09 MayThe Power of LinkedIn Groups for Lead Generation

Imagine this: you have just persuaded your company’s top 500 prospects to join a real-life networking group that your company owns. This group meets weekly, and discusses business topics in a very engaged way.

To stack things in your favour, the business topics are ones that you specialise in.

If you were this group’s manager, you would build strong relationships with your prospects. And by demonstrating expertise in the group’s business topics, you would probably generate a large number of meetings and sales over time.

The problem is, it would be nearly impossible to create this type of group in real life.  Even if you could somehow persuade your top prospects to join your group, you would also have to cope with the enormous logistics and costs of running a group of this size on a weekly basis.

Enter Social Networks

With millions of members, and highly scalable platforms, social networks allow companies to create digital versions of real-life groups like the one described above.

The best example of this is a LinkedIn group.

LinkedIn groups allow companies to pool their prospects in one defined forum, and engage them with content and conversation. As a group manager, this gives you an opportunity to interact with your members and exploit the powerful engagement models of LinkedIn groups.

What are these engagement models?

  • Firstly, you can have a one-to-one conversation with any group member, simply by responding to one of their posted articles or existing replies, and
  • secondly, each conversation you have with a member is broadcast to the entire group, via a group update on the members’ LinkedIn news feeds. So the group can view each one-to-one conversation, which means one-to-many exposure for your brand.

Another key benefit is positioning your company and group managers as thought leaders. As group managers consistently demonstrate their experience in the group’s theme, they emerge as subject matter experts in their field.

The engagement models of LinkedIn groups, and the ability to position oneself as a subject matter expert, helps to build the group manager’s brand awareness and trust among group members. It also creates virtual relationships that resemble those in real life.

Group managers can then leverage these relationships to generate leads, in several ways. For example, by posting content that links back to their own company’s website, converting group members into leads, or, by approaching members and asking them to meet in person, generating outbound leads. The latter has an especially high ratio of meeting requested to meeting secured.

The New Lead Generation Paradigm 

Social networks, and LinkedIn groups in particular, have turned lead generation on its head. It used to be that the number of relationships you enjoyed was limited to the number of people you could meet. Now you can build hundreds – even thousands – of relationships with prospects before you even meet them, then leverage that trust by reaching out to prospects you do want to meet.

This new approach to networking is not only scalable; it can also shorten your sales cycles. After all, you are meeting prospects that already know and trust you. The relationship, albeit virtual, is already there. And their membership in your group qualifies their interest in what you offer.

Tips for Success

The most important tip for building a successful LinkedIn group is this: define your target audience first. Who are your prospects?  And what are their core problems?

Once you identify these, your second most important task is naming your group. The secret lies in giving it a name that sounds as if it could address your prospect’s core problems.

Some more tips:

  • Before you go live, make sure to post interesting articles and conversation starters in the group. This will impress your first batch of members (e.g. staff and business partners) and get the conversation going;
  • Once you have built some initial activity, start inviting your business prospects to join the group. You can do this via LinkedIn paid media such as LinkedIn Ads, or Inmails which allow you to send personalised one-to-one invitations;
  • Promote regular conversations around the group’s topics, to grow discussion threads. For example, if one of your members posts an interesting article, jump in by responding with your own thoughts. Have a conversation with that member for the whole group to see then encourage other group members to jump in;
  • Never sell or self-promote in your group. Instead, engage in ‘social selling’. That is, provide immense value to your members via expert advice and information, without any expectation of return;
  • And finally, never allow spam or off-topic posts in your group. Members do notice and over time it will damage your group’s reputation.

Remember, each of your group’s members represents future business for your firm. So love them to death with the very best content, discussion, and friendship, and you will soon experience the business opportunities that LinkedIn groups provide.

http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/digg_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/reddit_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/stumbleupon_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/facebook_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/twitter_48.png

12 SepWant to Generate B2B Leads from Twitter? Get Your Prospects to Follow You.

There is no doubting Twitter’s massive growth worldwide.  The micro-blogging network has done an amazing job in growing its numbers, including among professionals.

It has also done an amazing job in branding itself as an information distribution channel.  We have all heard the statements: “Twitter is a great channel for PR” or “It’s perfect for getting your message out there”.

But there is a problem with this positioning in the B2B market.

