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Lead Conversion: How Do I Convert Traffic To Leads?

  
  
  
  
  

 Inbound Marketing: Get Found, Convert, Analyze

This article is part 3 in a series on the philosophy behind effective inbound marketing. If you haven't read the previous 2 articles, please feel welcome to do so here:

Article #1: Inbound Marketing Methodology - Part 1, Get Found, Convert, Analyze.
Article #2: Inbound Marketing Fundementals - Part 2, Get Found.

Part 3

Lead Conversion:

In summary, our view of a powerful, integrated and effective inbound marketing strategy needs to include 3 main elements:

  1. Get Found - Have your content optimized for search engines, blog articles & social media)
  2. Convert - Make it easy for the traffic you created to engage and become a lead
  3. Analyze - Evaluate all elements and data to improve your inbound marketing
    strategy and plan of action

inbound marketing twitter guideGetting found is a critical to success and becomes the result of a good web page & blog SEO strategy and the execution of that strategy. Write articles, produce videos (creating remarkable content), develop a large database of keywords and apply SEO (optimize). Then use all the social media sites and run email and PPC campaigns (when appropriate) (Promote). At the end of the day, however, we aren't in this for fun. We're also not in this for traffic. The goal is quality sales leads and customers, so the next step is to focus on converting as much of your traffic as possible to leads and customers.

Understand that there is potentially, huge value if you can increase your conversion rate and generate more leads from existing traffic. If you only get a few hundred visits per week, increasing your conversion rate by 1% could generate 10-15 more leads per month. If you get a few thousand visits a week, you stand to increase your lead flow by 100-150 leads per month

Landing Pages
 to targeted already established traffic (identified and/or isolated) can draw your audience to a specific page that has a very specific message, language & keywords. For instance, if you email everyone you met at a trade show and offer them a free trial of your product, that is a "targeted" traffic source because all the visitors have something in common - they are all from your trade show.

Converting a targeted stream of traffic requires two things:

  1. A well-crafted offer on a landing page that is designed specifically for the audience you will be driving to the page, and
  2. A stream of targeted traffic that you drive to the page.

If we compare this to the "organic" traffic from natural search (e.g., Google), social media sites, and other sources, we have learned that for "organic" traffic that finds you through SEO and social media, our conversion tactics need to be a little different because the audience is so much more diverse, and more difficult to target an offer that is designed especially for a particular visitor type.

Website & Blog: 
As you produce remarkable content, optimize and promote it, you are then able to generate traffic from variety sources, like Google, social media sites, the blogosphere, etc. You will have essentially created a magnet that attracts & pulls in prospects from throughout the web.

Conversion through the main pages on most websites is challenge. When someone hits a page on your site or your blog, you don't actually know where that visitor came from or what is on her mind. Because of this, it's sometimes hard to design an offer specifically for that person. For these reasons, your approach should consider the following:

  • What is the range of conversion paths on your site?
  • Where might people land
  • What paths through your content might they take?
  • How do we put offers and calls to action along the most common paths?
  • How do we gain the maximum chance of getting the "right" offers in front of a given visitor? 
  • What are all the methods available to maximize the chance of converting these visitors into a lead?

lead conversion white paperArticle #4 in this series (Analyze) will be posted next week.

Comments

Another great post in the series - valuable insights all round so well done! 
I would like to add, if I may, a thought about the content that you mention in this and the previous post. 
The biggest change in marketing caused by Inbound Marketing Automation is the shift in power from seller to buyer. So big a shift that today I call the sales-cycle a buying-cycle. And to truly make your content do what it needs to do to convert your visitors into prospects, you have to design the content that each piece of it is aimed at the visitor's specific stage of their buying-cycle. 
 
In the following description, I'm going to use the phrases which are used to describe the classic marketing cycle - if you need some explanation of these, our site's glossary will help www.gossamar.com/glossary) 
So, in the beginning of the cycle, when the visitor is doing his or her initial research and is thus building "Awareness" of the available solutions, the content you give them should be designed to create awareness but not to sell your specific solution over another. It's pure education, and not sales. But as the prospect works her way round the buying-cycle and eventually reaches "Preference", the content you design here should be all about sales related stuff (pricing and the benefits of your approach over others). 
 
The secret is to design each piece to nudge the person around their buying-cycle, one drip email at a time.
Posted @ Wednesday, June 09, 2010 4:36 PM by Eric Goldman
Thank you for the input and feedback pass4sure. You understand the inbound marketing analysis concept and that seems to be an important element many organizations miss. Good job. 
 
I recently posted an article on the best ways to monitor and evaluate exactly what your SEO or inbound marketing provider is doing. It is a Project specific inbound marketing project interface that's allows the client to have 24/7 access to all work and performance data. I hope it helps. 
 
http://www.virtualsupportsystems.com/inbound-marketing-project-interface/
Posted @ Friday, March 04, 2011 8:18 AM by Daniel Shlifer
For working with many different companies over the years, I've uncovered many different needs and challenges. Obviously, SEO were search engine optimization, blog development and social media development is where we focus our attention, but I'm sure the resource you have provided in NEC driver recovery could be of help for many. So again thank you for sharing, and I hope we hear more from you in the future.  
By best regards pass4sure 70-401 
Posted @ Saturday, March 12, 2011 1:31 AM by parker
Thank you so much for the quality information in your article. I have been working on traffic generation for a while and don't really have a problem getting traffic to my site, but am always looking for more information on converting it into leads for my program. 
 
This is the type of information that people can use to really find the success they are looking for on the Internet and with a MLM program. Thank you!
Posted @ Tuesday, November 01, 2011 12:05 PM by Mark
Thank you for the great comment Mark. It's so good to know that our work and this blog post helps someone. In my experience, business owners are just getting to this understanding. Initially it's all about search engine ranking and increased traffic. Now people are starting to understand that traffic on it's own hold little value if there are no effective conversion strategies in place, managed and evaluated on a regular basis. 
 
There is now a large selection of analytics designed for the end user as well as an Internet professional. The challenge of putting all the needed parts in place is getting easier. 
 
I posted a new article today. I hope it also provides some insight.
Posted @ Tuesday, November 01, 2011 12:52 PM by Daniel Shlifer
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