by Fronetics | Oct 21, 2014 | Blog, Data/Analytics, Marketing, Social Media

Individuals within the logistics and supply chain industries want to learn more about social media ROI. A recent survey conducted by Fronetics found that 81 percent of respondents reported that information on proving social media ROI would be helpful to their company.
Proving social media ROI can seem impossible, but it is not if you put the right framework in place. Here’s how to put that framework in place, and prove social media ROI:
Set goals
Support your goals with SMART objectives. This allows you to track and measure your progress towards meeting your goals.
- Specific: Describe your objectives specific to the results you want. Go deeper than “gain leads” to “achieve a visitor to lead conversion rate of one percent.”
- Measurable: Metrics are essential. You can’t assess your progress towards your goal without metrics.
- Achievable: Make your goal achievable. A visit to lead conversion rate of 10 percent may not be realistic. Your goal of a visitor to lead conversion rate may be more plausible. When setting your objectives, keep reality in check.
- Realistic: As with any job, you need to have the right tools. Make sure that you have the resources, tools, and talent to meet your objectives.
- Timed: Be specific with your objective and incorporate a time frame.
Track and measure
Once you have set your goals and objectives and have identified your key metrics, put a system in place that will track and measure your metrics. At the very least, your metrics should be tracked on a monthly basis.
React
Tracking metrics is not enough. You need to react. Look at your metrics in the context of your goals and objectives. Which efforts are moving you towards your objectives and goals? Which efforts are not supporting your goals and objectives? Can these efforts be tweaked? Should you scrap them and try something new?
Taking a data driven approach is critical to proving ROI.
Wash. Rinse. Repeat.
This process is not static. When you achieve your goals and objectives, set new ones. If you are really struggling to meet your goals and objectives, you may need to revisit them to determine if they need to re-worked.
Proving social media ROI is possible. But it needs to be supported by a framework. Take the time to put a solid framework in place for your business.
by Fronetics | Oct 7, 2014 | Blog, Strategy, Supply Chain

Figuring out how to consistently attract the right kinds of leads and meaningfully connect with prospects can be a daunting task. Producing significant returns on your investment, though, is the initial effort of creating a road map for your success. Introducing a standardized sales approach in your organization can increase sales revenue, create clear expectations, and eliminate process ambiguity. But beyond establishing clear objectives and defining measures of success, the development stage of creating a standard sales process should include consideration of a number of internal and external factors. As you begin to craft a strategy of your own, consider how your plan will incorporate these best practices.
Generate Better Qualified Leads
Generating well-qualified leads creates a streamlined and more efficient sales team. Efforts to attract the right kinds of leads should start well before anyone from sales enters the process, though. A standardized sales process allows others in the organization to set the framework for success. Working with the sales team, marketers can determine what questions your ideal customer might be searching for and use content to address those questions in a way that will resonate with prospects. Providing relevant value for the buyer establishes parameters for attracting more qualified leads. By generating better leads, your sales team will enjoy a shorter sales cycle and reduce wasted effort on opportunities that are unlikely to close.
Standardize Sales Procedures
Establish and institutionalize typical sales procedures; each department with either direct or indirect contribution to the sales team should understand and operate using the same processes and assumptions. This continuity removes ambiguous procedures, eliminates uncommon language, allows for team members to anticipate when support might be needed, and helps the organization to pre-plan for workloads as sales close.
Remove Barriers to Implementation and Continued Use
Create value in the sales process, not only for the buyer, but for the organization itself. What benefit will the current activities of your organization bring? Of great importance when considering the development and implementation of a standardized sales process is the ease of implementation and likelihood of continued use. How likely is it that your team will adopt this method? How likely is it to be around ten months from now? Does this process create unnecessary redundancy? Are you maximizing the amount of time your team spends on revenue-generating activities? Spending some time thinking through exactly how and why the process will be used by those in your organization will help guide your decisions in the process development.
Allow for Flexibility
The most significant benefit of implementing a standardized sales process is its structured approach. However, allowing for occasional flexibility in both the structure and application of the process gives your sales team the necessary autonomy to close unorthodox sales. Some leads require a slightly different approach – will your process allow for your team to adapt procedures as necessary? Similarly, requesting and considering feedback from regular users informs decisions to adjust or modify the standard sales process as needed.
Establishing a successful sales process requires building a solid foundation through the thoughtful and deliberate development of a process. Having a well-designed process to guide your daily activities will better position your organization to attract better qualified leads and close more sales.
by Fronetics | Oct 7, 2014 | Blog, Strategy, Supply Chain

