Categories
- Arts & Entertainment
- Business
- Advertising
- Bookkeeping
- Branding
- Careers
- Careers Employment
- Change Management
- Communication
- Corporate
- Customer Service
- Entrepreneurialism
- Ethics
- Financing
- Franchise
- Fundraising
- Human Resources
- Management
- Marketing
- Marketing Direct
- Negotiation
- Networking
- Outsourcing
- Partnerships
- PR
- Presentation
- Public Relations
- Resumes Cover Letters
- Sales
- Sales Management
- Sales Teleselling
- Sales Training
- Small Business
- Strategic Planning
- Team Building
- Top7 or 10 Tips
- Venture Capital
- Workplace Communication
- Communications
- Computers
- Culture & Society
- Disease & Illness
- Fashion
- Finance
- Food & Beverage
- Health & Fitness
- Hobbies
- Home & Family
- Home Based Business
- Internet Business
- Legal
- Pets & Animals
- Politics
- Product Reviews
- Recreation & Sports
- Reference & Education
- Religion
- Self Improvement
- Shopping
- Travel & Leisure
- Vehicles
- Writing & Speaking
Information
Direct Mail Sales Lead Generation Success Involves Three Numbers
You will succeed at business-to-business direct mail sales lead generation if you master three calculations, and your response rate is not one of them. Your response rate tells you only a small part of what you are doing correctly.
I am assuming that you have a sales force, and that you use what is essentially a two-step sales process. First, you generate a sales lead. Then, your sales force closes that lead with a sale. But how do you figure out what level of response rate you want? By looking at three of the most vital numbers in B2B direct mail lead generation, namely, qualified lead rate, appointment rate and close rate.
Qualified lead rate
Your qualified lead rate is the percentage of all inquiries that are ready to meet a sales person. In other words, the percentage of all leads who are also qualified leads. If you have 100 leads but only 25 of them are qualified (can afford your offering, have the authority to buy, need what you are selling and are ready to act within your timeframe), then your qualified lead rate is 25%, the industry average. Good for you!
Appointment rate
Your appointment rate is the percentage of qualified leads that result in a sales appointment or demonstration. For many reasons, not all qualified leads will meet with your salespeople. The industry average is 30%. Thirty percent of all qualified leads should meet with your sales people.
Close rate
Your close rate is the percentage of sales appointments that translate into a sale. Sometimes this number is expressed as a ratio. If you close two out of every four potential customers that you meet, then your close rate is 50%, or two out of four. The average in most industries is 25%, or one out of four.
As you can see, the most important question in B2B direct mail lead generation is not “What is our response rate going to be?” If you have a small sales force and high close rates, you can be satisfied with low response rates. But if you have a large sales force and low close rates, you need higher response rates.
The secret is to remember that your direct mail response rates tell you how successful you are at generating leads, and no more. How good you are at turning those leads into paying customers is another story.
© 2006 Sharpe Copy Inc. You may reprint this article online and in print provided the links remain live and the content remains unaltered (including the "About the Author" message).
About the author
Alan Sharpe is a direct mail copywriter who helps business owners and marketing managers generate leads, close sales and retain customers using direct mail marketing. Learn more about his creative direct mail writing services and sign up for free weekly tips like this at http://www.sharpecopy.com.
© 2006 Sharpe Copy Inc. You may reprint this article online and in print provided the links remain live and the content remains unaltered (including the "About the author" message).
Article source: Expert Articles
Most Recent Articles in Marketing Direct category
- Why Is My Business Card Ineffective? - By: Lynne Saarte
common reasons why people ignore and even throw out your business cards - A Quick and Easy Guide to Online Postcard Printing - By: Kaye Marks
Online postcard printing is easy and convenient in many ways. When you are considering printing color postcards for your business or special project you should really decide between having the traditional printing process, or an online printing process. Which of this two totally different printing process best suit your needs? - Know How To Market In Person - By: Janice Jenkins
the vast difference between normal marketing material and marketing personally to people - Corporate Gifts and Promotional Products for Brand Awareness - By: Michiel Van Kets
Many businesses are familiar with giving corporate gifts as a strategy of building up and preserving strong business relationships the idea goes for both employees and clients. - Boom Your Business With Using Business Gifts Ideas - By: Jnet Verra
It isn't new for us that when there is an upcoming business affair, we get busy buying gifts for our managers, bosses and colleagues. There are two options on how to shop for business gifts. - The Follow Up Offer - By: Janice Jenkins
the best kind of marketing is the kind that builds on previous marketing pushes - You Do Not Create Loyal Customers Overnight - By: Lynne Saarte
why are companies trying to make loyal customers from a single advertising push? - No Convention Is Complete Without Free Items - By: Lynne Saarte
conventions provide a distinctive purpose for your company - Pardon Me? That will be $6.95! Or how to market anything with free publicity! - By: Gil Carlson
What crazy item could you market that would get you a million dollars worth of free publicity? - Avoid Cluttering Your Business Cards - By: Lynne Saarte
It seems like as time marches forward people gain more and more methods for contacting each other. Back long before I was born all anyone really had was an address. Soon phone numbers were a prominent addition to your contact information. And then fax numbers rose in importance, followed by cell phone numbers and email addresses.
