Seeking advice on B2B lead generation.

ThinkAutomatio

Free Member
Nov 15, 2023
2
0
I'm in a bit of a pickle and could really use your collective genius. I'm working with this nifty piece of software. It's like a Swiss Army knife for business processes - automates everything but your morning coffee. (Now there's an idea for the next update... ☕)

Here's my conundrum: My boss, who's a great fan of "thinking outside the box" (though I suspect he's never actually been in one), has set me on a quest. A quest to bring in more quality leads via our website. Now, I know what you're thinking - just another day in the world of digital marketing. But here’s the twist: I need to do it in a way that's as innovative as the software itself. No pressure, right?

So, here I am, hat in hand, asking for your pearls of wisdom. How do you attract the crème de la crème of leads? Especially for a product that's more versatile than a Swiss army knife (and almost as cool).

Looking forward to your insights, anecdotes, and even the odd dad joke (I'm all ears!).

Thanks
Angelus
 
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fisicx

Moderator
Sep 12, 2006
46,663
8
15,360
Aldershot
www.aerin.co.uk
Charter an aircraft and have your company logo and tagline painted on the tail, fuselage and wings. Fly around the country to every single airport.

Or just do what everyone else does and employ all the normal marketing techniques. Including trade shows and exhibitions.

Had a look at your website and TBH it looks like an enterprise bit of kit. Not the sort of thing your average small business will ever need (unless I've lotally misunderstood what it does). Your crème de la crème of leads are going to be big businesses not Mandy the hairdresser.
 
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Leverage your existing client base and social following. Interview your contacts with the major companies in long-form video. Focus on the benefits of your work with them and segue to the new product and its benefits. A half hour video on YouTube. Break it down to 15-30 second reels and shorts.
Optimise with the clients branding so they think you're doing them a favour. Shorts and reels across all social platforms. Have the video professionally produced and edited. Post shorts and reels 6 times a day on all 4 platforms.
 
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Paul Carmen

Business Member
Business Listing
Jan 27, 2018
862
1
411
Newport Pagnell
insiteweb.co.uk
Who knows, you've told us very little in your post. There's often one sure fire way to generate a small fortune with the approach you've outlined though... start with a large one!

So here's what we'd do (unless your boss has given you a big fat branding budget to spend & doesn't care about ROI/results):
  1. you work out what problems your software solves
  2. you articulate that in a way that your customers/the public will understand
  3. you research your market; e.g. see who the competitors are, their proposition, USP etc
  4. you work out who your ideal customers are; businesses, consumers, age, affluence, job, sex etc
  5. you work out where they look for solutions to their problems
  6. you target your marketing/website/resources at those places
  7. you measure, test and optimise your marketing
As an aside, if you're Thinkautomation.com, your UK and worldwide search traffic has dropped a lot over the past couple of years, which is where I'd focus my marketing efforts.

Things you used to rank for or that a target customer might search for; e.g. business process management software, business process software, marketing automation software etc, you're nowhere near page 1 on Google results.

It's what my company does for a living, and despite talking to a huge amount of snake oil salesmen over the years, unfortunately there's no shortcuts that I've ever seen.
 
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Paul FilmMaker

Free Member
  • Business Listing
    Aug 29, 2018
    670
    1
    297
    London
    www.fnxmedia.com
    I'm in a bit of a pickle and could really use your collective genius. I'm working with this nifty piece of software. It's like a Swiss Army knife for business processes - automates everything but your morning coffee. (Now there's an idea for the next update... ☕)

    Here's my conundrum: My boss, who's a great fan of "thinking outside the box" (though I suspect he's never actually been in one), has set me on a quest. A quest to bring in more quality leads via our website. Now, I know what you're thinking - just another day in the world of digital marketing. But here’s the twist: I need to do it in a way that's as innovative as the software itself. No pressure, right?

    So, here I am, hat in hand, asking for your pearls of wisdom. How do you attract the crème de la crème of leads? Especially for a product that's more versatile than a Swiss army knife (and almost as cool).

    Looking forward to your insights, anecdotes, and even the odd dad joke (I'm all ears!).

    Thanks
    Angelus

    We filmed a vid for a customer's campaign which just won the 'B2B Marketing Awards' campaign of the year in the 'low budget' category. It finished in the top 5 overall. Apple didn't make it in there! Or MicroSoft! So this was crazy. And their sales also went crazy to the point they're completely sold out!

    I learned a massive amount from the customer as this was the first time I'd ever created a video this good as part of a campaign this incredible. I think my top three takeaways are:

    1. It's a process. What I saw is the real traction comes when the right people sit in a room together (with coffee because nothing ever good happens without coffee) and brainstorm. A lot of it is asking questions of each other before coming up with ideas.

    E.g. Personally, I asked about their customers, primary motivations and pain points, numbers, how sales would interact, key objections their salespeople face etc... Everything so each of us could contribute better. And we all did. Their marketing team were asking questions right back. Their PR team was involved etc... So brainstorming was all about fact finding and then coming up with ideas. And then iteration upon iteration until we got the 'big idea' to a really good place with everyone contributing.

    2. Integrated campaigns. A single 'thing' doesn't work. E.g. Telephone based BD is waaay more effective when the prospect has heard about you. So the campaign was email, social, a bit of trade PR, all pointing at a vid and all very focused on targeted, specific pain points. Then, telephone based BD to follow up.

    3. Creativity and focus, not money. Our customer did something amazing because they replaced money with creativity, stayed focused on customer pain points and even made prospects laugh. If you can make prospects laugh, the sales team told us that's huge for them and we took that on board.

    And also, with the vid, it wasn't about creating a better vid than Apple. We couldn't do that because Apple spends millions on each major vid. Instead, we created something 'rough' but with deliberate and specific creative choices to be 'documentary style.' And funny and laser focused on customer pain points.

    That was the first time I created something of that level so learned a huge amount. I think the most important bit was the process and then if you don't have the money, to be creative. Plus making prospects laugh. And spending enough time bringing together the right people on the 'creative' bit so you come up with something amazing.

    If you want to have a chat to find out more, please just DM me. Happy to chat through the customer's process so you can do something amazing.
     
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