As a CEO, you have a specific way of looking at your company’s success. You see the big picture: where you are, where you’re going, and how you need to get there. That view hinges on the ability to look at each facet of your business and see the value it brings to your company’s bottom line. A data-centric inbound marketing strategy can give you the data you’ve been looking for from your marketing investments.
Proving ROI is the most important goal of a data-centric inbound strategy. To accomplish this goal, each recommendation made in the strategy will be tied back to one of four metrics:
If marketing dollars are going toward events, advertising, materials, or production that can’t draw a direct line to one of these markers, then you’re spending money - not investing it. When you’re choosing an inbound strategy, the return is the difference between spending and investing.
A data-centric inbound marketing strategy is focused first and foremost on return on investment. To get returns, your website and entire marketing plan must focus on qualified leads. Here’s the why:
Ensure your leads are more qualified by following an inbound marketing strategy focused on attracting and converting those ideal customers - your buyer personas. When your website, marketing, and sales teams are all on the same page, your returns go up.
There are a number of important data available when it comes to an inbound strategy paired with a marketing automation system (such as HubSpot) and a client management system (like Salesforce). Some of the most important data identified by our own salespeople and clients when utilizing these tools include:
These metrics are typically available via app, email, or by logging into the CRM. Within five minutes, your salesperson gets a notification of a new form fill or a prospect on your site and is able to see what they’ve looked at on your website, what problems they’re most likely experiencing based on the pages they’ve visited, and can call them to follow up and address potential solutions that your business offers. If lack of insight into prospects is a challenge with your sales team, imagine the success they could see with access to this data.
So, how can you tell when your strategy is working?
That seems easy: the strategy works when it meets your goals. A data-centric inbound marketing strategy with the goals of increasing website visits, improving conversion rate, improving qualified lead numbers for your sales team to close, and ultimately, positively impacting your bottom line is working when you can prove that it’s doing these things.
Showing the returns from each marketing tactic you use when implementing the inbound strategy is paramount to its success. Without the ability to show closed-loop reporting, you’re back to square one with guessing at your marketing and hoping that it’s working.