Improving Sales Performance
  • Home
  • Solutions
    • Consulting & Coaching
    • Workshops & Peer Groups
    • Fractional Leadership
  • Frameworks
  • Keynotes
  • Assessments
  • Resources
    • Blog
    • Books and Newsletter
    • Podcast Interviews
    • Worksheets, Webinars, Ebooks
    • Live Event Peer Groups
  • About
    • Core Values
    • Karl Becker
    • Testimonials
  • Contact

How to Use Your CRM and Marketing Automation Tools to Work Smarter, Not Harder

6/17/2024

 
Picture
We've all heard the expression "work smarter, not harder." When it comes to your sales and marketing teams, getting the most out of marketing automation is one way to do just that. Proper use of marketing automation tools, combined with the capabilities of a CRM system, can sharpen the efficiency of your overall sales process.

Of course, this requires your sales and marketing teams to work together. For instance, there has to be alignment on how to set up automations, when to implement drip campaigns, and how to score leads. But once that alignment has been achieved, you are on your way to building a high-performing sales organization poised for growth. The next step is to use technology to leverage up your sales and marketing activities and increase overall effectiveness. 

What Is Marketing Automation?

The phrase "marketing automation" gets thrown around a lot, but you may wonder what it means. In short, it's a catchall phrase given to software applications that engage with prospects in the funnel based on their online actions. As far as what the customer sees, this usually involves email messages sent to them automatically based on their specific actions or series of actions, pop-up chat boxes specific to certain webpages on a website, or other methods of digital outreach triggered by an action they've taken.

For example, if a prospect scrolls down your company's homepage, a chat box may pop up offering to assist them. Or if a prospect has already signed up for your email list and visits a specific product page, that action may trigger an email offering them more info on the product or similar offerings. The main concept is that automation behind the scenes serves some type of predetermined content that marketing believes is valuable to a lead, based on that lead’s actions.

If you think about marketing automation in this way, these strategies and the corresponding automations enable your organization to be more attentive to your prospects and leads in ways no marketer or sales rep could ever do on their own. Instead of staying attuned to dozens of prospects at a time, your teams can stay connected with thousands of them! 

How To Get the Most Out of Marketing Automation and CRM Systems

First, it's important to clarify what a CRM is. "CRM" stands for "customer relationship management." It is a contact management system for your prospects and customers that doubles as a segmentation platform. When your marketing automation is properly integrated with your CRM, your data becomes supercharged data. Ultimately, sales and marketing can work more cohesively and effectively. How?

The goal is to combine the information you have about your customers in your CRM with marketing automation. This integration allows you to automate appropriate follow-ups and touchpoints at the right time and place in the sales funnel. As a result, you can enhance the serving of relevant content to your leads, prospects, and customers, enabling the lead scoring that helps you monitor their progress through the funnel and intervene at just the right time. 

Nurture Leads With Drip Campaigns 

Drip campaigns are email sequences used to stay in touch with prospects as they move through the sales funnel. These emails may be triggered by specific characteristics, specific locations of the lead within the different stages of your sales funnel, or through specific actions the lead takes. In short, a strategy that includes drip campaigns provides a series of emails with relevant content to a lead over a period of time - with the messaging tailored to appeal to the lead based on where they are in their buyer's journey.

Of course, one email sequence by itself could never cover all the customer segments you want to interact with. That's why your sales and marketing teams must put their heads together and develop your core buyer personas — and perhaps variations on each persona, depending on how deep you want to drill down. When your teams are in alignment on this, your drip campaigns will be much more targeted and effective as they will align to both your specific buyer personas and where each lead is within the buyer’s journey.
Some examples of drip campaigns include:
  • Sign-up sequences. Once a prospect signs up for a newsletter or exchanges contact info for a free e-book, this email sequence would welcome them to the company, provide them with a series of relevant digital gifts, and present easy CTAs for them to do (like following your company on social media). This sequence helps set expectations for your communications with them and provides them with small bites of information that should be useful and relevant to them.
  • Pre- and post-webinar sequences. Before a webinar takes place, you can send out a sequence to those prospects who signed up for it, generating excitement and offering them a preview of the useful information they'll learn. Afterward, you can send out at least a couple of different sequences depending on whether prospects did or didn't attend the webinar. For example, your sequence for those who attended could include key takeaways and next steps, while your sequence for those who didn't attend could include a recording of the webinar, along with a way to learn more about your offering without having to watch the entire video.
  • E-commerce sequences. This is a very common type of drip campaign. The idea is to target visitors to your e-commerce website and send out sequences based on the products they looked at, and whether they abandoned their shopping cart before purchasing. These emails often include discount offers or other money-saving incentives that encourage prospects to come back to the site and seal the deal.
There are many other types of drip campaigns, but the ones listed above give you an idea of what they may involve and how they can help prospects progress through their buyer's journey. The main strategy is to provide relevant content to each lead based on where they most likely are within their own personal buyer’s journey with your offering.

