Optimizing Customer Journeys with the Email Drip Campaign
Phil Mandelbaum
Fractional CMO | Agency President + CEO | Publicist, Cat Brooks | Brand, Digital, Social, Content, PR and Political Strategist | Award-Winning Writer, Ghostwriter and Editor | Sold 1 Business
Why You Can’t Master the Marketing-Sales Funnel (or Email Marketing) without Email Automation and Drip Marketing
Ninety-nine percent of consumers check their emails everyday; nearly eight in 10 consider email the best channel for company contact, preferring it by almost 200% to social media and other promotional and distribution methods. Of course, if you send the wrong email, or even the?right?email at the?wrong?time, you can damage your relationship — often permanently. My favorite example: when a high-value prospect clicks on a?digital ad?or?social media?post promoting?‘value-add’ custom content?(thought leadership), completes the on-page form, converting to a (cold or warm) lead — and the brand responds with an immediate?sales?email, alienating the lead before there’s a chance to?nurture?them. That’s not?how email marketing works; yes, there’s still a place for?newsletters?(for newsletter subscribers) and sales blasts (for?existing?customers and?hot?leads), but the marketing-sales funnel (and email drip campaign) is the real opportunity in email. In fact,?if your CX and digital marketing teams aren’t expert in the sales funnel, they’ll never optimize the customer journey (or customer lifecycle).
What’s the difference? In short, the sales funnel falls within the marketing funnel, which falls within the customer journey. Here’s how it works — and how to optimize your email drip campaign…
The Customer Journey
Good business isn’t about closing a deal, it’s about developing a long-term, mutually beneficial relationship with your customers; the goal is to maximize the?customer?lifetime?value?of each prospect. And the only way to achieve this goal is to nurture leads, demonstrating transparency, consistency, authenticity and empathy, and delivering predictive, personalized, interactive experiences at every touchpoint.?
The Customer Lifecycle Stages
The customer lifecycle considers the value of a customer for the full length of the relationship, including any support they may need as well as any assistance they may provide in helping to promote the brand on social media. In other words, the customer lifecycle takes into account the customer’s?experience, long after an initial purchase is made, which is why it requires seamless collaboration between marketing, sales and CX teams.
The customer lifecycle/journey has five stages:?
Stage 1: Reach
Before a consumer has any personal connection to your brand, they may:?
During this first stage, the consumer is comparing products and brands, conducting research and reading customer reviews.?This is your opportunity to?reach?them through social media?(as well as digital ads and?SEO). And if the consumer requests more information (or, obviously, makes a purchase), you’ve been successful.?
Stage 2: Acquisition
Once the consumer visits your website or sends you an email or social media direct message, they’ve entered the acquisition stage. As the name suggests,?this is your opportunity to?acquire?a new customer. But first you must convert the user to a lead.?
If the prospect reaches out by email or social media message, you’ll need to:?
If the prospect has made it to your website, they should be able to easily access interactive, personalized, value-add experiences and content that can help them better understand and relate to your brand — and, ideally, make an informed purchase decision.?
Of course,?to convert website users to leads, you’ll need to ‘gate’ some of your most valuable content. Here’s one example of how it could work:
Stage 3: Conversion
Every customer makes purchase decisions on their own time. For a few, no nurturing is necessary at all. For most, a drip campaign of value-add content and?(initially subtle)?sales messaging is required; automated trigger emails can be sent based on the lead’s behaviors online and in response to emails (and?texts).
No matter how long it takes or which tactics are deployed, once the lead has made a purchase they have been converted into a customer.
Stage 4: Retention
Once you’ve converted a lead into a paying customer, you have the opportunity to begin developing loyalty, in the hopes of creating a brand ambassador. Of course, you also have the opportunity to turn them off completely. In other words: this stage represents a balancing act between continually engaging the customer and being perceived as pushy.?
The number-one way to maintain your customer relationships is to focus on the customer, and not the sale.?To provide value on an ongoing basis,?follow the seven steps to customer success?— and:
Stage 5: Loyalty
You can't create brand loyalty out of nowhere. It must be nurtured and instilled throughout the customer lifecycle, on social media, via email and on your website. If you’ve provided consistent, personalized and empathic experiences from initial awareness through retention,?you have the opportunity to amplify your reach exponentially by empowering your brand ambassadors to promote you on and offline.?To ensure you’ve positioned yourself to benefit from brand loyalty, ask yourself the following questions:?
The Customer Lifecycle: A Real-Life Example
The Marketing-Sales Funnel
Sales funnel marketing can be defined as all the strategies and tactics associated with marketing efforts to nurture leads into conversion opportunities for sales. This can include:
The marketing-sales funnel consists of both the marketing funnel stages (nurturing) and sales funnel stages (conversions). While many sales funnel templates exist, it’s best to customize for your business based on?your?understanding of how to create a sales funnel that will generate the most conversions for?your?target audience(s).
For clarity, this doesn’t mean deprioritizing your sales funnel?(because ‘we already know our customers’); quite the opposite: it means ensuring your digital marketing, sales and CX teams?all?fully embrace the importance of optimizing the marketing-sales funnel as part of the larger customer journey.?If you don’t convert users to leads and then leads to customers, there’s no need for the fourth or fifth stage of the customer lifecycle anyway — and, ultimately?(and quickly), your business will fail.