Information Distribution Is Not the Same as Lead Generation

You see, there is something Twitter has not done well: it has never positioned itself an effective channel for lead generation.  And that’s a problem for the B2B market.

The focus on Twitter as an information distribution and PR channel has caused distrust among B2B professionals who need proof that it will generate hard business for them.

Why this need?  Because in B2B, a channel’s potential for Lead Generation has always been the key determinant of its value – much more than the promise of PR.

And it’s not just the sales professionals who focus on lead generation.  The majority of B2B marketers will tell you that they sweat targets almost as much as their sales colleagues.  Especially when the sales team is barking at them about the poor quality or quantity of leads they are receiving.

Why Is Information Distribution Not Enough?

You might be thinking: “But Information Distribution and PR does produce leads. Why can’t the B2B market see that?”

One of the reasons is lack of tracking.  Many B2B marketers do not properly track their online conversions (downloads, subscriptions, or sales inquiries) back to the original source of the click.  This means that proper attribution of leads can’t take place.

But this does not offer a convincing reason.  B2B professionals always work on much smaller target audiences than their B2C counterparts, so being able to “tell” that a lead has come through Twitter or another channel is often feasible.

There is a bigger reason.

It’s called the Random Twitter follower.

Random Followers

If you own a Twitter account then you know what I am referring to.

We all have random Twitter followers who offer no “buyer” value for our products or services.  You might have noticed this after every tweet – you get four new followers, three of which are from a foreign country while the 4th seems to be a consumer who likes to “hang out and meet new people”.

For most B2B professionals on Twitter, this randomness often represents the majority of their follower bases.

It makes sense that those in B2B struggle to appreciate the lead generation value of Twitter.  Most of their followers (who are consuming their information) cannot possibly be considered sales prospects.

What we need is a practical way to prove the business potential.

Sculpting Your Followers to Reflect Your Target Market

The key to any B2B professional’s heart is showing them a channel that can help them connect with their target audience, efficiently and effectively.

When the B2B marketer sees this evidence, information distribution and PR suddenly become necessary to generate leads and pipeline value.

On Twitter, there are several ways to identify and access your target audience.  Most require lots of research and engagement with prospects, which can be time consuming for the B2B professional.  I am going to focus on just one tactic that is relatively quick and easy, and has helped me build a relevant follower base that is approx.  60% composed of my target audience.

This approach is called Follow Your Prospects.

Follow Your Prospects.  Get Your Prospects to Follow You.

Basically, there is an unwritten rule within Twitter: if I follow you, you should follow me back.

This technique works best wherever the initial follower is a well-known brand or celebrity.  If you don’t fall under this category, then expect a reciprocal follow rate of around 10% – 15%.  It’s a small percentage, yes, but it can be very valuable to you.

Why?  If you’re in, say, IT sales, and follow 300 CIOs, CEOs, and IT Journalists, within one week you should find yourself with 30 – 45 followers from among this esteemed pool of prospects.

Suddenly, every tweet matters.

Especially if you use a URL within your tweets to prompt your CIO followers to clickthrough to a landing page that converts a high % of browsers into leads for your sales team.

Where Do I Find Prospects to Follow?

There are several tools on the market that allow you to search through Twitter for prospects based on their self-reported information.  Unfortunately, most of these tools are clunky and require lots of sweat and patience (note: opportunity for Twitter).

One of the easier-to-use Twitter search tools is FollowerWonk.  I have used this tool quite a bit over the last year to sculpt my follower base.  The tool takes the keywords you enter and maps them against Twitter users who have mentioned these keywords within their bios.

Simply enter your prospects’ job titles and location, and run a search to identity your prospects.  Say you are targeting senior IT professionals within New Zealand and Australia.  You can run the following search (click on the image to enlarge):

twitter-lead-generation

This search yielded 104 results.  This means there are 104 Twitter users who have stated in the Location field that they live in New Zealand or Australia, and have listed the keywords “CIO”, “Head of IT”, “IT Manager”, or “IT Director” in their bios.

You can now clickthrough to each user’s actual Twitter account, and decide whether to follow them.  Within one week of your follow campaign, you should notice a stream of reciprocal follows from this group.

Note: when entering search phrases of two or more words, always use parentheses and quotation marks to enclose the search phrase.  Always separate search phrases with the | symbol to indicate the “OR” option.

