Life is a journey, and so is marketing and sales. It’s a buyer’s journey – a path of your potential clients from being a target audience to awareness, consideration, and decision-making stages. And like every journey, a sales funnel has to end – in a final conversion.
But before you get to that final conversion, your target audience first needs to be converted from one stage to another. So let’s take a look at the conversion goals and means for every stage of the buyer’s journey.
There are three main stages in every prospect’s buyer journey:
Each of these stages can be applied to any marketing funnel, no matter what the source or the channel is. It’s worth noting that sometimes the buyer’s journey (aka customer journey) is depicted in more detail with over half a dozen stages, like in this graph:
However, awareness, consideration, and decision stages are the three key ones. We will discuss these three buyer’s journey stages through the lens of email marketing and drip campaigns and show you what content and approaches can be used at each stage to convert more people into the next one. You can download this detailed guide in infographic form here: Awareness, Consideration, Decision: How To Convert AT Every Stage Of The Buyer’s Journey.
Awareness is the first stage of the customer journey. During this stage, the customer realizes their problems and tries to define their own pain points. This is when they come across your service or company – while researching their problem. At this point, it’s important to provide the targeted audience with more information about your company or products in a calm and educational way. The less salesy and promotional your content is, the better – the person is not loyal to your brand yet, so it’s easy to scare off your potential client if you get pushy.
Numbers show us just how important it is to help the customer in their research if you want to convert them further: 81% of shoppers research before buying, with 75%* of time shopping is spent on research only. Before you make your move, make sure you can answer the following questions:
✔ What are the buyer’s challenges and goals?
✔ How do buyers educate themselves on their goals and challenges?
✔ What are the results of doing nothing?
✔ How do buyers prioritize their goals?
There are multiple types of free content you can use in your email sequences to convert more people from Awareness to Consideration stage. It’s best if this content is easily sharable – in B2B there is on average 7-20 people involved in the purchase process:
To make your content easy to discover, use stage-specific SEO keywords. For this buyer’s journey stage, “how-to”-queries are the most common. Here are a few examples:
As you can see, this stage relies heavily on shareable, optimized, educational content that helps your potential customer, not sells to them.
Consideration is the second stage of the buyer’s journey. At this step, the potential customer is a little familiar with your product or service, and is evaluating the problem, its urgency, how it can be solved, and whether it really needs to be solved here and now. Your goal is to show them all the ways their problem can be solved, how beneficial it will be for them and how you and your product can help. You also need to show how you are better than the competitors.
At the consideration stage, 60%* of customers want to get in touch with a sales manager. Make sure your sales reps are ready to answer any customers’ questions, but first see if you can answer the following:
✔ What types of solutions are the buyers searching for?
✔ How do buyers educate themselves on these solutions?
✔ How do they realize the pros and cons of every alternative?
✔ How do customers decide on the best option?
Once again, content can help you convert more people from consideration to the decision stage of the buyer’s journey:
As for SEO, these are the queries that work best at this stage (as shown on our own example of the email finder tool):
The decision-making stage is the final – conversion – stage of the buyer’s journey, at which your potential customer makes a decision based on their research. Your goal is to help them make a positive decision and finally become your client. That’s when the final conversion happens.
By this stage a target person has become more loyal to you and you should use this to educate less and promote more. 65% of B2B customers claim that the vendor’s content influences their buying decision, so this is your time to shine. As always, make sure you can answer these journey stage-specific questions:
✔ What do customers appreciate about your offer the most?
✔ What scares them off?
✔ How many people are involved in the decision-making process?
✔ What influences the decision?
✔ Do buyers expect a trial before making the final decision?
✔ Do prospects have to make any preparations before making a purchase?
If your sales reps did a good job at the previous stage, you won’t have a problem answering these questions.
As for the content, the best promotion is the product/service itself, so here’s what you can offer to improve conversions:
Here’s all the data you’re going to need in organizing your buyer’s journey content in the form of a shareable infographic:
Different stages of the buyer’s journey require different types of content to convert a person from one stage to another, as well as make the final conversion to a client.
For the awareness stage, use content that is at least 90% educational and just 10% promotional. Remember that a potential client has just stumbled upon your business and they can easily be scared away by content that’s too promotional or pushy. Make your content feel and look useful, interesting and shareable.
For the consideration stage, use content that helps understand the problem, the value of your solution and the results your client can get. The more value-showing your content is the better. Keep it 30% educational and 70% promotional. Remember: focus on the problem, your solution, and positive results.
For the decision-making stage, use content that helps you actually sell your product or service. Personal contact in the form of a demo or an expert opinion is a great chance to showcase your expertise, your product and win the deal. Your content should be 90% promotional and maybe just 10% educational – your goal is to sell now, at this stage your potential client is already “hot”.
Which content do you use to improve your conversions in the buyer’s journey? Let us know in the comments!
*All data sources are noted in the Resources part of the infographic above.
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Hey, really wonderful article, recommend to all to read. Thanks and keep sharing!
As a marketing analyst I found this piece to be very beneficial, I look forward to implementing some of the tips I received!
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