Marketing Funnel Stages and Sales Funnel Stages
The truth is, there’s no reason to separate your marketing funnel stages and sales funnel stages, or even to necessarily think of the marketing-sales funnel as distinct from the customer journey. They share the same trajectory, and purpose. Nevertheless, demonstrating the breakdown of the marketing-sales funnel is ideally suited to showcasing the strategy behind an optimal email drip campaign. And?with only 2% of website users making a purchase on their first visit to your website, the email drip campaign is your most powerful tool for enabling sales.
Stage 1: Top of Funnel: Awareness/Discovery
Like the first stage of the customer lifecycle (or customer journey), the first stage of the marketing-sales funnel finds the consumer in research mode. These potential customers (prospects) enter your funnel after discovering your brand during their search for answers or solutions. At this point, they know very little about you, or what you do.?
领英推荐
This is your opportunity to demonstrate your thought leadership and trustworthiness. At the top of the funnel, aggressive sales messaging turns prospects away; the goal of your digital marketing team should be to guide passive website users through the topics that matter to them — and then convert them to leads (i.e., lead generation).?
Stage 2: Middle of Funnel: Interest/Consideration
In the middle of the marketing-sales funnel, you’re halfway toward the sale; this is your chance to demonstrate:
Or, the opposite; if you’re not careful, you can also alienate your potential customers, as today’s increasingly sophisticated consumers continue to consider their options and compare your brand and offerings to that of your competitors.?
At this stage, your ability to develop, implement and automate an optimized email drip campaign will differentiate you from your peers.?
Stage 3: Bottom of Funnel: Decision/Purchase
At the bottom of the funnel, you need to close the deal. This is when consumer questions become more specific and vendor oriented; content showcasing product features and comparisons is most effective; and marketing passes off to sales. In this stage, the sales team’s job is to leverage all the customer data obtained during the previous two stages to convert qualified (warm, or hot) leads into new customers.
The Email Drip Campaign
Hence the name, an email drip campaign isn’t a race — it’s a strategically scheduled, automated series of emails designed to methodically hand-hold the consumer from lead to customer, down the marketing-sales funnel. More holistic, comprehensive email drip campaigns don’t stop there, either, continuing to:?
The two key elements of an email drip campaign are:
Most importantly, with drip marketing and email automation, you write and design the emails once, and then your CRM — powered by your CDP or DXP — uses AI to leverage customer data and their behaviors/actions to automate the personalization and delivery of your emails. Which frees up your digital marketing team to focus on:?
Although there’s no set rule on the number or types of emails to include in a drip campaign, there are established best practices based on at least a decade of experiential research. The biggest one: don’t be pushy; educate, nurture, then sell.
Needless to say, B2B drip campaigns and campaigns for higher-ticket items typically require more effort, time, and resources. However, most brands selling most things could adhere to the following for any lead?signing up to download content or learn more about their offerings:
This is the foundation of your email drip campaign.?For optimal results, your email drip campaign must be supported by pre-determined trigger emails built in to deliver automatically based on a lead’s behaviors (e.g., clicking a link, watching a video, abandoning cart, completing a survey, opening an email but not clicking, unsubscribing).?These types of actions, for instance, are what trigger the sales team to nurture the lead from middle to bottom of funnel and then from consumer to customer.
Like your initial drip marketing, these sales emails should also funnel recipients in one direction — by moving from a simple offer of assistance to a direct sales pitch. (Many times, a phone call is necessary to close the deal — but if managed correctly, your sales agents should be well equipped to move from automated messaging to one-on-one, person-to-person contact.)
Of course, the final trigger is the sale — while the sale, meanwhile, should initiate a second email drip campaign, structured similarly, to:
In other words: stages four and five of the customer journey.
Setting Up Your Email Drip Campaign: 8 Steps to Perfection
In case it wasn’t already clear, you may have to create a multitude of drip campaigns; e.g., triggered by:
No matter what, follow these eight steps in developing each email drip campaign:
Committing to Email Drip Campaign Best Practices Across the Customer Journey: The CRM
Without the right email automation software, you won’t be able to achieve any of your desired results via email. Long gone are the days of dropping hundreds of addresses into the Bcc section of a text email and mass-blasting your contacts from a browser-based email provider. Everyone knows you need an email marketing tool.?
A CRM, or customer relationship management tool, tracks and reacts to direct lead and customer interactions like new purchases, email link clicks and customer service communications. Coupled with a CDP (and/or DXP), this marketing, sales and CX tool empowers you to optimize all of your communications.
Here are the best CRMs and email marketing platforms?(in alphabetical order; demo them all):
Putting Your Email Drip Campaign in Perspective
Email automation and drip marketing are only two elements of email marketing.?Download?The Ultimate Guide to Email Marketing?to learn how to develop your email marketing strategy based on the latest trends, data and customer feedback.
Research These Brands
For More Articles Like This
Subscribe to my?Digital Marketing Tips?newsletter, and join me?on Customer Engagement Insider (LinkedIn: Customer Engagement Insider)!
Content Creator | @IMAGE360 | Digital Marketing | Photography | Elevate Your Brand & Marketing with Our Expertise
1 年Thanks for sharing