Site icon Megan Horn

How to Use Simple Marketing Funnels for Lead Generation

I talk to a lot of business owners who are struggling to get customers. They’ve tried running ads and found little success. Usually, the problem is pretty easily pinpointed to one of the following issues:

In this post, I want to focus on the last one: funnels.

Direct response marketing works…after some warm-up.

I’m a huge fan of direct response marketing. It’s hard, but when it’s done right, the results are immediate and oh so satisfying.

But unless your product is an impulse purchase—picture a goofy t-shirt that’s under $30—direct response marketing just isn’t going to work without some audience warm-up.

It’s expensive and risky to try to go from cold lead straight to purchase on anything other than a low-cost impulse buy.

I work with clients to build funnels that help find cold leads—targeted appropriately so they’re people who need what you sell—and nurture them until it’s finally time to make the sale.

Why Funnels Work

Funnels are called funnels for a reason:

They funnel your clients through a journey. In general, you get narrower and narrower (and closer and closer to a sale) the further down the funnel you go.

Funnels work (when done right, of course) because you’re providing value to potential customers and letting them get to know you before they buy. You’re not taking cold traffic and trying to sell them. You’re building your brand and talking to the people who care about and need what you do/sell.

The Simplest Funnel

There are infinite ways to build out a funnel. From how you target the potential leads (Facebook ads, Google AdWords, etc.) to how you provide ongoing value to those leads once they’re in your funnel (webinars, emails, etc.), you can build millions of different funnel combinations. It’s about finding the funnel that works best with your customer journey.

When it comes down to it, the funnel illustrated below is the lowest common denominator for funnel simplicity.

It looks simple because it is. Of course simple doesn’t mean easy. I’ve seen a lot of example of this exact workflow bomb pretty hard. Here are the important elements of each step to help make sure the funnel will drive results.

The Offer

The offer isn’t an individual step in the funnel; it’s woven through the entire process. And, honestly, it’s a huge factor in a funnel’s success. If your offer feels fake or gimmicky, your audience will be wary. Some examples of strong offers include:

These types of offers are often referred to as lead magnets because, when done right, they attract leads that align with the types of customers you want to work with.

Traffic

The traffic you drive to your squeeze page determines the success of the campaign. If you’re driving traffic that doesn’t care about what you’re offering, they’re not going to convert.

In most funnels I work with, we’re driving cold traffic. Which means we’re using some sort of ad to drive visitors. There are plenty of other ways to drive traffic, but paid ads are usually the fastest way to test an offer, messaging, and funnel process and get leads rolling in.

The most important aspects of the ads are:

Squeeze Page

The squeeze page (also called a landing page or opt-in page) is where people land when they click your ad. The page should explain the offer, talk about why visitors should care, and have functionality to collect a lead’s information.

Important elements of a squeeze page include:

There’s a lot of back-and-forth on whether long-form or short-form landing pages work best, and honestly, it depends. This is another opportunity to test what works best with your offer and leads.

Thank You

The thank-you page in a funnel is an oft-overlooked opportunity to keep a lead engaged when you’re already top of mind with them. Some ways to take advantage of the thank-you page include:

The thank-you page isn’t the end of a lead’s journey, it’s just step 2. Use it to continue to build the relationship.

Email Sequence

Once you’ve collected a lead’s information (usually email address), you need to stay in contact with them. I see a lot of business collect emails and then do nothing with them. Aaaahhhh!! That’s letting revenue right out the door.

When you build a funnel, you should plan in lead follow-up strategies. Often, these are a series of emails sent automatically. But they could be phone calls, connecting on LinkedIn, or a variety of other options.

My go-to follow-up strategy is a series of 5-10 emails that first and foremost educate and provide value. You can mention your product/service, of course, but always keep it in the perspective of why the reader should care.

My Favorite Thing About Funnels

OK, I actually have two favorite things about funnels: automation and data.

Automation

Pretty much every step of a funnel can be automated…and can be done so very quickly. For things that are more complex to automate, I usually complete those manually until the funnel has been proven, then we automate.

I’ve met a lot of people who don’t understand just how much of the process can be automated. When it doubt, assume it can be automated.

Data

I love data. I like knowing whether specific marketing activities are working or not. Funnel allow you to track analytics and data from a lot of different angles:

Let’s Talk About Your Funnels

Does the information about funnels resonate with you? Have you tried it before but not been successful? Then let’s talk.