{"id":45276,"date":"2019-10-25T17:39:20","date_gmt":"2019-10-25T21:39:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.drift.com\/?post_type=learn&p=45276"},"modified":"2023-07-10T12:33:18","modified_gmt":"2023-07-10T16:33:18","slug":"demand-generation","status":"publish","type":"learn","link":"https:\/\/www.drift.com\/learn\/demand-generation\/","title":{"rendered":"Demand Generation | The Demand Generation Marketing Guide"},"author":267,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"template":"","acf":{"title":"Demand Generation","cta":{"title":"Join 5,000+ customers using Drift to connect with their customers NOW.","body":"","button_text":"Get a Demo","button_link":"#getademo","button_text_two":"","button_link_two":""},"linked_articles":[{"article":"","thumbnail_image":false,"text":"Demand Generation Team Roles","external_link":"https:\/\/www.drift.com\/learn\/demand-generation\/demand-generation-team\/"},{"article":"","thumbnail_image":false,"text":"Demand Generation Metrics","external_link":"https:\/\/www.drift.com\/learn\/demand-generation\/metrics\/"},{"article":"","thumbnail_image":false,"text":"8 Demand Generation Campaign Ideas","external_link":"https:\/\/www.drift.com\/learn\/demand-generation\/demand-generation-campaigns\/"},{"article":"","thumbnail_image":false,"text":"Top Demand Generation Pitfalls","external_link":"https:\/\/www.drift.com\/learn\/demand-generation\/demand-generation-challenges\/"}],"hero":{"title":"Demand Generation","subtitle":"The Complete Guide","hero_image":false},"body_content":[{"acf_fc_layout":"text_section","header":{"title":"","style":"h2"},"body":"
One of the biggest challenges for today\u2019s brands is creating demand for products and services. That\u2019s why demand generation (also known as \u201cdemand gen\u201d) has become such a household name among B2B and B2C companies alike.<\/p>\n
But don\u2019t get us wrong. Demand generation isn\u2019t about forcing<\/em> demand or tricking people into buying things they don\u2019t need. It\u2019s about providing the right information to the right people at the right time with the confidence that what you\u2019re offering is the perfect fit for your customers\u2019 needs.<\/p>\n While demand generation marketing has a lot in common with lead generation, this strategy takes more time. It spans multiple touchpoints, campaigns, and offers and includes just about anything your brand does to generate buzz, awareness, and recognition.<\/p>\n The end game? Better conversations between buyers and sellers, which lead to higher conversion rates and more closed deals.<\/p>\n In this article, we\u2019ll go over:<\/p>\n Ready to learn? Let\u2019s go.<\/p>\n Demand generation is a marketing strategy that includes any activity that drives awareness and interest in your product or service. The ultimate goal is to create a predictable pipeline that will grow your business.<\/p>\n To do this, demand generation marketers aim to identify potential prospects based on behavioral data and guide them through a nurturing process so that the sales team receives high-quality, highly-qualified leads.<\/p>\n Demand generation covers all your marketing and sales initiatives at every touchpoint in the customer\u2019s journey \u2014 whether you\u2019re generating interest among potential buyers or upselling to existing customers.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Creating and promoting content is a big piece of any demand generation marketing strategy. After all, it\u2019s one of the most reliable ways to drive users to your website and bring them further along the buying journey.<\/p>\n However, if your goal is to generate awareness, you need a slightly different approach. Instead, your focus should be to build trust, increase brand recognition, and position your brand as the \u201cgo-to\u201d within your industry.<\/p>\n Building awareness goes beyond who you can get to write a guest post or the size of your social media following \u2014 all your marketing efforts should come together so that people will want your product or service. That means you need to be solving a problem \u2014 one that your prospects are currently struggling with or one they haven\u2019t yet realized they have.<\/p>\n The key to every successful marketing strategy is to offer solutions that speak to each specific buyer by addressing their unique pain points, readiness to buy, content preferences, and where they are in the sales cycle.<\/p>\n So, before you put pen to paper, start by defining the following:<\/p>\n At the beginning of the buying journey, the goal isn\u2019t to sell \u2014 it\u2019s to answer questions and educate prospects. Here, your job is to create content that helps people and generates interest \u2014 which, when done right, can position your brand as a thought leader and go-to resource in your niche.<\/p>\n At Drift, we created the Drift Learning Center<\/a> to act as a resource hub for both internal and external users. There, you can find all our thought leadership content, such as an introduction to Conversational Marketing<\/a> (a category we created!) and AI chatbots<\/a>.