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  • Lead Generation Is About Being Found

    Traditional lead generation tactics, directory advertising, trade show participation, half page print ads are quickly loosing appeal with small business marketers. There are two very good reasons for this decline 1) traditional methods are some of the most expensive and 2) traditional methods are proving less effective in terms of lead generation.

    Message and information overload, technology to block ads (caller ID, TiVo, XM radio), and the availability of information may make traditional and more expensive outbound marketing efforts a thing of the past.

    For the most part, Gen Y doesn’t know how to operate the Yellow Pages, doesn’t read the newspaper, and watches TV like an interactive sport (when not playing Wii or watching commercialess TV online)

    Small businesses must change the way they think about and approach lead generation – they must think more in terms of being found and less in terms of finding. People are still looking for solutions, trying out new services and buying things they want, they’ve just changed how they go about doing it. In a way the control of message consumption has changed with it.

    Technology has put the phone directory in our pocket, no need to travel to the trade show because the interactive demo is on YouTube, and blogs, search engines and social media sites provide all the product information, answers and reviews you could ever consume.

    So, in order to generate leads and be found you must put yourself in the path of people who are learning about, asking about, and shopping about in your industry. You must create a web presence or hub of information for your business and then create spokes, online and offline that lead people to your hub.

    The beauty of this approach is that once you master it, the leads you turn up will be much higher value, much more qualified and likely expecting to pay a premium because they have convinced themselves that you are the answer. (Do it now before your competitors figure it out.)

    Now, don’t get me wrong here, I’m not saying your lead generation must be done exclusively online, and I am also not say don’t use advertising – what I am saying is that your online presence is the hub of education and that your online and offline adverting, pr, and referral systems must utilize this new reality to its fullest.

    Think of it as lighting candles along dark paths so that weary travelers can discover you in the dark.

    Those candles are your education based entries in social media hubs like twitter and Facebook – gentle guides of introduction. They are your pr efforts and articles, written to illuminate your expertise. They are your blog posts, designed to attract surfers looking for the way. They are your strategic partnerships, alignments that evoke trust. They are your web conferences, providing interactive discussions with customers and prospects. They are your community building events, places where candles can be re-lit and shared.

    You can no longer sit back, dump an offer in the mail and start working the phones, you’ve got to build your inbound marketing machine and start taking advantage of the power of information, networking, trust, connection, and community to generate leads.

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    Posted by: John Jantsch on Feb 24, 09 | 7:07 am
    Category: Advertising, Lead Generation, Marketing Strategy, Public Relations, Referral Marketing | Tags: ,

    Comments
    • This is a great post. There needs to change in the way small mom & pop stores think about marketing, and lets face it, if they do nothing, they will sink in statistics.
    • John Jantsch
      @KJ - sad, but true - thanks
    • This is so right. Your best, most ideal clients and prospects are searching for solutions to the stuff they're dealing with. So you need to put those candles out there to give them ways to find you as a potential solution. It's getting them to raise their hand and say, "Hey, you might be able to help me. I'd like to know more."

      Used to be you'd tell a small business they needed to have a web site to be taken seriously. Now, you need to have a "web presence". By the way, the "spokes" out from your hub should be focused on providing useful information to your clients/prospects. That's what will make it a "candle" for them to find their way back to your hub.

      Nice post John.

      All my Best!
      Kevin
    • I disagree with this thinking.

      Lead Generation and being found are two different things.

      Being found is tactical SEO. Lead generation is about capturing prospect info. Just getting them to your site is not enough.

      Some can argue that any traffic is a lead but if they bounce what good is it?

      If you really want to capture a lead, you need to develop your page/site to appeal to your prospects desires -- what do they really want and how does your product deliver on that.
    • I was JUST explaining this very topic to a client! Great timing. This is a mentality that so many are not programmed to and have to reprogram their thinking. Lord knows you GET IT John!
    • Handled correctly, the prospect was ‘pre-sold’ even before our first meeting. Build your inbound marketing machine! The profitable clients seek YOU!
    • John Jantsch
      @Krisof - perhaps I wasn't very clear, but SEO wasn't even part of this discussion unless that gets you found. I was also talking about being found at the Chamber of Commerce workshop

      Then of course you move to lead nuturing and conversion, which may be more what you are referring to.
    • "Small businesses must change the way they think about and approach lead generation - they must think more in terms of being found and less in terms of finding."

