Guest column: Turbo charge your website’s effectiveness

HomeColumnsGuest column: Turbo charge your website’s effectiveness

By Jim Armstrong

Volume 26/Number 26; May 13/20, 2013

(Second of two parts)

In the last issue of FCNews, I revealed a lead-capture strategy which compels your website visitors to leave their contact information. This is important because you can have hundreds of visitors to your site each month, but without a lead-capture strategy the vast majority will leave and you’ll never hear from them again.

After spending thousands of dollars on a website, pay-per-click and SEO development, this is the kind of thing that can cause a dealer to weep openly and consider a career in organic chicken ranching. However, by using lead capture, you now have the opportunity to do follow-up marketing, which is the main topic of this part of the series.

Let’s assume you’re using the lead-capture strategy from my last column. You’ve got a steady stream of highly qualified prospects opting in on your site, and you’re no longer considering leaving the flooring industry. What do you do with those leads?

Well, if you’re like many retailers, you turn them over to your sales team, which then proceed to work diligently and do what sales teams do best with leads: nothing.

Maybe that is a little harsh. Some salespeople will do a single follow-up call, but that’s usually the extent of it.

The problem with this is flooring prospects generally have an incubation period that often lasts weeks or months as they slowly transform from shoppers into buyers. If all you do is make a single follow-up call or send a single email, you won’t be in front of them when they make the switch from shopper to buyer.

In fact, many of them will have forgotten about you completely. The solution is to implement an automated drip-campaign for captured leads. As an example, here is how a drip-campaign that I created for dealers in my Inner Circle Club works:

Step 1: The prospect opts in for the free report (see part one about this) and receives it via email or instant download.

Step 2: Over the next 30 days, prospects receive a series of 16 emails—one about every other day. These contain 80% to 90% educational content, with only 10% to 20% of the message being a call to action.

Step 3: Any prospect who still hasn’t purchased after 30 days gets plugged into a long-term, delayed-lead nurture campaign where they hear from the dealer about once a week. There they stay until they become buyers or opt out.

You can run this campaign manually, but it’s a lot of tedious work, and it’s virtually guaranteed things will start falling through the cracks. You might feel an odd compulsion to drink more. Not good.

The good news is all these steps can be fully automated using relatively inexpensive marketing software.

Here are just some of the benefits of this kind of campaign:

•It runs on autopilot. The messages go out on time, every time, seven days a week, 365 days a year, even if the dealer is on vacation, asleep or doing whatever.

•Nothing falls through the cracks.

•Since very few dealers do this—especially the box stores—it creates total differentiation from the competition.

•By using the right kind of educational messages, the dealer is positioned as a trusted advisor—and the obvious choice—rather than just another guy hocking floors.

•When the prospect finally makes the switch from shopper to buyer, the dealer has total top-of-mind awareness.

The most important thing is not to be boring in your messages. Being boring is the cardinal sin in marketing. Unfortunately, too many floor dealers commit this sin and their marketing efforts suffer.

By the way, eliminating boring from your marketing will be the topic of my next column.

Must Read

Multifamily developer confidence falls in first quarter

Washington, D.C.—Confidence in the market for new multifamily housing declined year-over-year in the first quarter, according to the Multifamily Market Survey (MMS) released today...

Retailers React: Business wise, where are your bright spots?

Every two weeks, FCNews seeks out flooring retailers across the country to offer their advice on hot topics of the day. This week, we...

Unilin receives European patent for Osiris recycling technology

Waregem, Belgium—Unilin Technologies, the intellectual property division of Unilin, has been officially granted the European patent EP 4114629 for its Osiris recycling technology. This...

Mills cash in on consumer preference for patterns

Patterned carpet is a popular choice these days, offering both visual interest and practical benefits like concealing dirt and wear, which makes it particularly...

Milat Floor signs i4F drop-lock license agreement

Istanbul, Turkey—Milat Floor has signed an i4F drop-lock license agreement for all its new SPC product ranges. The company will begin manufacturing the new...

Retail case study: Verhey Carpets’ recipe for longevity

Running a floor covering business for 75 years in and of itself is considered an amazing feat by many observers. But doing it at...
Some text some message..
X