<\/p>\n We also provide books and reports<\/a> that cover a wide range of marketing hot topics, like this one \ud83d\udc47<\/p>\n Your buyers aren\u2019t interested in becoming another MQL \u2014 and your sellers need higher-quality leads. Find out why conversations<\/em> are the way forward.<\/p>\n Get the Book<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n After you’ve developed an understanding of your buyers and their journey, you’ll also want to learn which websites, industry publications, and other resources they turn to as they work toward making a buying decision. An intelligent public relations strategy helps brands generate buzz, build trust, and reach more people than your content strategy alone. Strong public relations fuels demand generation.<\/p>\n Free calculators, hashtag generators, and evaluation tools \u2014 a good way to create demand for your core product or service is by creating a free tool that relates to the pain point your brand solves.<\/p>\n Examples of free tools for B2B demand generation include Coschedule’s Headline Analyzer<\/a>, WordStream’s Google Ads Performance Grader<\/a>, and SproutSocial’s social media image resizing tool<\/a>. If not a tool, you could also offer something like a free report<\/a>.<\/p>\n From there, you can drum up interest for a solution you offer. For example, we built a tool to help people test their webcam<\/a> and test their microphone<\/a> as part of a demand generation strategy to generate leads for Drift Video<\/a>. And for buyers further down the funnel, we allow people to calculate estimated ROI with Drift<\/a> and test drive our solution<\/a>.<\/p>\n After you\u2019ve put your awareness-boosting strategies in place, the next step is to capture existing demand. Now, your aim is to reach the people actively searching for the solution you provide using persona-specific content, pay-per-click (PPC), and social ads.<\/p>\n Because the focus is on attracting users who are already interested in your solution, you can use gated content, as well as lower-funnel sales collateral like price sheets and white papers, that get specific about your offers. Keep in mind that your demand generation strategy should cast a wide (and relevant) net, touching as many channels and mediums as possible.<\/p>\n This graphic helps illustrate the different types of content used throughout the buyer\u2019s journey, often overlapping.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Most customers, particularly in B2B, interact with marketing content way before they talk to someone on the sales team. That\u2019s why a lead scoring<\/a> system is so crucial in demand generation marketing.<\/p>\n A lead scoring system allows teams to maximize their sales resources by defining when exactly a prospect is receptive to direct outreach. To do this, marketing and sales teams must get together to form a unified set of definitions for what makes someone a qualified lead, a hot prospect, or on the flip side, a bad fit.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Initially, you\u2019ll want to look at what your most successful leads have in common. Ask and answer questions like:<\/p>\n Dig into the data to find out which factors had the most significant influence on sales and, from there, develop a points-based system for qualifying leads. Then, your marketing and sales teams can work together to develop a strategy for targeting the right audience.<\/p>\n During the awareness stage, we mentioned that you might demonstrate your value to potential customers by offering free tools and reports. (For example, download this Demand Gen PDF<\/a> for easy reference later.)<\/p>\n To capture existing demand, you can use a similar strategy \u2014 only this time, offer the free resource in exchange for an email address, as opposed to a web-based tool with no strings attached.<\/p>\n Attracting high-quality leads and converting them into customers is both an art and a science. So, while it\u2019s important to have engaging and unique content, you also need to follow SEO best practices<\/a>, hit the right keywords, and craft content that captures audience intent.<\/p>\n But that doesn\u2019t mean you want to get lost in targeting specific buyer personas and keywords. Instead, think critically about what information your buyers need at every stage of their journey. Then, create content that actually answers questions people ask while focusing on long-tail, conversational keywords.<\/p>\n Amplify your content with paid search ads. You might use Google Ads to drive asset downloads, encourage newsletter sign-ups, or promote an e-book.<\/p>\n With paid search, it\u2019s important that you place your content in front of the people actively searching for related terms. So make sure you\u2019re aligning your digital advertising with your buyers\u2019 intent \u2014 that way, you\u2019ll be able to turn clicks into conversions<\/a>, and potential buyers into customers.<\/p>\n Drip marketing and remarketing campaigns keep your brand top of mind among those prospects who aren\u2019t quite ready to buy. Tactics like buying display ads allow you to passively engage with buyers still in the evaluation stage. By connecting with buyers through email or the sites they frequent, you can incentivize prospects to come back to your website with personalized offers.