      To me this is more about building a successful business by following John's path as mentioned in the article.

      "So, in order to generate leads and be found you must put yourself in the path of people who are learning about, asking about, and shopping about in your industry. "

      This wasn't about SEO. Lead generation is just that, generating leads. Being found( in peoples path of fulfilling a need, learning, educating) is a path of earning people who have a needs to get to know you, like you and trust you. Essential elements of the buying cycle.
      THANKS JOHN!!!!
    • Hi John -

      I don't disagree about the importance of traffic. Without traffic, you can't sell anything. But traffic is only part of the equation.

      I guess it comes down to how you define "lead". For me, a person hitting your page is nothing more than traffic. Because if they don't engage, the only thing you've generated is a lost opportunity.

      I define a lead as the point when you capture the visitor's information - say from a person opting in to an email newsletter. Because without it, you can't even begin to have a conversation. This's why I talked about developing a page where the content focuses on how your product /service benefits the visitor. It has to compel them to act. And it's that action that converts them from "visitor" to "lead".
    • Great article! I have been mulling this very thing over in my mind. I want to redesign one of my company web sites to be a hub, a place that encourages interaction, with Facebook and Twitter and a Blog acting as active spokes.

      Your second to last paragraph about what the candles are could act as a great marketing plan for any small business.

      This approach fits hand in glove with educational selling. I love the part about contacts convincing themselves that you are the answer.

      One could get so good at this that they could almost eliminate the need for traditional sales, and focus that effort on education and customer service instead. Hopefully my company will fit that bill.
    • John Jantsch
      @Bradford - yes, getting so good at it is the goal for sure.
    • I love what you say about taking a more proactive approach. This is so true...especially now.
    • John - great thoughts here. If my blog is a hub, than might SEO be one of the spokes you are referring to? Its one way people are lead to my "hub". I suppose a whitepaper might be another, and offline networking and speaking a third? How about an email newsletter or RSS feed? More like the tire surrounding the hub? Okay I'm going too far here!
    • Very nice said, John. I like the candle analogy a lot. The days of TV-industrial complex are over. Today, it's about marketing by attraction instead of persuasion. Earning the right to be listened to. Something you've done very well, might I add :)
    • BTW I highly recommend Jeff Jarvis's "What Would Google Do?" book, especially if you're in the lead generation business (as a provider or buyer). This industry is bound to go away very soon, like most middlemen, and Jarvis's book will give you a few ideas on how to reinvent your business before it's too late. http://bit.ly/4ax6y0
    • I have been trying to explain this concept and I don't know if it is me or most small biz are just not ready or willing to accept it.

      I do not think there is a post that I agree with more John and the reason to develop your content marketing and integrated communication strategies as a result.

      Thanks
    • John Jantsch
      @Joe - I think the reason this is a tough sell is because it runs counter to what so many people have seen and been taught over the years and because, frankly it's more work initially to set in motion.
    • Great point & straightforward post. I love the candle analogy, that is one that will finally make sense to some of my low-tech clients. Love the blog!
    • John Jantsch
      @Dave - that candle thing seems to be a good metphor for people - maybe another book idea!
    • Here is one thing to consider. When thinking of online lead generation there are two steps, search traffic and conversion.

      This begs the question of the premise of a hub. The old model of the web was designed like a magazine or catalog. One central place to browse. Search changes all this. Your candle analogy is a good one. I like fishing...the more hooks in the water, the greater your chance of hooking lots of fish. Mike Volpe of Hubspot talks about 'tickets in the lottery' all the same concept. The more content you have out there, the more candles or hooks or tickets you have in the search ocean.

      But do you need a site? Is there any such thing as a hub any more? Data proves, that them more steps you put in front of web traffic (people) the higher the defection rate. When you consider business blogging, shouldn't you be able to convert traffic right from the blog? Or what about landing pages unique to each blog or each CTA?

      Our company has over 550 blogs, each with CTA's and landing pages. We rarely send traffic to our site. Our blogs generate almost 30x our site traffic for organic search...so who needs a hub?
    • Brian
      Has anyone used 'Tube Toolbox' (www.tubetoolbox.com)? I was referred to it but not sure if I feel like it's cheating the system or not. I'm thinking of going the more ethical route although it's tempting
    • I hate to admit it but my conventional marketing techniques that have served me so well and helped to build my business have started to become less and less effective over the last year and some of them are just not cost effective. I will try some of your initiatives and I hope they work!
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