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CMOs fail to go beyond brand awareness on LinkedIn and prove a clear social media ROI | B2B Marketing

Kristina Jaramillo,

GetLinkedInHelp.com

‘s chief LinkedIn strategist, shows how marketers at top organisations are using LinkedIn for brand awareness instead of revenue generation

Recent studies show that at least 87 per cent of B2B sales and marketing leaders are using LinkedIn and other social media platforms but less than one in five can clearly prove and demonstrate social media ROI. I believe it’s because the attention and efforts are on the top of the funnel instead of thinking about the complete buyer’s journey.

A recent MarketingLand.com article, 5 CMOs Who Are Turning To LinkedIn For Increased Brand Engagement, shows how CMOs are focused on brand awareness and brand engagement instead of buyer engagement. Below I analyse the ideas, thoughts and actions the CMOs at Xerox, Wiley, Lithium, XOJet and G2 Crowd mentioned within the article.

Five examples of CMOs who are focused on the top of the funnel instead of the complete funnel:

Xerox CMO, John Kennedy, mentioned that they are using LinkedIn to share content with their followers.  Through company page updates and sponsored updates, Xerox is supplying their audience with e-books, SlideShare presentations, and blog articles that offer advice on how to work better. He stated: “Hopefully, we’ll provide useful resources that can help those who follow us perform better; and as a result, engender interest in the Xerox brand along the way.”

That’s a lot of hopefuls. Hopefully, prospects will find and read Xerox’s content. Hopefully, they will find it useful. And, hopefully, the content they read will generate interest in the Xerox brand in the process. You see, John is using the word “hopefully” because he cannot directly tie these LinkedIn actions to sales opportunities or even revenue.

And, because they are just focused on reach and getting brand awareness, there is no predictive marketing. However, when you focus on the complete funnel and pay strict attention to the next step actions prospects are taking as you build the relationship,  you can put a process in place that you know will lead to revenue.

Wiley is focused on click-through rates and leads (even if the leads do not move further)

Wiley’s CMO, Clay Stobaugh, mentioned they’re focused on sponsored updates and sponsored Inmails, since they are getting amazing click-through rates. Now, I must admit that they’re getting an unusually high click-through rate. But it seems like he’s just focused on leads and getting people into the funnel. Focusing just on leads causes misaligned goals with sales (leads vs. revenue) and marketing teams optimising for cost per lead rather than true business growth.

It seems like there is misalignment here as Clay does not mention how many of the prospects who clicked through became paying customers – and how this paid media opportunity is driving real business growth. He’s getting a false sense of LinkedIn success by focusing on a low cost per lead – and if click throughs are not trickling down the funnel, Wiley has a high cost of business growth.

Lithium is using LinkedIn to fill the funnel and then letting marketing automation programmes take over

Lithium CMO, Kathy Keim, understands marketers should spend less time on volume at the top of the funnel and more on what is driving through to a qualified sales opportunity. I totally agree with that but I don’t agree with how Lithium is driving prospects to a qualified sales opportunity. They’re letting marketing automation programs take over once they get a prospect into the funnel using updates.

But what about those leads that are resistant to sales and marketing messages and do not want to move forward without a real relationship? What about those B2B buyers who are looking for vendors that can turn their vision into a clear path to value? You can only do that if you take the time to build a real relationship instead of treating prospecting like a lead – which is exactly what you’re doing when you let your marketing automation take over.

By just using LinkedIn for a top of the funnel tool instead of using LinkedIn to directly engage and interact with their prospects on a one-on-one more personal level to help grow relationship, Lithium is missing out on opportunities. Prospects are using LinekdIn throughout the complete buying process to make their buying decision, which means you should be thinking beyond the top of the funnel.

XOJET and G2Crowd are using LinekdIn for brand building and an extension to their website

XOJET CMO, Shari Jones, is currently utilising LinkedIn for two core functions – brand building and recruitment. Her marketing efforts are concentrated on their company page – which is top of the funnel. She’s failing to understand that LinkedIn is not about engaging with brands. B2B buyers on LinkedIn are looking for access to broader networks that can help them (not brands – but with actual visible experts) and they want relevant context to connect with those vendors.

To me, LinkedIn is a buyer engagement tool, not a brand engagement tool. When you actively engage with buyers and have a go-to-customer process in place that helps them solve problems and establishes trust – you will generate leads and sales opportunities. This is how XOJet’s LinkedIn program needs to evolve if they want to go beyond brand awareness and generate more leads and revenues. 

Lastly, G2 Crowd’s CMO, Adrienne Weissman, stated that they are using their LinkedIn company page as an extension to their website. On their company page, they are sharing relevant content with their followers and specific audiences. So G2 Crowd is only taking the first step to building long-term value using LinkedIn. They are building a following and establishing their brand as an expert resource with the content they are sharing on their LinkedIn company page.

But, building long-term value that leads to ROI and revenue requires further educating your prospects via a nurturing flow and real relationship building that has prospects comfortably moving forward. 

These marketing leaders are not realising the real power of LinkedIn:

 

The ability to target key decision makers, build a relationship and leverage those relationships to transition these prospects through each stage of the buying cycle.

 

LinkedIn marketing is simply becoming a numbers game. My recent LinkedIn marketing study shows this. I asked sales and marketing leaders as well as some well-recognised, trusted social media marketing experts and firm owners: What metrics are most important to you? What are you paying attention to?

Most of the sales and marketing leaders and social media experts chose clicks, profile, and platform post views, website traffic and superficial metrics like shares, comments and likes. They chose these metrics over:

  • Next step actions beyond the click, like and comment
  • Marketing qualified and sales qualified leads
  • Revenue

That’s why most of the sales and marketing leaders were mainly getting visibility and reach and that’s about it. The sales and marketing leaders who were regularly driving demand and creating sales opportunities (not leads but actual opportunities that went past the initial interest stage) were focused on revenue objectives. They were focused on having the right tools, content, and processes to help them meet revenue objectives using LinkedIn. They understood that you can’t measure the ROI of brand awareness and brand maintenance and that it’s not enough anymore to gain visibility. They wanted measurable results. They wanted to see leads and opportunities – and they wanted to see that these leads are being developed into customers.

Remember, you can’t create a path to LinkedIn revenue and ROI if all of your focus is on how much you expanded your network, how many people you’re reaching with your content and sales messages and what your click-through rate is on sponsored updates. You need to think beyond the top of the funnel – and focus on how you’re going to use LinkedIn to move prospects through the complete buying process.

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