In just a few minutes, this guide will walk you through a few best practices, strategies, and tactics for effective B2B lead nurturing in 2024.
Based on our firsthand observations in building lead nurturing programs, we've identified five key areas you can focus on to improve your lead nurturing efforts. Whether you want to refine your approach to managing leads, diversify your communication channels, or better understand lead intent, this guide has you covered.
It’s easy to treat all leads who aren’t sales-ready the same way once they enter the pipeline, encouraging them en masse to move closer to a purchase.
But the truth is that leads enter the pipeline at different stages of their individual buyer’s journeys, from different sources, for different reasons.
That’s why it’s much more effective to segment leads according to these factors if you have the tools, time, and resources to do so. After all, if someone has their wallet in their lap itching to buy, you wouldn’t want to send them a high-funnel guide to read.
This one-size-fits-all approach runs the risk of confusing leads and sending them unwanted and irrelevant emails.
Instead, it would be more appropriate to send a low-funnel prospect content that’s tailored to their lifecycle stage, like a case study that demonstrates the effectiveness of your solution. This can further persuade them to choose you as their vendor.
Here’s an example. Say somebody just came in through a general interest white paper. An ideal lead nurturing sequence for this person might look like:
Unless a lead shuts the door to further communication, it should remain open. It’s worth contemplating how many different ways you can follow up in a consistent, respectful way to lead them down the funnel.
After leads from different segments actively talk to sales and fail to convert, lead nurturing sequences can become streams of helpful resources that provide value while keeping the door open should they wish to re-engage.
Email, in practice, is pretty inefficient at getting prospects’ attention. Think about every channel instead of defaulting only to email.
One of the fundamental challenges of lead nurturing is that the linear highways to purchase marketers lay down are rarely taken. Instead, the buyers' journeys of prospects look more like a botanical garden: a network of interconnected paths that can be walked in any order.
Someone might grab up all of the case studies featured on your website, sit on them for weeks, go back to read some blog posts, and then wait again before calling for a demo.
So it’s important to acknowledge that many, if not most leads won’t be nurtured the way you plan. The idea is to provide as many logical touch points as you can. That’s why it’s smart to “think outside the inbox” when it comes to lead nurturing.
Sending emails alone may train some of your leads to ignore them—preventing your messages from getting to a segment of those you nurture.
One simple strategy is to use retargeting ads in conjunction with an email sequence. Another is adding LinkedIn as a touchpoint.
No, that’s not just a connection request. It’s value-driven. It’s looking at what a person put their hand up for and giving them an asset you know they’d find valuable with a more personal touch.
If their actions signal they’re dealing with a specific problem, LinkedIn is a place where you can hand them a resource that shows them how to solve it.
Think about it: These days, so few connection requests are at all thoughtful that the bar for personalization is extremely low.
People enter your funnel through all kinds of front doors. Contextualize your nurturing accordingly.
Build a unified campaign within your nurture sequence based on the intent they’ve signaled through their actions. Take your best guess:
Here are a couple lead nurturing don’ts that might not be immediately obvious.
The first has to do with gathering contact information. After a lead has filled out a form to request a resource, you have all the information you need about them.
So don’t make them fill out another form to access future content you send to them. Instead, link directly to the document. This prevents undue frustration.
There are certainly situations where you wouldn’t want to link to an outside site, such as a competitor. But unless you’re stealing and republishing content, it’s actually perfectly fine to include third-party content in your lead nurturing activities.
For example, prospects may be delighted to receive quick summaries of online articles from trusted industry publications along with links to the full articles in your monthly e-newsletter.
The internet is awash with opinions about how often to follow up with leads, but the truth is that finding the right frequency requires experimenting with your audience until you hit on something it likes.
Here is what this might look like, based on our experience:
For a more transactional situation:
For less transactional situations:
Lead nurturing, while challenging, can be worthwhile when you’re able to demonstrably increase lead generation as a result. Understanding how to segment leads, providing the right resources at the right time, and automating whenever it makes sense can help you do this more effectively and reduce headaches for your sales team.