Chances are, your company is online, and you’ll be making some attempts to generate leads online. However, perhaps you’re relying on guesswork, or don’t have a proper strategy in place. Maybe you’re relying on outdated online B2B lead generation tips, or aren’t using multiple methods cohesively.
Whatever you’re currently doing, it’s undeniable that there’s untapped potential to get more leads online, and it can be a real disappointment when you realise there’s a B2B lead generation channel you’ve not been taking advantage of.
So, we’re going to start at the beginning. We’ve put together this quick guide to help you understand exactly how to get more B2B leads online. Let’s get started.
Before we get into this guide, let’s first understand what exactly B2B lead generation is.
B2B lead generation involves attracting businesses that could become potential customers of your products or services. It's the first step in any B2B marketing or sales strategy and is focused on turning those potential customers into paying clients.
Unlike B2C (Business-to-Consumer) marketing, which targets individuals, B2B lead generation centres on reaching key decision-makers within organisations. This means understanding the target company's needs, and challenges, and how your solutions can address them.
Having a proactive B2B lead generation strategy is essential because it helps you create a consistent flow of new business opportunities.
A big part of B2B lead generation is to develop a narrative that speaks directly to your ideal. This ensures that the leads that you attract for your sales team will be engaged and more likely to buy. In fact, B2B lead generation, when done correctly.
Evaluating the success of your B2B lead generation initiatives is crucial. There are two parts to B2B lead generation, the first is online visibility and the other is conversion.
We’ll now take a deep dive into the key strategies for improving both.
When looking at improving the amount (and quality of) B2B leads you’re generating online, you need to first take a step back, and ask yourself, can my ideal customers find me?
After all, if your customers can’t see you online, they can’t engage with your content, and ultimately, won’t convert into leads. No matter if you need to understand whether you are being found online, or if your customer is even aware of your online presence, the answer is the same. Start with how much traffic you’re generating to your website.
Your current website traffic will give you an indication of how many potential customers are finding you successfully online. While not all this traffic has the potential to become leads, you’ll at least have a starting point for how you can convert a good number of users into customers.
Understanding how much traffic your B2B website receives and where these visitors come from should be your first priority.
To do so, check out Google Analytics.
If you don’t have Google Analytics (GA) set up on your website then do so immediately. Setting up your account is straightforward, requiring you to:
GA provides an often overwhelming level of detail but at its core, it provides valuable insight on how many people visit your website and how they’re doing so.
Not only will Google Analytics tell you who is visiting, but it can tell you a whole lot more about demographics, region, interests, browsers used, and general behaviour.
For example, if you’re a construction company based in the NE of England and you’re receiving a lot of traffic from Newcastle, Australia, you know that something needs to be amended.
By doing exercises like this, you’ll begin to form a picture of when, where and how your potential leads are engaging with your site.
Your content management system (CMS) can usually help you with web traffic analytics too. Take Hubspot, for example. Hubspot is far more than just a CMS - this element of the tool can help you pinpoint where your visitors come from. With this information, you can begin to build a strategy and plan which helps you augment the channels which provide the least value.
Though it might seem daunting at first, seeking to understand exactly how users are coming to your site allows you to analyse your online presence at an overall level. Once you have metrics on where users are coming from, you’ll be able to determine where you have a good online presence, and where you need to improve.
Based on these metrics, you’ll be able to form a strategy to boost your web traffic - our first method to generate more leads online.
Getting enough people to your website is of paramount importance to any online B2B lead generation strategy. It’s simple really - if no one is engaging with you online, how will you educate, inform, and sell to them?
Fortunately, there are a lot of things which you can do to improve both the quantity and quality of the traffic hitting your website and as a result, boost your online lead generation.
Here are the top 5 ways of improving traffic:
Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) remains one of the most important strategies to get noticed online. Climbing the rankings onto the first page of the major search engines not only boosts your online presence but can also directly help you attract and convert visitors into qualified leads.
The specifics of SEO change quite regularly, but the core principles remain pretty consistent. Fundamentally, when forming a strategy for SEO, you should:
When it comes to SEO for B2B lead generation, it’s best to start at the beginning. Even choosing the right keywords can be difficult, but fortunately, we've got you covered. SEO is the first step in developing a long-term strategy for online lead generation.
You read right - SEO is a long-term strategy. Crucially, it’s not a quick fix.
But if it’s not going to help me now, we hear you ask, why suggest it?
Think of SEO like water - people will always look for the easiest route to their solution. If you rank highly (and ideally, on the first page) you're far better placed to get visitors through the door, so to speak.
