HPdivisiontakeslong-termleadnurturingseriously
BY CHRISTOPHER HOSFORD
BY JANUARY 2006, PolyServe, a Beaverton, Ore.-based software maker, had reached a point at which, according to Senior Marketing Manager Jeff Day, “ People felt things could be improved.”
It wasn’t that the company, acquired last year by Hewlett-Packard Co., was in crisis. Just the opposite: PolyServe had grown nicely since its founding in 1999, and its storage solutions for clusters of computers was aimed at an industry segment on the cusp of explosive growth. But the company determined its Internet presence was not delivering enough
meaningful leads and that it was performing poorly in helping customers understand its products.
Noting that “first touch” sales conversions at b-to-b companies are often little better than about 4%, Day said: “My team calls on the leads, and they say they’re interested, they like our product—but they’re just not ready to buy yet.”
Working closely with Kevin Joyce, CEO of Portland, Ore.-based marketing automation consultancy Rubicon Marketing Group, Day overhauled the PolyServe Web site. This work included implementing search engine optimization and analytics
(using Google Analytics and Web-Trends) to determine how potential customers were behaving online.
Day and Joyce analyzed each stage of customer readiness: product awareness, knowledge of product features, intent to buy and so forth. Beyond the few who converted quickly, 30% downloaded some piece of information, 25% were merely browsing the PolyServe Web site and 40% visited one page but went no further. The Web site was continually tweaked based on this feedback.
Analyzing prospect behavior online, Day and Joyce deployed an automated system that set up customer
“tracks,” sending follow-up communications (e-mails, white papers, webinar and podcast invitations, etc.) based on specific interactions with the Web site. While cheap e-mail communications went to tire-kickers, when a prospect moved to a higher level of interest, the automated delivery of information was enriched, as well. For example, these prospects would be sent an invitation to a webinar, offered a demo with a presales engineer or even given a phone call from sales.
“You can slice and dice your customers by tying specific actions to specific people at specific times,”
Day said. “We created a grid based on this, and it worked extremely well in increasing conversion rates and making overall lead-qualification more efficient.”
Eight months after initiating the program, the company experienced a 70% reduction in Web site “bouncers” (those who visited a single page but then left) and a 500% increase in online leads. The visitor conversion to leads improved fourfold, while the overall conversion rate went from the 4%-to-7% range to a current 20%.
“Lead nurturing far outstrips trying to get new customers, and the money now coming in far exceeds the money we spent on the program,” Day said. “My ROI is double-digit.”
Company Business Objects
Location San Jose, Calif.
URL
www.businessobjects.com
Phone
(800) 527-0580
Key exec
Franz Aman, VP-business intelligence platform product marketing
Cognos Inc.
Ottawa
www.cognos.com
(800) 426-4667 N/A
IBM Corp.
Armonk, N.Y.
www.ibm.com/software/websphere (800) 426-4968 N/A
Product/description
BusinessObjects Text Analysis: Reads text in 30-plus languages, extracts information so unstructured text data can be used as a data source for integration or business intelligence; BusinessObjects Intelligent Search: Search all sources from a single secure search box. Results are reranked for relevance and clustered by people, company and other concepts; BusinessObjects VizServer: Ability to explore relationships and networks (Star Tree), trends (TableLens) and timelines (Time Wall).
IBM Cognos 8 Business Intelligence: Guided exploration of information pertaining to all dimensions of your business, regardless of where the data are stored. Analyze and report against online analytical processing (OLAP) and dimensionally aware relational sources; IBM Cognos TM1: Consolidate, view and edit enormous volumes of multidimensional data. Using a 64-bit, in-memory OLAP server, TM1 can support financial performance management; IBM Cognos 8 Analysis for Microsoft Excel: Explore and analyze information from data sources in Microsoft Excel. Perform ad-hoc analysis of planning and financial data.
IBM WebSphere Software
Infor
Alpharetta, Ga.
www.infor.com/solutions/crm
(678) 319-8000
Tony Compton, director-product marketing, CRM
Microsoft Corp.
Redmond, Wash.
www.microsoft.com/sql/default.mspx (800) 426-9400 N/A
MicroStrategy Inc. McLean, Va. www.microstrategy.com
(703) 848-8600 N/A
Oracle
SAS
Teradata Corp.
TFC Inc.
Xert Communications Corp.
Redwood www.oracle.com/epm Shores, Calif.
Cary, N.C. www.sas.com
Miamisburg, www.teradata.com Ohio
Napa, Calif. www.tfcinc.com
Alexandria, Va.
www.xert.com
(800) 633-0738
(919) 677-8000
John Kopcke, senior VP-enterprise performance management global business unit
Mary Crissey, global marketing manager
(937)-242-4786
Randy Lea, VP-products-services marketing
(707) 224-6161 Alex Peake, VP
(703) 838-9847 Dave Battaglini, CEO
Infor CRM Outbound Marketing: Streamline complex campaign processes and develop targeted campaigns using data analytics and segmentation; Infor CRM Inbound Marketing: Create a real-time customer profile and then apply analytics and business rules to deliver offers at the moment of interaction.
Office PerformancePoint Server 2007: Provides monitoring, analytics and planning capabilities. Helps articulate goals, monitor business activity, identify and analyze issues, and collaborate.
MicroStrategy 8: Enables companies to convert volumes of data into meaningful insights for decision-makers across their organizations.
Oracle Business Intelligence Foundation: Provides BI and analytic capabilities based on category-leading products for OLAP, interactive dashboards, ad-hoc analysis, proactive detection and alerts, advanced reporting and publishing, mobile analytics, desktop gadgets; Oracle Business Intelligence Applications: Intuitive, role-based intelligence for everyone in an organization enabling better decisions, actions and business processes; Oracle's Enterprise Performance Management System: Supports the entire financial management cycle of goal-setting, modeling, planning, monitoring, analysis and reporting. SAS Enterprise Miner: Streamlines data mining to create predictive and descriptive models based on data analysis; SAS Forecast Server: Generates forecasts; SAS/OR: Optimization, project scheduling and simulation techniques.
Data Warehouse/ Database systems: Analytical databases used for business intelligence; Marketing and Customer Management Software: Customer relationship desktop software portfolio for analyzing customers and communicating; Master Data Management: Software used for managing, defining and analyzing data.
MarketingPlatform: Automates four key marketing activities: dashboard/metrics, analytics, campaign deisgn and execution.
Xert Precision Suite: Campaign management and analytics tools to collect and organize contacts, execute targeted e-mail marketing and events marketing, and optimize online results.
References:
http://www.businessobjects.com
http://www.ibm.com/software/websphere
http://www.infor.com/solutions/crm
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