When most people start implementing inbound marketing, they're primarily worried about getting enough new leads in the funnel.
But once you have a lot of leads, you need to figure out who's really interested in your product and who's just starting to look around.
That's where lead scoring comes in. Lead scoring lets you assign a value (a certain number of points) to each lead based on the professional information they've given you and how they've engaged with your website and brand across the internet. It helps sales and marketing teams prioritize leads and increase efficiency.
Every company has a different model for assigning points to score their leads, but one of the most common ways is using data from past leads to create the value system.
How? First, you'll take a look at your contacts who became customers to see what they have in common. Next, you'll look at the attributes of your contacts who didn't become customers. Once you've looked at the historical data from both sides, you can decide which attributes should be weighted heavily based on how likely they are to indicate someone's a good fit for your product.
Sounds easy, right? Depending on your business model and the leads in your database, this can quickly become complicated. To make this process a little easier on you, we're going to walk you through the basics of creating a lead score, including what data you should look at, how to find the most important attributes, and the process for actually calculating a basic score.
6 Types of Data You Can Use for Lead Scoring
1) Demographic Information
Are you only selling to people of a certain demographic, like parents of young children or CIOs? Ask demographic questions in the forms on your landing pages, and you can use your leads' answers to see how well they fit in with your target audience.
One thing you can do with this information is remove outliers from your sales team's queue by subtracting points for people who fall into a category you don't sell to. For example, if you only sell to a certain geographic location, you might give a negative score to any lead who falls outside the proper city, state, zip code, country, and so on.
If some of your form fields are optional (like a phone number, for instance), then you also might award extra points to leads who provide that option information anyway.
2) Company Information
If you're a B2B organization, are you more interested in selling to organizations of a certain size, type, or industry? Are you more interested in B2B organizations or B2C organizations? You can ask questions like these on your landing page forms, too, so you can give points to leads who fit in with your target audience and take points away from leads who aren't at all what you're looking for.
3) Online Behavior
How a lead interacts with your website can tell you a lot about how interested they are in buying from you. Take a look at your leads who eventually become customers: Which offers did they download? How many offers did they download? Which pages -- and how many pages -- did they visit on your site before becoming a customer?
Both the number and types of forms and pages are important. You might give higher lead scores to leads who visited high-value pages (like pricing pages) or filled out high-value forms (like a demo request). Similarly, you might give higher scores to leads who had 30 page views on your site, as opposed to three.
What about leads who have changed their behavior over time? If a lead has stopped visiting your website or downloading your offers, they may not be interested anymore. You might take points away from leads who've stopped engaging with your website after a certain period of time. How long -- 10 days, 30 days, 90 days -- depends on your typical sales cycle.
4) Email Engagement
If someone's opted in to receive emails from your company, you're not sure how interested that person is in buying from you. Open and clickthrough rates, on the other hand, will give you a much better idea of their interest level. Your sales team will want to know who opened every email in your lead nurturing series, or who always clicked through your offer promotion emails. That way, they can focus on the ones who seem most engaged. You might also give a higher lead score to leads who click through on high-value emails, like demo offers.
5) Social Engagement
How engaged a lead is with your brand on social networks can also give you an idea of how interested they are. How many times did they click through on your company's tweets and Facebook posts? How many times did they retweet or share those posts? If your target buyers are active on social networks, then you might consider awarding points to leads with certain Klout scores or numbers of followers.
6) Spam Detection
Last but not least, you might want to give negative scores to leads who filled out landing page forms in ways that could indicate they're spam. For example, were first name, last name, and/or company name not capitalized? Did the lead complete any form fields by typing four or more letters in the traditional "QWERTY" keyword side-by-side?
You might also want to think about which types of email addresses leads are using compared with the email addresses of your customer base. If you're selling to businesses, for example, you might take points away from leads who use a Gmail or Yahoo! email address.
How Do You Know What Matters Most?
That's a lot of data to weed through -- how do you know which data matters most? Should you find out from your sales team? Should you interview your customers? Should you dive into your analytics and run a few reports?