Especially in the B2B world, no potential buyers are going to waste their time searching for your business anymore. Times have changed.
Putting the work in to climb the rankings can get you anywhere between 25 - 40% of all traffic for a particular search term or keyword. So trust us, SEO is more than worth it, even if it does require patience.
This has probably just whetted your appetite for SEO knowledge. We’ve got you covered with our comprehensive look at SEO. For a deeper dive into the world of SEO for B2B websites, consider reading our comprehensive guide.
Ah, the ongoing debate for B2B companies everywhere. Cue questions such as:
“Should we really be using social media for our B2B lead generation?”
“Do B2B buyers even use social media?”
And our personal favourite:
“Why not just use outbound instead?”
Despite us now being firmly in the 2020s, we still regularly hear these debates. We don’t really understand where the myth that if you work in a B2B industry you don’t use social media has come from, but quite frankly, it’s garbage.
While it’s true that not every person you’re looking to target will use social media regularly, you simply cannot afford to completely ignore it altogether. Especially if you’re looking to generate more leads online.
Nearly 80% of marketers said that they saw increased traffic with a little as 6 hours a week invested in the right sort of social media work.
“Right” is the key word here.
By encouraging the B2B world to use social media, we’re not suggesting that a legal company should start making TikToks - but matching your social strategy to your audience.
Often in the B2B space, the “right” sort of social media work consists heavily of LinkedIn, which provides over 46% of all social media traffic to B2B websites.
LinkedIn in particular is particularly useful to B2B companies, as it allows you to:
It also proves particularly useful for not only driving traffic to your website, but acting as a funnel through which you can nurture visitors into leads, and qualified leads into paying customers.
But it’s not just LinkedIn you should be focusing on to generate more leads online.
Social media channels that have traditionally been shoved aside by B2B companies are fast becoming increasingly popular among their target audience.
Take Instagram for example. We’ve experienced people say that Instagram “just isn’t relevant” to their audience, which in some cases might be true, but the reality is that (especially in the aftermath of the past year) more people than ever are using social media to connect with others - and that includes your business.
Research shows that 40% of the workforce at most average companies are millennials - millennials who love to use Instagram. And as this workforce ages, B2B companies are going to have to keep up.
Even Facebook, a channel which has traditionally been seen as poorly performing for B2B businesses, has its advantages.
While the younger generation has found new ways to play, a lot of the older generation remains on Facebook.
That means that, for the most part, the CEOs, the decision-makers and the buyers are all still on Facebook.
Additionally, another social media channel that has skyrocketed in popularity is YouTube - which, when looking into audience research, has some pretty surprising stats.
According to research, YouTube is most popular with users 35 and under, but only slightly. 73% of Americans aged 36 to 45 use YouTube, along with 70% of those aged 46 to 55 and 67% of those 56 and older.
This shows a different pattern from other social channels, where users in older age groups tend to decline.
This is game-changing for B2B companies. Why would you want to miss this lead-generating opportunity?
If you’re still by some miracle not convinced that social media is a tool to benefit your website lead gen issues then read our blog, Six Reasons you should be using social media for B2B lead generation.
But if you’re thinking:
These stats are all well and good, but where do I begin with a social media strategy when I’m not too familiar with it?
Start small. Begin with something achievable that will allow you to maintain constant usage and then, as you start seeing website traffic increase and begin to understand what works for your audience, you can develop it.
We recommend a simple 3-step process:
Based on the principles above, we’ve got a more comprehensive guide to developing a social media marketing strategy. Read it here to help you start driving traffic and generating more leads online.
Link building is the process of gaining hyperlinks from other websites to your own, and it’s a great way to boost traffic and improve lead generation. A link from a highly-visited website with a good domain ranking could not only lead to a surge in traffic but more potential customers.
If the link is from a relevant website to your own - even better.
The leads you will get from these types of links will be genuinely interested in your product or service, and therefore more likely to engage with your business, and even make a purchase.
There are 9 ways, as identified by Axon Garside’s link-building experts, to start building valuable links on your site:
Read more about these 9 areas and how to implement them here.
“Are all links born equal?”
No. Search engines can frown on the use of certain links and penalise the website. As a result, it’s best to be cautious about dropping links in the following areas:
Ah - finally a method that works in the short term!
Well, that is, if correctly targeted. Not only is digital advertising extremely quick to generate online leads, but it is also scalable and predictable. A godsend when you’re looking to accurately forecast results & ROI.
The obvious downside to these avenues is the ‘Paid’ & ‘Pay’ aspects.
