Many business owners get excited to start a marketing program with the hopes of generating high-ticket sales. What they don’t realize is that it takes more than just being ready with the advertising budget – you have to be prepared and brief all parties who will be involved in this campaign.
Without the proper infrastructure in place, you may be wasting your time and advertising budget if you don’t have the right processes established prior to the start of your lead generation campaign. We’ve seen too many business owners go down this road – super excited to kickstart a lead generation campaign but they lack the foundational sales structure to close the lead.
Here’s what you’ll need to do before the lead generation campaign launches:
- Have a team meeting and brief your sales team or customer service representatives (team members answering the phone) on this new marketing initiative
- Ensure they have a full understanding of the campaign objectives and how to answer to/follow up on these leads
- Establish some type of “source of truth” documentation via your customer relationship management (CRM) software or a spreadsheet to track each lead that comes in and the quality of them
- Set up a recurring monthly meeting to check in and hold your marketing and sales team accountable
Depending on your industry, leads will generally be delivered from a marketing provider in one of two ways: form submission (An inquiry for a quote, request for an e-book download, webinar opt-in, etc) or a live phone call. Typically when phone numbers are present, more leads will tend to call directly as it’s easier to talk to someone live rather than submit a form and wait for someone to respond.
Now, let’s dive into the 9 practices you MUST have in place for high-ticket lead generation:
1. Sales Team Must Be Ready and Available. Always have a company representative who knows how to sell available to answer the phone throughout operating business hours (or hours the lead generation campaign is active). Ensure that they are fully trained and have the script memorized without sounding like a robot.
2. Collect Contact Information Upfront. Capture caller’s name, phone number, and email early on in the call to follow up. This is also helpful in case the call gets dropped and allows the sales team to address the lead professionally.
3. Form Submissions Should Be Followed Up Within 1 Hour Timespan. The key here is: the sooner, the better. The fact that your lead submitted a form if they also had an option to call you shows that your lead doesn’t need an urgent response but may also be comparison shopping for quotes the same way across your competitors. Be quick to respond via a phone call and showcase your value. Put some checks and balances in place to ensure that your sales team is not just ignoring these form submissions as they could be equally, if not more valuable, then phone call leads. If the form submission leads don’t answer, leave a voicemail and follow up at a later time if you don’t hear from them.
4. Ensure Your Wait Times Are Reasonable. There’s been an increasing trend toward customer expectations of service that is fast, if not instantaneous. Simple and obvious tip: don’t make your leads wait too long. Here’s a quick rule of thumb: any wait time over 2 minutes is unreasonable.
5. Clear Your Voicemail Box. Get in the habit of checking the voicemail box often in case a call goes to voicemail and a lead cannot leave a message to be followed up with. Check for any missed calls and be sure to follow up with any that came through while sales team was potentially unavailable.
6. Follow Up! It takes an average of 10 touchpoints with a brand before a potential buyer converts into a customer. Most sales teams give up after 3-5 touchpoints (WAY TOO SOON!) but know that depending on your typical sales cycle, you will want to reconsider your follow-up strategy. Depending on how high-end your service is, the lead will need time to touch base with other decisionmakers before pulling the trigger. What does this mean? Your customers likely won’t be ready to pull the trigger on first contact. Be sure to button up your follow up strategy – there’s a right and wrong way to go about this. Engage via calls and an email schedule to stay on top of mind.
7. Listen to Your Phone Calls. If your marketing provider records the phone calls for you, use the calls as a training mechanism to help your sales team improve. What could they have done better to explain the value and close the lead? Maybe they could improve on cross-selling or having a solid understanding of the service they’re selling – the only way to know is to listen
8. Incentivize Your Team. This makes a big difference – if your representatives are not being incentivized with commissions or bonuses to engage, follow up, and close the leads, it’s a lot easier for leads to “slip through the cracks” and be forgotten
9. Measurement and Accountability System. Invest in a CRM (customer relationship management) software to keep track of all the leads your marketing team is generating. If you’re not quite at the point of using a CRM – use a simple spreadsheet to record your leads and their stage in the funnel. The key is to have a single source of truth to monitor leads in the funnel to keep your sales team accountable and show the marketing team what their efforts are contributing to.
Are you ready to generate leads for your business? If you can answer “YES!” with full confidence to the following questions, you are ready to invest in a lead generation marketing campaign and have a higher likelihood of success:
- Do you have dedicated customer service representatives or sales representatives with a process in place to follow up with leads in a timely manner?
- Do you have a re-engagement follow up schedule?
- Do you have a CRM software or spreadsheet to track leads and their stage in the funnel?
- Is your sales team receptive to working with your marketing team together in order to improve results?
- Is your team FULLY trained on scripts to sell your service on the phone?
If you’re ready to take your lead generation to the next level, feel free to reach out for a free consultation to see if you’re a good fit for our done-for-you program.
Michelle Kop is a marketing consultant and award-winning pay-per-click marketing strategist. She has over 8 years of professional paid advertising experience in Google and Microsoft Ads, with a specialization in lead generation for B2B and B2C companies.
After working in corporate marketing with Fortune Global 500 Brands like Toyota and BP, Michelle founded Level 28 Media, a lead generation micro-agency for small to medium businesses.