<\/p>\n It\u2019s no surprise that social media is huge for reaching potential buyers. According to Sprout Social<\/a>, nine out of 10 consumers say they will buy from brands they follow on social, and 86% will choose brands they follow over a competitor. But while social media is becoming a fundamental for demand generation marketing, social media algorithms have made organic growth much harder.<\/p>\n Paid promotion is essential for driving your target audience to long-form blog posts, lead magnets, and event sign-ups that will get them into the pipeline. Plus, social platforms like Facebook come with seriously powerful targeting tools like lookalike and custom intent audiences.<\/p>\n Not to mention, social media allows you to build a community of buyers and customers that are fans of your brand. You can help support that community by creating a space for discussion and offering trainings like we do with Drift Community<\/a>.<\/p>\n And if you haven\u2019t yet, follow us on Twitter<\/a>, LinkedIn<\/a>, Instagram<\/a>, and Facebook<\/a>!<\/p>\n Conversational Marketing<\/a> is a Drift staple because it\u2019s one of the best ways to engage buyers with targeted messaging and move buyers through the sales cycle quickly.<\/p>\n Instead of directing your audience to a traditional landing page with static forms, you can use conversational chatbots<\/a> to answer questions, gather information, and automatically qualify leads. Additionally, <\/span>chatbot software<\/a> offers more context than old-school forms and can be designed to uncover pain points, intent, and the product features that are most important to the buyer. Organizations with a strong sales enablement strategy will have an easier time turning buyer interactions into actual revenue. To make that happen, marketers need to know exactly what happens after a lead converts and offer support to the sales team in the form of price sheets, sales decks, case studies, and more.<\/p>\n Today\u2019s sales and marketing teams need to work together to give customers the best possible experience \u2014 and of course, develop a replicable process for closing deals, increasing deal size, and speeding up the sales cycle.<\/p>\n So, the goal of demand generation marketing here is to give sales the content they need to speak intelligently on any product, service, or segment and close more deals.<\/p>\n Learn how to align these two teams for the benefit of your buyers… and the bottom line.<\/p>\n Get the Guide<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n When marketers focus exclusively on blog posts, social, and advertising, they’re leaving out a good chunk of the buyer’s journey.<\/p>\n Internal content like sales decks and playbooks ensures that sellers have the information they need to maintain brand consistency and demonstrate expertise during any prospect interaction.<\/p>\n If your sales team doesn\u2019t have resources like playbooks, here\u2019s one to get them started:<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Often, companies believe that their problem is so unique that no one else could possibly understand it. But most of the time you should be able to point prospects toward a client who had a similar problem.<\/p>\n Customer case studies<\/a> are a great tool for closing the deal because they back your solutions with real-world data. Focus your case studies on benefits and results, calling out specific numbers. For example, in our SAP Concur case study<\/a>, we show how Drift influenced SAP Concur’s pipeline by $10M and became one of their highest converting channels.<\/span><\/p>\n But make sure to be careful about mapping case studies to specific customer segments, especially in B2B demand generation. Present buyers with a case study that doesn\u2019t resonate with their problem and you may end up with more objections.<\/p>\n Testimonials work well at every stage of the buying journey, but they can be especially useful towards the end \u2014 when buyers are looking to validate their decision.<\/p>\n While customers are free to write what they want in a review, like with G2’s customer reviews<\/a>, you can approach clients for testimonials so you have some control over the content. You can do this by interviewing your best customers and asking them specific questions about how your product or service benefitted them.<\/p>\n Whether you record a video testimonial or capture their praise in written form, you can use these testimonials across a wide range of demand generation strategies and channels.<\/p>\n Another critical component of sales enablement is automating repetitive, time-consuming tasks. Organizations need to have the right tools in place, including a content repository so salespeople can easily find the right information on-demand, a customer relationship management software (CRM) that keeps contact information organized, and automations that prevent essential tasks from slipping through the cracks.