Costs can quickly mount and become unsustainable. But that being said, if you have the budget, and need to get leads online in the short term, paid advertising is likely your best bet.
But before you get your chequebook out, consider these ‘dos and don'ts’ of using paid advertising to generate leads.
Do:
Don’t:
This is the holy grail if you’re looking for rapid, almost immediate results. If you need more convincing that it works, check out our blog - Paid Social Media: Does it work?
Email remains one of the most effective means of communication and is proven to generate good quality B2B leads online.
As a B2B organisation, you should have a stable list of contacts you can send updates to, such as blog subscribers. Then, whenever you post a new blog (or any other piece of content) you can send an email to all contacts who will then be directed to read the piece on your website.
To take it one step further, you can segment your email lists so that content is only sent to contacts who are likely to be interested. This way, not only will you boost your traffic, but visitors will be more willing to be nurtured by your business - meaning you can work to convert them into leads, and then pay customers.
Email is particularly useful as part of an inbound marketing campaign, as you can create lists based on specific buyer personas.
Unfortunately, there is a caveat associated with email. It’s not always a feasible solution.
With GDPR, obtaining an effective database is more complicated than it once was. The upside of this is that the people you do have within your database should be relevant, interested parties who, at the time, may not have been ready to buy.
The downside is that developing a rich database of contacts often requires good traffic and conversion - which we’ll come back to later.
Learn how to rejuvenate your email marketing for online lead generation in our blog.
So, that covers a sizable chunk of options when it comes to boosting traffic to your website as a fundamental way of generating more leads online. However, getting a decent level of traffic is only the beginning.
You may have users coming onto your site regularly - but is that all they’re doing? If users are simply entering your site, having a look around, then exiting swiftly - this is a major problem. They’re not taking action, and therefore aren’t converting into leads.
Let’s take a closer look at what this means, and where you can improve.
If you just jumped to this segment, it might still be worth casting your eyes over the first section of this guide.
After all, you can never have too many people visiting your site - and going back to the very beginning is a great way to start generating more leads online.
If not, we’re glad to hear that you’re getting good traffic to your site. But there’s clearly still a problem.
People are aware of your online presence, they might be engaging with your content now and again but they just aren’t converting.
What does it actually mean?
A conversion is classed as when someone completes a desired action. In doing so, they show intent and, usually, identify themselves. This can include signing up to your blog, filling a form, sharing content on social media, or even purchasing a product.
If you’re getting a lot of visitors but they remain anonymous, then you need to be improving conversion. Luckily, there are proven techniques to employ which will go a long way to helping you out in generating more leads.
But before you can improve anything, you have to understand what you’re looking to improve. That’s your conversion rate.
To calculate your conversion rate, you divide the number of conversions by the number of visitors and multiply that number by 100 to get the percentage. With that percentage in hand, you can get to optimising.
Conversion rate optimisation is the process of increasing the number of people converting into leads on your website, no matter where they came from.
Like many things in inbound & digital marketing, CRO is a cross between science and art. Data should lead your experimentation, but sometimes gut feeling and a spark of creativity will help really turn your conversion rate around.
Here are four areas of your website that have the potential to largely benefit from conversion rate optimisation.
The homepage is typically the most viewed page and first port of entry on your website - making it a haven to capture leads, and a prime candidate for CRO. Without overloading potential contacts & customers with too much information, you should clearly emphasise relevant offers or sign-up buttons. If you want more leads, give people a reason to stay or remember you.
Additionally, chatbots which offer to support your visitors as they tour your site can help both improve their experience and when done right, can even gear them towards a purchase.
Experimenting with your pricing page can be the difference between a sale and a rejection - making it absolutely vital for lead generation. Altering how prices are viewed (pricing intervals), making it easier to read more information about services and products, or providing easy access to speak to experts or get a personalised quote call-to-actions (CTAs) will undoubtedly guide those who are interested towards a sale. Featuring pricing is a fear for many B2B companies, but if you’re looking to generate more qualified leads, it’s one of the easiest places to start. After all, what’s the point in spending time and money nurturing a lead only for them to drop out down the line because they could never afford your services in the first place?
It should go without saying that your blog is key to improving your lead conversion rate. It’s a landing point for so many people looking to gain thoughtful content online, and it provides an opportunity for you to persuade them to stick around. Using CTA buttons or subscriptions to provide further insightful content are a must on your blog articles, as they allow you to find out more about your visitors.
Subscriptions also mean you can gather more information on your visitors, and use email marketing to send them content that serves to nurture them towards a sale.