Parting Tips

If you want to maximize the percentage of reciprocal follows from your target audience, here are some tips that have proven successful for me:

  • Make your Twitter Bio more relevant to your target audience.  Don’t talk about your love of muffins or music or Twitter.  Talk to your prospects and tell them what you can do for them;
  • Improve your Twitter Pic.  Ensure it is professional and inspires your prospect to follow you back;
  • Use a relevant landing page in the Twitter URL field.  Many of your prospects will decide whether or not to follow you based on the information contained within the landing page your Twitter account sends them to.

Follow the advice above and you should experience a surge in followers from within your target market, more qualified clickthroughs, and a new lead generation channel that pleases the CEO.

 

http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/digg_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/reddit_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/stumbleupon_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/facebook_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/twitter_48.png

28 NovFacebook B2B Lead Generation: Can You Handle the Truth?

I have lost count of the number of times my friends, colleagues, and business partners have made the statement, “Facebook is personal. It is not for B2B! Try LinkedIn.”

And these are guys who work in the B2B space.

I understand their sentiment. Since its inception, Facebook has always been an intimate space reserved for friends and family, or very close professional associates. The types of friends with whom you feel comfortable sharing your life’s novel, including the mandatory cheesy pictures and funny banter.

So the thought of having a marketer or salesperson invade that safe, intimate space and try to “sell something” is met with resistance, anger, and in some cases, disbelief.

It’s the Person, not the Approach

Imagine you have a professional friend with whom you are connected on Facebook.  You have known her for a couple of years. This professional friend works as the sales manager for a network security company, and you happen to be an IT manager for a company that could use your friend’s services.

One day you are engaged in Facebook Chat. The topic turns to work, and your friend starts discussing one of her recent network security jobs.  You recognise that the solutions she offered her new client might benefit your company as well.

Would you hold it against her if – upon noticing your interest – she asked whether it would be a good idea for her to visit your office, and have a chat with your team?

I don’t think you would. At worst you might find it a bit forward, but also interesting.  At best you would welcome her help! The relationship you have with this person is strong enough to keep the conversation going, even if that turns into a soft B2B lead generation exercise.

The Problem with Facebook B2B

Facebook is absolutely the right place for B2B social media lead generation, as is LinkedIn or Twitter, if your prospects and business partners are there (and they are).

So the problem is not whether Facebook is the right “place” for B2B.  If we accept that the scenario mentioned above is realistic, then the problem is a different one altogether. In fact the problem is two-fold:

  1. How do you persuade your business prospects to accept you onto their Friends list; and
  2. Once there, how do you develop a genuine relationship that resembles the one I described above, and enables you to generate sales leads?

Getting on “the List”

Firstly, how do you “get on the list”, when most Facebook members still cling to the ideal of a personal space with no business interruptions? Facebook purists are almost always reluctant to accept invitations from anyone but their personal friends, and even more so if those asking to connect are marketers and business developers.

In fact, this reluctance to accept non-friend invitations has created a self-fulfilling prophecy, in which marketers and sales professionals don’t even bother in most cases due to their fear of rejection.

The answer to “how do I get on the list?” is simple, yet hard in practice.

You have to find ways of making the act of connecting with you a no-brainer for your prospect. A couple of proven ways include being referred by their friends (i.e. friends you share), or developing a reputation that is so compelling that your prospect clicks “Confirm” on the spot. Naturally, both of these require prolific networking, PR, and hard work over a number of years.

Building a Genuine Relationship

Even if you get lucky and get accepted onto your prospect’s friend list, how do you go about building a wholesome relationship upon which you can base lead generation activity?

Do you have the skills to engage in genuine relationship building with your prospects on Facebook, or are you falling for the trap of adapting your behaviour (or even worse, tip toeing) to avoid coming off as an aggressive salesperson?

Again, the answer to this problem is simple, but hard to achieve in practice.

You have to find ways of connecting with your new Facebook friends on both a personal and professional level. This includes posting interesting content, making the effort to chat, commenting on any of their posts which you find interesting, and sharing pieces of you that give them a glimpse into who you are as a human being.

Also, you have to provide helpful, relevant information, that enriches their Facebook experience on both levels.

