Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Why Inbound Marketing Should Take a Back Seat to Current Customers

inbound-marketing-current-customersInbound marketing, as a phrase and a movement, has almost been as popular as content marketing over the past decade.

If both phrases were tradeable stocks, and you purchased $10,000 worth of “inbound marketing” and “content marketing” in June 2008, inbound marketing would be valued at $490,000. If you owned content marketing, you would be a millionaire (per Google Trends March 29, 2016).

Content-Inbound-Marketing

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Regardless, both approaches have arguably dominated the marketing conversation for the past five to 10 years. Unfortunately, if you are focusing all your efforts on inbound marketing as your primary marketing strategy, you may be missing a large opportunity. Let’s discuss.

What is inbound marketing?

As David Meerman Scott writes in the foreword for Inbound Marketing (by HubSpot founders Brian Halligan and Dharmesh Shah), “Inbound marketing is about getting found online, through search engines and on sites like Facebook and YouTube and Twitter …

“In other words, inbound marketing is about developing marketing activities that ‘pull’ people into your site, generally through compelling content creation, rather than those that go out and interrupt prospects with advertising messages.”


Inbound marketing is developing marketing tactics that pull people into your site through compelling #content.
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More recently, HubSpot has expanded the inbound marketing definition to include more than the top-of-the-funnel activities into a methodology that includes awareness through post-sales relationship-building (moving it closer to the definition of content marketing). Still, the majority of marketing professionals see “inbound” as a top-of-the-funnel activity.

What’s the inbound problem?

Following an inbound marketing approach, for most organizations, is actually quite sensible. The problem is that far too many enterprises and small businesses focus on inbound marketing as the primary strategy (bringing in new customers), and loyalty and retention initiatives (focusing on current customers) as secondary.

Let me use an example:

I recently had breakfast with the vice president of digital marketing at a large B2B manufacturing company. As we broke down his goals and initiatives, the underlying focus was clear.

After years of content creation about just products/services/features/benefits, the organization has moved more resources to top-of-the-funnel activities. These include a large SEO/SEM team; a content creation team for white papers, blogs, e-books and webinars; a newly launched marketing automation team; and better integration and lead nurturing between sales and marketing.

For a large B2B organization, the change management needed to make all this happen was quite impressive.

Then I asked this question: “What types of activities do you have around customer loyalty/retention/up-selling/cross-selling, etc.?”

I’m sure you already know the answer. Outside of customer service, major account representatives, and post-sales product collateral, the organization ignored loyalty and retention marketing.

Starting with current customer experience

Robert Rose, CMI’s chief strategy officer, evangelizes three experience timetables for content marketing:

  • Amazing awareness experience
  • Remarkable nurturing experience
  • World-class loyalty experience for current customers

I believe the third experience – focusing on loyalty and retention – is the most critical when thinking about the opportunities around content.

Recently, I was flipping through my notes on the book Managing Business-to-Business Marketing Communications by J. Nicholas DeBonis and Roger S. Peterson — an excellent book — and the key highlight of the book is the following:

The fundamental principle of marketing is that it is exponentially more profitable to keep existing customers than it is to acquire new ones.


It is exponentially more profitable to keep existing customers than it is to acquire new ones via @RSPBBG
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The rule of thumb is that it costs five times as much to acquire a new customer than to keep an existing one. According to Harvard Business School, an increase in customer retention by just 5% can lead to an increase in profits of 25% to 95%. Although new business is always an important driver to any business, more companies seem to neglect the MOST PROFITABLE marketing strategy – keeping and growing your current customer base.


An increase in customer retention by just 5% can lead to an increase in profiles of 25% to 95% via @HarvardHBS
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It is your current customers with whom you already have awareness and a current relationship. It only makes sense to focus first on their informational needs and pain points and to maximize the revenue opportunities from current customers before taking an inbound approach. Only after you perfect the loyalty experience and turn customers into evangelists should you look at other parts of the buyer’s journey.

Getting inspiration for loyalty and retention

Here are a few brands that recognize the value of loyalty and retention in their marketing strategies:

John Deere delivers The Furrow magazine to 1.5 million customers on a monthly basis, in 40 countries and 14 languages.

TD Ameritrade’s thinkMoney magazine is targeted to the brand’s active traders. It’s found that high-volume traders who engage in the magazine trade five times more than those who do not.

think-money-magazine-tdameritrade

Slack, a digital communication tool, uses its YouTube channel not only to introduce its product but to host how-to video guides, strengthening its relationships with customers using the product.

Slack

HANDPICKED RELATED CONTENT:
23 Things to Consider When Creating Video Content [Examples]

Weight Watchers sends a weekly e-newsletter to its customers with helpful tips on food and fitness.

Weight Watchers

My purpose in writing this article is not to get you to shy away from inbound activities, but to put your goals in perspective. Our opportunities with current customers are significant. Don’t ignore current customers at the expense of top-of-the-funnel activities.

Want to learn more ways to build loyalty with your customers? Subscribe to the free daily or weekly CMI email.

Cover image by Joseph Kalinowski/Content Marketing Institute

The post Why Inbound Marketing Should Take a Back Seat to Current Customers appeared first on Content Marketing Institute.

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