Landing pages are built almost exclusively to get your visitors to take action - making them a vital tool for online lead generation. They are regularly used to gate content or encourage people to register for an event, and as such, have to be prominent in your optimisation strategy if you want to generate more leads.
Landing pages are usually pretty easy to edit, to A/B test, and to experiment with, so go crazy - the possibilities are endless.
This leads us smoothly into the next section.
The language of CRO is the language of experimentation.
Come up with a hypothesis, test it, and use the data to influence your future experiments. The process is evolving and iterative. If you fail, you fail quickly, sure - but the good thing is you have the data to avoid it in the future.
Sometimes data supports how you choose what to do to optimise lead generation and conversion. Other times it can feel like the most arbitrary changes - such as changing a CTA button’s colour - can alter the dynamics of a page.
That’s not a bad thing, you just have an audience that prefers red buttons to blue ones. It’s small differences such as these which can make a huge difference in the amount of leads you get.
Perhaps the most common form of experiment is the A/B test.
An A/B test is about splitting a web page, for example, into an A and B version, and slightly altering the second version of the page to test a hypothesis against the original. You determine the timeframe for the test and then use a CMS like Hubspot, which has this functionality integrated within, to randomly assign visitors to either page A or B as they enter.
After a given period of time, if the B version of your page has received more interest then you amend the page accordingly. The best practice and most systematic approach would be to alter a single facet of the page each time. This enables you to precisely identify which variable has improved lead generation, and impacted the conversion rate.
Think of A/B testing as a means of proving or denouncing your hypothesis and a valuable tool to support your actions when gaining buy-in from stakeholders.
Probably the most obvious question to ask when discussing CRO is…
Do you have anything with which a visitor can convert into a lead on your site?
The most common means of getting someone to convert into a lead online is through the use of calls-to-action (CTAs). CTAs do what they claim to do. They get people to act. They can come in many shapes and sizes, such as forms, ‘learn more’ buttons and social sharing links to name just a few.
So, do you have any?
Without any form of CTA then you may as well not have a website in the first place. Plain and simple, you're missing out on lead generation opportunities. And because of this, you may be losing potential revenue.
If you’re looking for a great introduction to CTAs and the types which could add value to your site then Hubspot is a great place to start.
But if you’re looking to boost what you already have then we can help. At Axon Garside, we follow these rules:
Top tip: Optimise your CTAs by language, location and device in order to deliver a more personalised experience is an indispensable tool available to marketers.
Heatmap tools such as Hotjar give further insight into how visitors are interacting online.. With heatmaps implemented on your site, you can see exactly where people click, and how far down they scroll.
Clicks on a heatmap show clear intent. Most of the time those clicks are going to correspond to a button or hyperlink but not always...
Take an example from one of our blogs. There’s been a sizable number of clicks around the term ‘B2B website’. If the data suggests people want to know more about a certain topic - appease them.
Next, consider the scroll maps. If you can see that 80% of your audience makes it 50% down your page and then there’s a noticeable drop off by the time you reach the 60th percentile, where should you place your CTA button?
It’s worth implementing heatmaps across your site and assessing the placement of your CTAs. You could find out that your less-than-average conversion rate is in part down to the placement of your forms and CTAs.
Heatmaps provide some of the science and data to substantiate your experimentation and are a quick and easy way to rectify conversion issues on your website. Based on your findings, you may find new ways of converting your visitors into leads that you’d never before considered.
For the end user, chatbots are increasingly the norm. In many cases, they are the first ‘person’ a potential online lead will ‘talk’ to from your business. This makes your chatbot your first chance to make a good impression.
As the technology matures, people are becoming far more comfortable with bots. If programmed properly, people know they’ll get the answer they need without the hard sell. This is key. If you programme your chatbot to be genuinely helpful, there’s almost no doubt it could help you generate more leads online.
Just some of the cool things chatbots can do include:
Ultimately, chatbots are there to BANT (budget, authority, need and timeline) qualify or gather the information you need to turn a visitor into a contact or contact into MQL. Even if you don’t get them to fully qualify a visitor, there’s valuable data to be gleaned from the products or services they request more information about.
For example, if you used a chatbot to direct users to a relevant training course, not only would it prevent a user not being able to find what they’re looking for, but the time taken to sell is significantly reduced by giving them what they need upfront.
This has a knock-on effect on your conversion rate. Poor customer service is often the difference between closing and losing a sale. Having a chatbot in place ensures that if potential leads or customers have urgent questions, they can be answered right away.
