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In B2B Direct Mail Lead Generation, Work Backwards
Author: Alan Sharpe
Topic: Direct-Mail
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Business-to-business lead generation is one of the few times in
life when you should start at the end and work backwards.

Before you write a single line of copy or design a single
element of your direct mail package, sit down with the sales
people who close the sales. Find out when and how they get
prospects to sign on the line that is dotted, and work backwards
from there to discover what you need to do to capture the
attention of these prospects in the first place and get them
into your sales funnel.

Here are some questions to ask the sales team:

1. What makes a prospect buy? (Is it price? terms? guarantee?
after-sales service? quality?)

2. What customer objections will endanger a sale? How do
salespeople overcome these objections?

3. Do prospects need a lot of information before making a
decision?

I am assuming that your clients' B2B buying process (and your
sales process) consists of more than a few steps. Usually, it
looks something like this:

* Identify need

* Gather information on solutions

* Establish specifications

* Request proposals or quotations

* Interview top suppliers

* Make short list of suppliers

* Check references

* Test sample or demo product

* Select supplier

* Negotiate terms and price

* Sign contract

* Make first purchase

* Evaluate performance

* Make repeat purchases

* Remain loyal to valued, long-term supplier

* Drop supplier and start over again

Your goal with every direct mail lead generation mailing is to
figure out where prospects are in their buying cycle and to
target them there. The thing to remember in all of this is that
your goal in a multi-step, complex buying process is not to
close the sale but to move the prospect to the next stage. Here
are some ideas:

If prospects are at the needs-identification stage, offer them a
white paper or similar document that describes the customer
problem that your product or service solves.

If prospects are gathering information on solutions, offer them
a series of case studies or success stories that demonstrate why
your solution is superior.

If your sale involves many stakeholders, consider mailing a
different direct mail package to each person who influences the
buying decision. In complex high-tech sales, for example, you
can target the CIO (offer ROI benefits), the CFO (offer
cost-cutting benefits) and the IT manager (offer scalability and
ease of integration benefits).

In many B2B lead generation efforts, you will need to mail or
contact leads more than once before you generate a response and
have a chance to qualify them. That's why starting at the end
makes such good sense. You'll know how many steps you need to
take to reach the sale, and how many times you need to mail each
prospect (and what to mail) to turn them into a customer.

About the author:
Alan Sharpe is a business-to-business direct mail copywriter.
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