<\/p>\n Drift Chatbots<\/a>, for example, can be set up to remind salespeople to follow up, so they never forget to communicate next steps to the buyer. Before meeting with a prospect, sales reps also receive an email with a rundown of the ways they have interacted with your business \u2014 including marketing materials received, website visits, company info, and more.<\/p>\n On the marketing side, Drift Email<\/a> helps users send marketing emails that sound natural at scale, flag potential customer issues, and route replies to the right sales rep.<\/p>\n Additionally, Drift Integrations<\/a> automatically keep your marketing automation and CRM data updated \u2014 so all your data is unified and you get a holistic view of all customer records.<\/p>\n Interested in how Drift can help elevate your demand gen strategy? Schedule a demo<\/a>.<\/p>\n Many B2B marketing<\/a> professionals use the terms \u201cdemand generation\u201d and \u201clead generation\u201d interchangeably \u2014 but they\u2019re not the same. Demand generation raises brand awareness and increases demand for your product, while lead generation focuses on converting engaged audiences into quality leads.<\/strong><\/p>\n Demand generation is a long-term strategy that covers all stages of the customer journey. On the other hand, lead generation is a subcategory of demand generation marketing that focuses on the top of the funnel.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n And while lead generation<\/a> efforts involve collecting information from leads to nurture them into customers, demand generation is focused on putting your name out there and building trust with potential buyers. When measuring your demand generation marketing efforts, skip the vanity metrics and instead focus on lead quality and the impact your initiatives have on your overall revenue. Here are a few examples of what demand generation metrics<\/a> to measure.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Leads at the very top of the funnel are a leading indicator that your offers are appealing to your audience \u2014 but, if those leads don\u2019t have decision-making power, they aren\u2019t going to help grow your business.<\/p>\n So instead, track the number of visitors who book a\u00a0sales meeting<\/a>\u00a0\u2014 be it a discovery call or demo \u2014 to gauge how many high-quality leads you are acquiring through your demand generation marketing.<\/p>\n Another metric that will help you understand the quality of your demand generation marketing is the number of leads that turn into actual opportunities. This gives you insight into the quality of your leads while also allowing you to evaluate your lead scoring system.<\/p>\n Quick tip:<\/strong> If you\u2019re using chatbots<\/a>, don\u2019t compare the conversion rates between a traditional landing page with a form against a chatbot. Instead, check the lead to opportunity conversion rate for leads that originate through your chatbot vs. leads from other sources<\/em><\/p>\n Your average deal size represents the average value of each new customer in dollars. You can figure this out by dividing total revenue by the number of deals closed in a given time period.<\/p>\n Knowing your average deal size helps you forecast revenue from demand generation campaigns and decide what types of customers you should target and prioritize. And, by figuring out the average deal size of each channel, you can get a more granular view of your marketing return on investment (ROI).<\/p>\n In order to make sure your sales reps are on track to reach their goals, you can look at your sales pipeline value. This refers to the combined revenue from every qualified opportunity in your pipeline, which can be calculated by simply adding the estimated deal size for all leads in your pipeline.<\/p>\n You can also measure your marketing team\u2019s success by looking at marketing\u2019s contribution to the sales pipeline as a percentage. By calculating the amount of marketing sourced pipeline, your sales team will have a better idea of how many deals they need to source via outbound efforts.<\/p>\n Checking how many clicks you get on your CTAs is all well and good, but what really matters is whether your demand generation campaigns are generating revenue. Your customer acquisition cost<\/a> (CAC) tells you how much you spent to acquire a single paying customer from a specific demand generation campaign.<\/p>\n To calculate it, divide the total campaign cost by the number of customers acquired during the period you spent that money. When measuring CAC, you can also take into account the marketing headcount needed to manage and create these campaigns. This measurement of CAC is imporant for showing investors and company leaders how efficient you are at acquiring new business.<\/p>\n Similar to the previous demand generation metric<\/a>, cost per lead tells you how much you spent to acquire a single lead. You can calculate this by dividing your total campaign costs by the number of leads that come in.