Internet Marketing: CRM, Marketing Tactics and IT Alignment

Internet marketing and sales strategyInternet marketing continues to evolve, becoming both more viable and more complex. Customer relationship management software (CRM) has become a must due to the complexity. It plays an important role at all stages of the sales funnel. With a solid CRM system in place, your Internet sales and marketing teams can more effectively manage contacts whether they’re in the engage, convert, or nurture stage. Where the sales funnel was once the realm of the sales and marketing team, today’s Internet marketing strategies require a robust CRM solution – and IT involvement.

To add to the complexity of CRM and the Internet sales funnel in general, social media has emerged as a major channel for customer service, tech support, sales, and marketing alike. Integrating social media into your Internet marketing CRM program allows everyone to see the larger picture. For example, is a contact complaining about your service? Is she raving about your products? Has a contact expressed a need that your company can fill? By tapping into these channels, your sales, marketing, customer service, and tech support teams can respond appropriately.

Opinions vary on the best approach to CRM with some Internet marketing experts favoring a single, shared database for both marketing and sales and others preferring separate databases to ensure that leads are managed properly according to where they are in the Internet sales funnel. Other experts advocate using marketing automation software to first clean up the sales funnel data before importing it into CRM software.

Can a single CRM solution handle everything your Internet sales and marketing teams need? The answer varies from company to company. In most cases, sales and marketing need to work with the same data and contacts; however, they tend to interact with that data differently.

Integrated CRM solutions that include marketing automation and email marketing software may be the optimal choice by allowing sales and marketing to access shared data without duplication or conflicts. For example, with an integrated Internet marketing CRM platform, when an email subscriber unsubscribes from an email marketing campaign the contact will be removed from the mailing list and relevant information appended to the contact’s record.

No matter which option makes the most sense for your Internet marketing strategy, one thing is clear: you need IT support. With multiple databases, automation software, and lead sources (such as cold calling, opt-in lists, special events, and social media channels), managing the sales funnel requires software and systems that perform to their fullest potential.

While many Internet marketing platforms are offered as “software as a service” and imply that minimal IT intervention will be required, aligning marketing with IT is essential. While installation, updates, and support tasks may be minimal with cloud-based Internet sales solutions, IT should be involved in selecting the solution to make sure it is compatible with existing systems along with the company’s security and privacy policies. If your CRM solution includes social media information from contacts based in European Union countries, stricter privacy regulations may apply.

By including IT in the Internet sales and CRM conversation, you’ll benefit from a broader perspective that extends beyond the sales funnel and better aligns with the organization’s objectives. In addition, IT professionals tend to have more experience in purchasing software. Thus, they may be better equipped to evaluate the terms and conditions and negotiate the contract.

No matter which CRM solution you use to nurture prospects through the sales funnel, stronger Internet sales require alignment between your Internet marketing, sales, and IT teams.

Website Optimization’s Effect on Offline Marketing Strategies

Website optimization or SEO drives slae sleads to your WebsiteThe importance of website optimization can’t be stressed enough. After all, the website is the heart of eCommerce and it’s where online conversion takes place. In recent years, website optimization has become more sophisticated. Not only is website optimization important online, it can extend offline as well.

According to Marketing Sherpa’s 2012 Website Optimization Benchmark Report, the most important website optimization goals include the following:

  • To increase overall conversion (83%)
  • To learn about consumer behaviors and motivations (64%)
  • To discover the most important wordings and phrases (62%)
  • To determine the most effective page elements (62%)
  • To find leaks in the sales funnel (58%)
  • To build brand awareness (53%)

Over 80 percent of the survey’s respondents agreed that increasing overall conversion was “very important” while 64 percent felt the same about learning about consumer behaviors and motivations. A good website optimization campaign can drive traffic, improve conversions, and provide you with detailed insights about your customers and their behaviors.

All of this learning from website optimization is largely being shared. The report revealed that 70 percent of the surveyed marketers use the lessons they’ve learned from their website optimization efforts to adjust their offline marketing campaigns and other forms of messaging.

With website optimization, marketers have a unique platform that they can use to test messages and responses. As marketers learn more about what works and what doesn’t work through the optimization process, they have the opportunity to use that knowledge in offline marketing.