Figuring out how to consistently attract the right kinds of leads and meaningfully connect with prospects can be a daunting task. Producing significant returns on your investment, though, is the initial effort of creating a road map for your success. Introducing a standardized sales approach in your organization can increase sales revenue, create clear expectations, and eliminate process ambiguity. But beyond establishing clear objectives and defining measures of success, the development stage of creating a standard sales process should include consideration of a number of internal and external factors. As you begin to craft a strategy of your own, consider how your plan will incorporate these best practices.
Generate Better Qualified Leads
Generating well-qualified leads creates a streamlined and more efficient sales team. Efforts to attract the right kinds of leads should start well before anyone from sales enters the process, though. A standardized sales process allows others in the organization to set the framework for success. Working with the sales team, marketers can determine what questions your ideal customer might be searching for and use content to address those questions in a way that will resonate with prospects. Providing relevant value for the buyer establishes parameters for attracting more qualified leads. By generating better leads, your sales team will enjoy a shorter sales cycle and reduce wasted effort on opportunities that are unlikely to close.
Standardize Sales Procedures
Establish and institutionalize typical sales procedures; each department with either direct or indirect contribution to the sales team should understand and operate using the same processes and assumptions. This continuity removes ambiguous procedures, eliminates uncommon language, allows for team members to anticipate when support might be needed, and helps the organization to pre-plan for workloads as sales close.
Remove Barriers to Implementation and Continued Use
Create value in the sales process, not only for the buyer, but for the organization itself. What benefit will the current activities of your organization bring? Of great importance when considering the development and implementation of a standardized sales process is the ease of implementation and likelihood of continued use. How likely is it that your team will adopt this method? How likely is it to be around ten months from now? Does this process create unnecessary redundancy? Are you maximizing the amount of time your team spends on revenue-generating activities? Spending some time thinking through exactly how and why the process will be used by those in your organization will help guide your decisions in the process development.
Allow for Flexibility
The most significant benefit of implementing a standardized sales process is its structured approach. However, allowing for occasional flexibility in both the structure and application of the process gives your sales team the necessary autonomy to close unorthodox sales. Some leads require a slightly different approach – will your process allow for your team to adapt procedures as necessary? Similarly, requesting and considering feedback from regular users informs decisions to adjust or modify the standard sales process as needed.
Establishing a successful sales process requires building a solid foundation through the thoughtful and deliberate development of a process. Having a well-designed process to guide your daily activities will better position your organization to attract better qualified leads and close more sales.
by Fronetics | Sep 30, 2014 | Blog, Strategy, Talent

Are your sales reps as sold on your leads as you are?
In theory, it seems straight forward: You write engaging blog posts; you spread your unique as well as curated content via appropriate social media channels; you include calls to action; you watch your prospects take the bait; and, finally, you hand off a neat list of qualified leads to sales.
Sales, in turn, swiftly goes to work and the sale is a fact.
The reality is, as most of us know, far more muddled. You may be in the habit of dumping any lead, qualified or not, on sales. Sales, on the other hand, may be busy doing anything but tending to your leads. Hours go by. Hours turn into days. When sales finally do follow up, the lead has moved on.
Here is the bad news: Time kills even the most eager leads.
The 2014 Lead Response Report by InsideSales.com shows an undeniable connection between the time it takes to make contact with a prospect and the likelihood of converting that prospect into a customer. Since most companies will send out an automatic e-mail confirmation to anyone who has filled out an online form, the study looked specifically at the phone response rate, which it argues is a much more effective sales tool.
Consider a few of the findings:
- Fifty percent of buyers choose the vendor that responds first.
- The median first call response time was 3 hours and 18 minutes.
- Only a fraction of companies reply within five minutes.
That last number is important because another InsideSales study on lead response management found the following:
“Making a successful contact with a lead are 100 times greater when a contact attempt occurs within 5 minutes, compared to 30 minutes after the lead was submitted. Similarly, the odds of the lead entering the sales process, or becoming qualified, are 21 times greater when contacted within 5 minutes versus 30 minutes after the lead was submitted.”
If you need further proof that response rate matters, an article in Forbes on inbound marketing sums it up perfectly: “If your goal is to ‘pull your customer toward you’ in order to sell them something, then time is definitely of the essence.”
With these statistics in mind, it is more important than ever to ensure marketing and sales are aligned. Too often poor lead-to-customer conversion can be blamed on a disconnection between the two departments.
Work in partnership to establish a common sales funnel. Spell out who is in charge of each step of the sales process. It doesn’t matter who makes that first call to your qualified lead, but it is important that you know someone will actually pick up the phone with a sense of urgency.
Bear in mind: All your leads need to grow cold is time.
by Fronetics | Sep 30, 2014 | Blog, Strategy, Talent

Are your sales reps as sold on your leads as you are?
In theory, it seems straight forward: You write engaging blog posts; you spread your unique as well as curated content via appropriate social media channels; you include calls to action; you watch your prospects take the bait; and, finally, you hand off a neat list of qualified leads to sales.
Sales, in turn, swiftly goes to work and the sale is a fact.
The reality is, as most of us know, far more muddled. You may be in the habit of dumping any lead, qualified or not, on sales. Sales, on the other hand, may be busy doing anything but tending to your leads. Hours go by. Hours turn into days. When sales finally do follow up, the lead has moved on.
Here is the bad news: Time kills even the most eager leads.
The 2014 Lead Response Report by InsideSales.com shows an undeniable connection between the time it takes to make contact with a prospect and the likelihood of converting that prospect into a customer. Since most companies will send out an automatic e-mail confirmation to anyone who has filled out an online form, the study looked specifically at the phone response rate, which it argues is a much more effective sales tool.
Consider a few of the findings:
- Fifty percent of buyers choose the vendor that responds first.
- The median first call response time was 3 hours and 18 minutes.
- Only a fraction of companies reply within five minutes.
That last number is important because another InsideSales study on lead response management found the following:
“Making a successful contact with a lead are 100 times greater when a contact attempt occurs within 5 minutes, compared to 30 minutes after the lead was submitted. Similarly, the odds of the lead entering the sales process, or becoming qualified, are 21 times greater when contacted within 5 minutes versus 30 minutes after the lead was submitted.”
If you need further proof that response rate matters, an article in Forbes on inbound marketing sums it up perfectly: “If your goal is to ‘pull your customer toward you’ in order to sell them something, then time is definitely of the essence.”
With these statistics in mind, it is more important than ever to ensure marketing and sales are aligned. Too often poor lead-to-customer conversion can be blamed on a disconnection between the two departments.
Work in partnership to establish a common sales funnel. Spell out who is in charge of each step of the sales process. It doesn’t matter who makes that first call to your qualified lead, but it is important that you know someone will actually pick up the phone with a sense of urgency.
Bear in mind: All your leads need to grow cold is time.