Inbound marketing helps you generate more leads to your website. However, the big challenge is just starting. What are you going to do with all of these leads? Most marketers send them straight to their sales team, but not all the leads are actually qualified.
This is not great news, considering the fact that you've used lots of resources to attract and convert these leads. Not to mention the time spent by the sales teams to contact and try to close them.
Moreover, not all the qualified leads will necessarily turn into clients. Actually, a part of them isn't ready yet to make a purchase; they're still taking their time to research or evaluate.
So how do you manage to separate the good leads from the ones that do nothing but waste your sales team's precious time?
Here's where lead scoring, an automated system, helps you or your marketing team to identify the leads that are ready to convert.
Lead scoring allows using your prospects' behavior in order to put the leads that made it to your list out of pure curiosity on hold while focusing on the ones that are genuinely interested in your products or services. Lead scoring helps you:
There are several platforms to use for lead scoring and you can do it manually as well. HubSpot is hands down one of the greatest and user-friendly platform for lead scoring. Other two renowned options are Marketo and Acquia.
Whether you’re going for a platform, or you want to do lead scoring manually, you have to choose the criteria you want to measure through lead scoring.
The lead scoring system has to be based on information that proves: the degree of matching between the leads and the company, the level of interest and the level of activity.
Based on these 3 categories, here are some examples of criteria that you can measure by lead scoring:
You can extract this information using the conversion form and it will show you whether or not this lead matches your buyer persona profile.
These actions can be analyzed by using a lead management program that records each lead interaction with the website.
This information shows how active a lead is on your website. If a lead visits many web pages, reads many articles, or downloads many eBooks, then it matches your buyer persona profile thus is more likely to make a purchase.
In order to measure the level of activity and interest, the lead scoring system provides a certain score for each activity. It's recommended that this score is established during a meeting between the marketing and sales teams to ensure that these leads are real sales opportunities.
For example, you can set a scale from 0 to 100, in which:
With a lead management platform such as HubSpot, when the lead gets a certain score (for example 65), it automatically switches from MQL to SQL and is assigned to a sales representative.
At the end of the day you should have something similar to this example presented in Medium blog article "This is Why Your Lead Scoring Sucks"
Last but not least, review your lead scoring system regularly (at least every 3 to 6 months) along with your Sales team. This way, you'll make sure that the results are analyzed efficiently and that your qualification is being correctly applied based on how many deals your Sales team closed from the leads Marketing provided. Plus, companies that have aligned marketing and sales generate way more revenue from marketing.