Use CRM Lead Scoring To Convert Leads

Lead scoring is an objective ranking of sales prospects and leads according to factors like interest level and sales-readiness. Your team members may not be able to read prospects' minds, but a well-designed lead-scoring system is the next best thing.

The main purpose of lead scoring is to help your sales team prioritize which prospects they should spend their time on, and which ones need to be nurtured a bit more before reaching out. There are all sorts of criteria, ranging from explicit factors like the prospect's industry, company, or job title, to implicit considerations like number of web pages visited, frequency of site visits, materials accessed or downloaded, etc. Most lead scoring systems function on some type of base scale, like from 1-10 or 1-100 — or more specifically, several scales of 1-10 that add up to an overall score for each lead.

The important thing is that everyone in sales and marketing agrees on the lead scoring criteria and then sticks to it. Of course, the best way to make this happen is to develop the lead scoring criteria together, across both departments. Then once the system is in place, scores can be calculated and tracked across your CRM and marketing automation platforms (such as HubSpot or Salesforce). Everyone has insight into each lead's score and can take appropriate action as needed.

It's true that it takes some effort on the front end to integrate marketing automation and your CRM, set up drip campaigns, and develop and implement a workable lead-scoring system. However, if you're willing to put in the work, and if your sales and marketing teams are willing to work together, then those tools will provide your company with long-term benefits. You'll truly be working smarter, not harder, and your sales performance will improve accordingly. It’s all about intentionality, action, and accountability - putting in the hard work up front to make your entire sales process more streamlined and effective.

Learn More

A healthy relationship between sales and marketing is vital to an organization’s success. Dive deep into this effective strategy in a new book called Sales & Marketing Alignment. If you'd like more insights on how you can improve your sales leadership, contact us. Or sign up for our newsletter for more valuable resources.

    Meet  Me

    Picture
    I’m Karl Becker and I help individuals and organizations improve how they sell. My focus is on clear, concise, actionable solutions.

    In short, I'll show you how to increase performance and generate more revenue.

    This blog shares approaches, tools, and ideas that I have seen create success.

    If you’re interested in discussing anything, please reach out.
    Sign-up For Newsletter

    Archives

    May 2025
    March 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    December 2021
    October 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    June 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018

    Categories

    All
    Audience Engagement
    Building Trust
    Buyer's Journey
    Case Studies
    Change Agent
    Customer Personas
    Decision Maker
    DiSC
    Kpi
    Lead Generation
    Marketing And Sales
    Marketing Funnel
    Revenue Equation
    ROI
    Sales Alignment
    Sales Challenge
    Sales Compensation
    Sales Foundations
    Sales Funnel
    Sales Leadership
    Sales Management
    Sales Meeting
    Sales Performance
    Sales Pipeline Velocity
    Sales Success
    Sales Systems
    Sales Tasks
    Sales Team
    Sales Team Communication
    Sales Technology
    Sales Tech Tools
    Sales Tips
    Solution Selling
    Target Audience
    Thought Leader
    Value
    Virtual Sales Meeting
    Working Remotely

    RSS Feed

Picture
We are headquartered in Colorado with domestic and international teammates and clients. Please use the contact form on this page to inquire about any of our books, podcasts appearances, speaking engagements and workshops, any of our offerings, or simply to connect.
Improving Sales Performance
[email protected]

© Improving Sales Performance. All Rights Reserved.
  • Home
  • Solutions
    • Consulting & Coaching
    • Workshops & Peer Groups
    • Fractional Leadership
  • Frameworks
  • Keynotes
  • Assessments
  • Resources
    • Blog
    • Books and Newsletter
    • Podcast Interviews
    • Worksheets, Webinars, Ebooks
    • Live Event Peer Groups
  • About
    • Core Values
    • Karl Becker
    • Testimonials
  • Contact