Actually, we recommend a combination of all three. Your sales team, your customers, and your analytics reports will all help you piece together what content is most valuable for converting leads into customers, which will help you attach certain points to certain offers, emails, and so on.
Talk to your sales team.
Sales reps are the ones on the ground, communicating directly with both leads who turned into customers and those who didn't. They tend to have a pretty good idea of which pieces of marketing material helps encourage conversion.
Which blog posts and offers do your sales reps like to send leads? You might find some of them telling you, "Every time I send people this certain piece of collateral, it's easier to close them." This is valuable information. Find out what those pieces of collateral are, and assign points accordingly.
Talk to your customers.
While your sales team might claim certain content converts customers, you might find that the people who actually went through the sales process have different opinions. That's okay: You want to hear it from both sides.
Conduct a few customer interviews to learn what they think was responsible for their decision to buy from you. Be sure you're interviewing customers who had both short and long sales cycles so you get diverse perspectives.
Turn to the analytics.
You should also complement all this in-person research with hard data from your marketing analytics.
Run an attribution report to figure out which marketing efforts lead to conversions throughout the funnel. Don't only look at the content that converts leads to customers -- what about the content people view before they become a lead? You might award a certain number of points to people who download content that's historically converted people into leads, and a higher number of points to people who download content that's historically converted people into customers. (HubSpot customers: Click here to learn more about running attribution reports in HubSpot.)
Another way to help you piece together valuable pieces of content on your site is to run a contacts report. A contacts report will show you how many contacts -- and how much revenue -- has been generated as a result of certain, specific marketing activities. Marketing activities might include certain offer downloads, email campaign clickthroughs, and so on. Take note of which activities tend to be first-touch conversions, last-touch conversions, and so on, and assign points accordingly. (HubSpot customers: Click here to learn more about creating a contacts report in HubSpot.)
Image Credit: HubSpot's Academy Blog
How to Calculate a Basic Lead Score
There are many different ways to calculate a lead score. The simplest way to do it is this:
Step 1: Calculate the lead-to-customer conversion rate of all of your leads.
That's the number of new customers you acquire, divided by the number of leads you generate. Use this conversion rate as your benchmark.
Step 2: Pick and choose different attributes customers who you believe were higher quality leads.
Attributes could be customers who requested a free trial at some point, or customers in the finance industry, or customers with 10-20 employees.
There's a kind of art to choosing which attributes to include in your model. You'll choose attributes based on those conversations you had with your sales team, your analytics, and so on, but overall, it's a judgment call. You could have five different people do the same exercise, and they could come up with five different models. But that's okay as long as your scoring is based on the data we mentioned previously.
Step 3: Calculate the individual close rates of each of those attributes.
Step 4: Compare the close rates of each attribute with your overall close rate, and assign point values accordingly.
Look for the attributes with close rates that are significantly higher than your overall close rate. Then, choose which attributes you'll assign points to, and if so, how many points. Base the point values of each attribute on the magnitude of their individual close rates.
The actual point values will be a little arbitrary, but try to be as consistent as possible. For example, if your overall close rate is 1% and your "requested demo" close rate is 20%, then the close rate of the "requested demo" attribute is 20X your overall close rate -- so you could, for example, award 20 points to leads with those attributes.
The More Advanced Method
This simple method of calculating a lead score is a great start. Note, though, that the most mathematically sound method is one that employs a data mining technique, such as logistic linear regression.
Data mining techniques are more complicated. Logistic linear regression involves building a formula in Excel that'll spit out the probability that a lead will close into a customer. It's more accurate than the technique we've outlined above since it's a holistic approach that takes into account how all of the customer attributes -- like industry, company size, and whether or not someone requested a trial -- interact with one another.
If you'd like to explore logistic linear regression in Excel, check out this resource. In the meantime, the simplified approach is a great way to get started.
What are other ways to use historical data for lead scoring? Share your tips in the comment section.
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