Above all, your interest in your prospect must be real and genuine. Connect not because you intend to market your product to them, but because you sincerely want to develop a friendship with them, regardless of outcome.

Otherwise there is no point in even trying – you will be found out sooner or later.

Facebook B2B Lead Generation – Only for the Few

So the above leads me to my conclusion: Facebook is a great place for social media lead generation, but only if you are in that minority of marketers and business developers who can consistently get onto their prospects’ friend lists, and once there, build robust personal and professional relationships that lead to sales lead opportunities over time.

Which means that Facebook is a terrible place for B2B, if one is a marketer or business developer lacking advanced rapport building and relationship development skills.

And because a large number of marketers and business developers do, in fact, lack those skills, it is no wonder Facebook is not considered a B2B platform. The term “self-fulfilling prophecy” makes sense.

May I suggest another look at Facebook.

http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/digg_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/reddit_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/stumbleupon_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/facebook_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/twitter_48.png

31 OctSelf-limiting in Online Networking

I was at an event the other day when I met a very smart, respected, and likeable business owner, named Ron.

We got to discussing LinkedIn, and I asked him how many connections he had. He mentioned he had around 300, and then went on to proudly proclaim that he knew “all of them personally, save three or four”.

When I asked him whether he had considered inviting people to join his network whom he did not know personally, he said he did not feel comfortable connecting in this manner. He had formed such a strong policy against this, that he felt compelled to physically meet people for a coffee prior to accepting their invitation request.

Obviously Ron’s approach, while highly personal, is also highly inefficient, time-consuming, and non-scalable.

Paradigm Shift: Think of the B2C Model

Interesting isn’t it. When a B2C company is promoting a new product, it does everything in its power to reach the masses without the slightest care for knowing each member of its audience personally. TV, radio, press, outdoor, search marketing, banner advertising, email advertising – these offer large, lucrative audiences where impersonal relations are the norm.

Imagine now if this B2C company were to suddenly change its marketing approach. Imagine if it decided to sell its new products only to its existing customer base and business partners.

The lost market share opportunity!

Online networking is similar to B2C marketing. If you agree that you and your company are the product, then of course you want your brand to reach as many potential clients and influencers as possible.

Why? Because the more your personal and company brand are known to your target market, the better your chances of generating a sales lead, and the sale itself.

On LinkedIn, this means connecting with as many high-quality prospects and influencers as possible, within your target market.

Yet, there are thousands of people just like Ron, who unintentionally self-limit themselves and their market share opportunity, by insisting on connecting only with those they know personally.

I do not blame Ron, nor any of the others I have met just like him. The truth is, it is hard to reach out to professionals whom you don’t know – especially if their LinkedIn profiles make them appear busy and important. It can be downright awkward, even scary – no one wants to be rejected by those they want to connect with.

How to Connect on LinkedIn without Fear

You have identified your target market on LinkedIn. You are ready to start inviting prospects and influencers, and expand your network. So how do you do it, in a safe and sound way?

My advice is simple: look for Human Connection Points.

Human Connection Points are the commonalities you find by reviewing your intended connection’s LinkedIn profile, Twitter posts, personal blog, and other online mentions. There are dozens of human connection points you can use, but here are some of the obvious ones:

  • People you know in common (available on their LinkedIn profile)
  • LinkedIn groups you share
  • Their blog posts or published articles (i.e. the ones you have read and enjoyed so much, as to form an opinion)
  • Schools you both attended

Once you have identified your human connection points, you are ready to write your LinkedIn invitation.

Be relevant. Make sure to address your invitee by their first name, and to clearly reference your connection points. Throughout your invitation, be genuine and respectful. Tell them how you found them, and why you want to connect. And make sure to pump up your credentials as well, via a strong LinkedIn profile.

If you follow this approach, you will experience a consistently high acceptance rate, and grow your LinkedIn network faster among your target market. You are now in a position to start marketing your company to a progressively larger audience, who will get to know you through your status updates and group participation.

Of course, not all will accept, but that’s ok. By following the principles mentioned above, and optimising as you go, you will find your acceptance rate (and LinkedIn network reach) continues to increase.

http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/digg_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/reddit_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/stumbleupon_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/facebook_48.png http://www.tomskotidas.com/wp-content/plugins/sociofluid/images/twitter_48.png