If your prospects have queries resolved and questions answered quickly through a bot in the buying process - they’ll remember it and could recommend you to their peers.
You can even link your bot to your consultants’ and salespeople’s calendars to provide a seamless, real-time way to book meetings and schedule appointments.
When you’re even slightly serious about increasing your online B2B lead generation, then content is going to be a fundamental part of your strategy.
If you’re not creating content, then it could very easily be the reason why you’re failing to get leads online.
Content not only drives traffic but aids conversion. Think about how many times a company has sent you an email newsletter, or sent you a piece of content they somehow know that you’ll love. But how do they do it?
The secret is, there’s no secret.
You can learn a lot about your potential customers through what content they’re consuming. Even better, you can use that knowledge to better nurture them towards a sale. But to do this, you need to be regularly creating content.
But how?
Well, creating content is like a muscle. The more you do it the stronger you get. The better your knowledge of a subject matter is, the more trusted you will be, and the more conversions you will see as a result.
If you’re regularly sharing content on social media platforms and distributing content via email, your blog pages will be some of your most visited.
But are you making the most of potential leads coming to these pages? Make sure you are, by:
Including CTAs on all blogsYour blogs should end with calls to action for a relevant eBook or offer in exchange for a reader’s information. This is a surefire way to start generating more leads.
Making it easy for your blogs to be shared
Social sharing buttons are CTAs too. In the short term, they may seem less useful than a filled form or requested quote but you should never underestimate the power of peer advocacy. If the reader deems it worth sharing then they must also know people with similar pains and problems - generating further leads.
Reviewing your best-performing content
Use your CMS to identify which blog pages convert best, and see if they align with the most visited pages. If so, consider writing more about this subject area, as there’s clearly interest.
If not, identify the differences between the pages. The most visited pages likely have subjects (or titles) which intrigue the reader, but there’s clearly something stopping them from converting. Try rewriting them or mixing up the content a bit to get results.
Businesses often pivot internally and fail to reflect this throughout their presence online. This is especially true in the current climate, as organisations look to react quickly and adapt to the new normal.
If there are even the slightest changes to your business that may affect new and existing customers, make it clear online. Alter the messaging on your site, publish social posts, create a video - whatever you do, just communicate. Language that worked well previously may no longer work with new value propositions or USPs.
Reading dry, text-heavy content will begin to bore even the most ardent bibliophile, and will completely dissuade the time-pressed buyer you’re trying to attract.
If you do need to use a lot of text then:
Make it easy for people to engage with your content. This will help them convert.
Cross-reference your content styles and format with your personas and the buying stage.
Many businesses lose patience with a content approach because they repeatedly post blogs and fail to see any progress.
The following isn’t a rigid format nor is it exhaustive but is usually a pretty good guide to types of content where they are most effective:
In this stage, use content such as:
Keep it light. Keep it helpful. Use this to support the prospect’s journey as they identify their problem.
This is where you really want to nurture your leads into customers. Use content such as:
Your potential leads are now looking for who will help them with their pains. Make it obvious that your offering can help.
The last mile. Secure their business with content such as:
Final decisions are taking place. Help yourself stand out. Can you attract people with a reduced price or attentive customer service/pre-sales?
Once you start mastering which formats resonate most with your audience take your personalisation one step further and think about implementing smart (or custom) content across your site.
Smart content allows you to alter your content based on the interests of the visitor or previous browsing habits. As with most online lead gen methods, smart content creates a more personalised experience for the visitor by removing content that doesn’t interest them so they can focus on what they really need.
It sounds difficult but there’s technology out there to make this sort of personalisation relatively pain-free. For example, users of HubSpot Marketing Hub Professional and Enterprise customers can create smart CTAs, forms, and rich text modules on landing pages, website pages, or email.
Intelligent use of smart content can do wonders for your CRO.
You’ve managed to create a personalised experience for visitors to your website, how else can you improve your lead generation and conversion rate with content?
User-generated content!
People want to hear from people you've worked for. They want to hear how you did from the clients themselves. Even if case studies usually need client approval, you can be creative with the story. Reviews and content created by the client - which you can't edit - paint a truer reflection of your business relationship.
Help turn visitors into leads by letting other people wax lyrical about your work.
Congratulations. You made it to the end... or you didn't and you've skipped to the end to download it and read at your leisure.
Either way, there's a lot for you to unpack and implement here. The bottom line is, in order to generate leads online, you need a cohesive strategy that doesn’t rely on one method. But more importantly, you need to be sure that your online presence is sound.
That’s right. You need a good website. And if yours isn’t up to scratch - it could be time for a new one.