The advent of marketing automation software has provided countless advantages to the marketing processes of companies that use it. One of marketing automation's biggest benefits is lead scoring. Marketers now have a much more precise way to measure the warmth of leads before passing them to Sales, thereby increasing conversion rates.

But lead scoring is still one area of marketing automation implementation that has a lot of marketers stuck. Here are three ways to smooth out the scoring process—and use it to boost conversion rates.

1. Decipher between 'interest' and 'need'

So, what exactly is the purpose of scoring leads?

Lead scoring is designed to first judge the interest level of prospects and then prioritize those leads. But what constitutes being "interested"? That's a harder question to answer; in fact, every person in an organization could answer differently.

"Interest" is not something that can be judged by taking a one-dimensional look at demographics. Interest is a combination of many elements built around another dimension that seems to get left out of the mix: the notion of need.

Need is the hardest element to measure, and it requires that marketers look deeper than the outer, demographic layer of their buyers. For that reason, you should start any lead-scoring exercise with the buyer persona-establishment process.

After all, people are just people... and they buy because of the same basic needs we all have. Those basic needs are supported by our individual personalities.

The absolute best way to build customer personas, therefore, is to survey the people who have previously purchased your products and services, and ask them questions about their decision-making process.

For instance, did they choose to purchase because the product would save them time or enhance their job performance? Are they motivated by advancement in their companies? Are they looking for a vendor to make them look good or a vendor that'll follow their directions implicitly? Are they skeptical? Are they trend followers or are they early adopters?

Once you've worked through the persona process, don't let the information you've obtained slip away for more traditional targeting. That'll get you right back to the old scoring process.

When we push through those basic indicators of potential buyers (e.g., location, job title), and get into their needs (how they make buying decisions), we can begin to score leads to better determine interest. That process does not happen overnight, and it should be re-evaluated multiple times throughout the year.

2. Take it down a notch

Marketers get excited about their elaborate scoring metrics that have quadrants and acronyms that correspond to combinations of titles and behaviors. Those scoring models don't necessarily scale, they're confusing to those outside of marketing, and—if the Marketing has turnover (as it's sure to)—they can get ditched because of a lack of translation from one year to the next.

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Three Ways to Improve Your Lead-Scoring Process

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Justin Gray

Justin Gray is the CEO of LeadMD. He founded the company with a vision to transform marketing via the use of marketing automation and CRM solutions. Reach him via jgray@leadmd.com.

LinkedIn: Justin Gray

Twitter: @jgraymatter