First, let’s start with the definition of Inbound Marketing: Inbound marketing is based on the concept of earning the attention of prospects, making yourself easy to be found and drawing customers to your website by producing content customers value.
Now that you’ve got the gist of what we’re talking about here, let’s dig in to what really constitutes an inbound marketing strategy.
Anyone with a marketing degree is likely familiar with the 4 Ps (Product, Price, Place and Promotion). The 4 Ps, provide a roadmap marketers have used for decades to select a successful scenario for marketing and selling their company’s products. The thought of this traditional marketing model is that if I create the correct product at the correct price for my target market, make that product conveniently available for that target market and promote it to them, I’ll sell a lot of it and be successful.
I’m not going to argue this basic principle – but I am going to examine the Promotion element more closely. The fact is, in 1948 (when this framework was first established) this was a really new thought process. Marketers could determine the answers to these four questions and be fairly successful at selling product. But, as everyone adopted this approach, the level of competition increased. No longer was it this simple. New approaches to the same game have been tried – with relative success. But, not until the more recent approach of applying inbound marketing strategies did the game really change.
Traditional marketing practices at their core consist of creating a message and promoting it to the target market when appropriate for the company, hoping that a small percentage of the audience will bite. Inbound marketing strategies flip this thought process on its head. Instead, we provide remarkable, original content in the venues where the target audiences go, making this information available whenever the audience is looking for it. In short, it’s about providing the access to your company via great content when the buyer is ready instead of forcing your product or service when the buyer may or may not be ready.
A solid inbound marketing strategy includes attracting new visitors, converting those visitors to leads, and turning those leads into new customers utilizing a handful of useful tools.
The name of the game is getting traffic to your site that could become customers in the future. To accomplish this you’ll want to use:
Now that the newfound visitors are on your site, give them a way to engage with you without too much commitment – Here’s how:
Getting your new leads to convert to customers is where your campaign kicks into high gear. Now that they’re engaged with you, we’re going to pull the leads through a sales funnel online, very similarly to how an offline sales process might work. Again, we’re going to do this with additional original content, but content that’s geared specifically to the target audience and their stage in the buying process. And, we’re going to use one more important tool:
If you use these inbound marketing strategies and tools, and use them well, you’ll be well on your way to reaching your online lead generation goals.