sales tactics around Pre-Awareness, you might want to build a tech stack to support an account-based marketing initiative. Terminus, Engagio, EverString and ReachForce for data quality might be good additions to build on top of your platform technology.
If you’re more focused on the middle stages of the buyer journey, email marketing and sales automation tools might make more sense. Drift, Seventh Sense and Conversica might be part of your add-on tech stack.
Here’s a fourth and final checklist to make sure you have complete understanding of how to use technology to better optimize your marketing and sales efforts:
If you can’t put a check in the box next to these eight elements required to create a technology strategy and roadmap, you’re probably not ready to invest money in these tools. The worst move you could make is to buy something, not use it, cancel it and then find out a few months later that you need it.
Also, these tools alone rarely generate results, but tools in the hands of people who know how to use them almost always produce solid results. Make sure you have the team in place to fully leverage what you buy.
If you can check each of these boxes and the boxes in the previous sections, you’re going to have an amazing 2019. When you leave the waterfall behind and embrace the cyclone, the clouds part and the sun comes out, revealing the path to sustainable, predictable and repeatable revenue growth.