Based on the Marketing Sherpa’s report, the majority of marketers do so. But what about the other 30 percent? What’s holding them back? It turns out that where a marketer is in the optimization process has an influence on whether or not those online findings will be extended to the offline world. The report revealed that those in the more advanced stages are 57 percent more likely to do so.

No matter where you are in the website optimization process, you may be able to apply what you’ve learned to other areas. For example, if you’ve split tested a landing page and found that your target audience responded favorably to a specific call to action, wouldn’t it make sense to use a similar approach in a print newsletter or some other offline campaign?

Likewise, your analytical tools may reveal interesting trends and insights into your audience. In fact, you may come to learn that your products and services appeal to a completely different demographic than you initially envisioned. What will you do with that information? While tweaking your website and online marketing campaigns to leverage those findings is the obvious choice, have you considered how you might use this information offline?

What if the team that handles inbound marketing isn’t involved in offline marketing? This could be a mistake. This doesn’t mean having your Web marketing team take over offline marketing, but it does suggest that sharing information could be beneficial to your broader marketing strategy.

Website optimization is a complex, constantly evolving process. As you fine-tune your website, test pages, analyze results, and learn more about how your customers and prospects interact with it, it’s smart to get the most mileage out of your efforts as possible. The next time you learn something new about your customers through the website optimization process, consider walking across the hall and sharing your insights with your offline colleagues.

B2B Video Marketing: Using Video to Reach Other Businesses

With decision makers relying on the Internet and social media as top information sources, B2B marketing online is bringing new opportunities. From articles and press releases to online B2B video marketing, the Internet delivers multiple ways to reach business customers. Thanks to improvements in online video technology, it’s no longer necessary to send a customer a corporate video on DVD in the mail. Instead, post your videos online and extend your reach.

B2B Video Marketing vs. Consumer Video Marketing

Just as B2B marketing is different than consumer marketing, B2B video marketing has its differences, and similarities, from consumer-oriented videos. For example, your corporate video for a B2B marketing campaign will be geared toward business customers rather than consumers. However, no matter who your business video is targeting, it is targeting a real person. In the case of a B2B marketing video, that person is likely a decision maker.

When planning your corporate video, try to visualize your target audience. Ask yourself: What’s important to the decision maker? What does that person need in order to make a decision? How does your product or service make that person’s job easier? How does it solve problems? By understanding your business customers’ needs and problems, you can produce an effective business video to match.

Leveraging Business Video Channels

Video sharing sites like YouTube provide businesses with a platform for B2B video marketing. In fact, you can create an entire “channel” focused on your company, products, and brand. Once your channel is established, consider embedding your videos into other B2B marketing materials such as email campaigns, press releases, and articles.

Using corporate video in your email campaigns adds another dimension to your B2B marketing efforts and can build trust and credibility. Depending on your email campaign management software, support for B2B video marketing may or may not be available. However, there’s a way around this: Insert an image of your corporate video and hyperlink it to your business video hosted elsewhere.

Many press release distribution sites support B2B video marketing, making it easy to include corporate video in the body of your press release. If you’re using a press release site that does not support video, providing a link to your business video where appropriate can yield results.

If your B2B marketing plan includes distributing articles, consider adding complementary video segments to your article. From useful tips to testimonial videos, short video clips can enhance your articles and influence decision makers.

In addition to using video sharing sites and incorporating business video clips into other B2B marketing channels, it’s not a bad idea to create a corporate video channel on your website. Depending on your goals, you could embed your existing YouTube videos on your site or host each business video on your own servers. If you’re attempting a viral B2B video marketing campaign, it’s smart to choose an embeddable video format so that users can easily share your business video.

B2B Video Marketing as a Search Engine Strategy

Not only can your business video be shared using YouTube, email campaigns, press releases, and articles, corporate video can also play an important role in terms of driving search engine traffic to your site. Many decision makers use search engines specifically to find business video clips. If you do not have a B2B video marketing presence, you won’t be found by this segment of searchers! In addition, a keyword-optimized corporate video clip could show up significantly higher in the search engine results than a standard article or webpage optimized for the same phrase due to a lighter focus on B2B video marketing.

These are but a few highlights of B2B video marketing. How are you using business video in your B2B marketing efforts? Share your thoughts and ideas in the comments section below.