<\/p>\n Cost per lead tells you how efficient your demand generation campaign is, and it\u2019s useful for figuring out how much you need to spend to keep your funnel full. On the flip side, you can set a limit on your cost per lead to ensure you don\u2019t spend more on acquiring leads than you would get back in revenue. So, keep this metric in mind when planning new demand generation campaigns and calculating your demand generation ROI.<\/p>\n Customer Lifetime Value<\/span><\/p>\n How much will a customer spend over the course of their relationship with you? Customer lifetime value (CLV) measures the average profit you can expect to make per customer. It also reveals how well you\u2019re managing and engaging with your customers, and if there\u2019s room for improvement. You can measure this by calculating the average purchase value, then multiplying that number by the average purchase frequency rate.<\/p>\n How long does it take you to close a deal? Average sales cycle length provides a clear timeframe from first touch to a signed contract. To figure this out, add the time to conversion for every stage of your funnel. You can also measure the length of your sales cycle by channel to determine which channels to prioritize in your demand generation campaigns.<\/p>\n It\u2019s also important to understand how long your sales cycle is because this tells you when you can expect to see the full impact of your campaigns. If you know how long it takes for a lead from a specific channel to close, you can plan your demand generation campaign backwards and map out the interactions and marketing offers you will need to have throughout that cycle.<\/p>\n In essence, this is a measure of your company\u2019s profitability \u2014 so you can\u2019t leave this one out. This metric tells you how much revenue you\u2019ve earned from your demand generation marketing. To calculate it, take the amount generated from a campaign, subtract the marketing costs, then divide that number by the marketing cost.<\/p>\n Before you dive into planning and executing some new demand generation campaigns, it\u2019s worth looking at what other marketers are saying about their own demand generation initiatives.<\/p>\n Here are several recent demand generation benchmarks to give you an idea of how much companies are investing in demand generation, what they\u2019re prioritizing, and the impact they\u2019ve seen.<\/p>\n With how broad demand generation marketing is, it can get hard to keep your all initiatives in order \u2014 while making sure that all of your efforts are actually driving demand.<\/p>\n So, why not make your life a little easier?<\/p>\n Drift Conversation Cloud<\/a> brings all your revenue teams together with just one goal in mind: to have the right conversation with the right person at the right time. Whether you\u2019re in marketing, sales, or support, our platform ensures you\u2019re having relevant, meaningful conversations with your buyers and customers \u2014 all the time.<\/p>\n\n
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What is Demand Generation?<\/h2>\n
Our Top 3 Demand Generation Strategies<\/h2>\n
Demand Generation Strategy #1: Generating Awareness With Your Target Audience<\/h3>\n
Demand Generation Strategies Hinge on Well-Defined Personas<\/h4>\n
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Develop Top-of-the-Funnel Content<\/h4>\n
The MQL is Dead<\/h4>\n
Public Relations<\/h4>\n
Create a Free Tool<\/h4>\n
Demand Generation Strategy #2: Converting & Monetizing Existing In-Market Demand<\/h3>\n
Lead Scoring<\/h4>\n
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Start Developing (and Promoting) Downloadable Resources<\/h4>\n
SEO and Inbound Marketing<\/h4>\n
Pay-Per-Click Advertising (PPC)<\/h4>\n
Nurture Prospects with Email and Remarketing Campaigns<\/h4>\n
Social Media & Community Building<\/h4>\n
Conversational Marketing<\/h4>\n
\n<\/span><\/p>\nDemand Generation Strategy #3: Align Sales & Marketing Teams for Better Results<\/h3>\n
The Disconnect Between Sales and Marketing is Legendary.<\/h4>\n
Product-Specific Content, Playbooks, & Sales Decks<\/h4>\n
Case Studies<\/h4>\n
Testimonials<\/h4>\n
Use the Right Set of Demand Generation Tools<\/h4>\n
Demand Generation vs. Lead Generation<\/h2>\n
\nSince you almost always want to generate both demand and leads, it\u2019s a good idea to develop a demand generation strategy that captures leads while also providing them with the information they need at every stage of the customer journey, bringing them one step closer to becoming a customer.<\/p>\nDemand Generation Metrics: How to Measure Your Efforts<\/h2>\n
Number of Meetings Generated<\/h3>\n
Number of Opportunities Generated<\/h3>\n
Average Deal Size<\/h3>\n
Sales Pipeline Value<\/h3>\n
Customer Acquisition Cost<\/h3>\n
Cost Per Lead<\/h3>\n
Average Sales Cycle Length<\/h3>\n
Revenue Generated Against Budget Investment<\/h3>\n
Demand Generation Benchmarking Data<\/h2>\n
Demand Generation Budget<\/h3>\n
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ABM Solutions<\/h3>\n
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Driving Demand at All Stages of the Funnel<\/h3>\n
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Demand Generation Goals & Strategies<\/h3>\n
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Drive Business Growth with Drift\u2019s Conversation Cloud<\/h2>\n