Marketing automation is a beast. Rare is the marketing executive who can clearly articulate what marketing automation is or how it works. Executives will budget for the monthly software fee without understanding that the software is the easy part.

But without content—reports, webinars, and follow-up emails—that expensive marketing automation software will be a big flop. Content is the fuel that makes any marketing automation system run.

From Stranger to Customer: Your Content's Purpose

Like it or not, marketing and sales is a self-service operation today. Buyers get an estimated 80% of the information they need online, well before they speak with a salesperson.

That information is what we loosely call "content," and it's the foundation of content marketing.

For marketers, the real purpose of content is to convert a complete stranger into a customer. Thus, the content you create follows the basic sales cycle.

Your content moves with prospects through the sales cycle. As people consume a piece of content, you use marketing automation software to simulate a person-to-person sale. You'll gain prospects' trust, determine their specific needs or interests, feed them the information they need to make an intelligent decision, and hand them the ideal solution on a silver platter.

Matching Content to the Sales Cycle and Marketing Automation

Your content doesn't simply consist of reports, articles, or webinars. Each content piece has a specific purpose that aligns with its place in the sales cycle, and that content will help you attract leads, capture leads, nurture leads, and segment and score leads.

1. Attract leads

A prospect may start as a complete stranger, or she may know of you or about your products. Either way, she's still a stranger until you can get her in your door. For lead generation, content can consist of the following:

  • Advertisements (online or offline)
  • Direct mail postcards and letters
  • Online articles
  • Trade magazine articles
  • Press releases

The purpose of this type of content is to alert potential customers that you might have something they want or need. Whether you're simply trying to get some brand recognition or make some sales, you've got to get people's attention first.

2. Capture leads

Attracting a lead isn't the same as capturing a lead. You capture a lead when she willingly gives you her contact information. In marketing automation terms, that lead capture occurs when the prospect completes your Web form, providing you with her name and email address at a minimum.

Enter your email address to continue reading

Content: Fuel for the Marketing Automation Engine

Don't worry...it's free!

Already a member? Sign in now.

Sign in with your preferred account, below.

Did you like this article?
Know someone who would enjoy it too? Share with your friends, free of charge, no sign up required! Simply share this link, and they will get instant access…
  • Copy Link

  • Email

  • Twitter

  • Facebook

  • Pinterest

  • Linkedin


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Sid Smith
Sid Smith is lead copywriter and marketing automation specialist for Albertson Performance Group. Sid has written on topics ranging from flex circuits to motherhood, but gets a real kick out of putting together the puzzle pieces of complex marketing automation strategies. Reach him via sid.smith@apg7.com.