When I talk with IT business owners struggling to generate more leads, clients, and revenue from their cloud services websites, I see a shockingly common problem: Nearly all of these websites have only one or two ways for a visitor to become a lead.
In most cases, you’ll find a Contact Us page. Now granted, some Contact Us pages are better done than others.
The lousy Contact Us pages try to hide the company’s physical location and sometimes even its phone number.
The good Contact Us pages not only alleviate website visitor anxiety by providing offline contact information, but the forms that capture the data also do a good job of walking the tightrope between:
But the bigger issue: Generally, the only people who will fill out a Contact Us form are either
While attracting those with that immediate buy urgency may sound appealing, it’s not quite as cool as it seems.
In the modern B2B buying process, 83% of the sales cycle is over before decision-makers talk to any vendor.
What’s happening during this time period? Your best prospects are becoming educated and empowered in ways that were unthinkable as recently as five years ago.
So if you want your cloud services company to be perceived as a thought leader and trusted advisor, it’s critical that your business get found in that first 83% of the sales cycle – where your content and educational resources help website visitors begin to fall in love with your company. (“Wow! This stuff is awesome! I’ve been looking for resources like this for weeks! What else do they have to say?”)
You need a way – actually lots of ways – for website visitors that are a good fit, in many cases a great fit, to be able to raise their hands and convert to leads, even if they won’t be ready to buy for a few weeks or a few months.
Most B2B decision makers go through three distinct buying cycle stages when looking at cloud services websites:
In order for your website to be effective at engaging with those that are very well qualified but not yet ready to buy today, your website must have different kinds of content, including premium content gated behind landing pages, for website visitors that are currently in the awareness or consideration life cycle stages.
If your website fails to address the needs of early-stage prospects, it’s no better than a car salesperson who refuses to talk to people who aren’t ready to sign on the dotted line immediately.
Remember the reason that you need lead generation in the first place: Without it, your website is only capable of interacting with those who are ready to buy on the spot on the very first visit!
How effective is your cloud services website at engaging different kinds of ideal buyers who are a great fit and very highly qualified but not yet ready to buy today? Let us know how you’ve addressed this issue in the Comments box below.