How to Use Data About B2B Buyer Behavior to Improve Conversions

TMO GroupMay 29, 2014
How to Use Data About B2B Buyer Behavior to Improve Conversions

Nowadays, there are more and more eCommerce websites being published. Unless you’re selling low-ticket items that cater to impulse buyers, most of your visitors won't buy from you immediately after visiting your website. They usually shop around at different merchants and find both cheap and high quality one.

Smart marketers create sales funnels to change visitors into leads and nurture those leads into buyers. They encourage people to join email lists, request price quotes, or schedule product demos. Those initial steps are very important to recognize leads and separate them from your visitors.

What's the best way to try this? Most B2B businesses understand the value of this, but a majority of battle with execution. However you use data-driven insights to formulate your individual lead outreach "best practices" and convert more customers.

Lead Generation is Just the First Step

"Sales" gets to be a multi-step process if you're working with expensive, complicated B2B products. As explained in the excellent book, B2B buyers view selling as less of a transaction and numerous beginning of a fresh relationship. The psychology shifts as price and complexity increases.

A lot of B2B marketers nail the lead generation part, nonetheless they struggle with regards to follow-up and conversion. Maybe they depend on instinct or copy what their competition is doing. However they would use buyers' behavioral data to streamline their process.

Once you're selling expensive services or products, even slightest improvement on your lead conversion-process may lead to a substantial improvement for your business after a while.

Use Data-Driven Insights to Strategically Increase Conversions

If you’re still establishing your business, you might not have the requisite traffic or transactions to extrapolate meaningful insights from your data.

Fortunately, Software Advice, a company that helps buyers choose software to meet their specific needs, published a comprehensive Online B2B Buyer Behavior Report. The Software Advice team analyzed the behavior of over 6 million U.S. visitors who visited Software Advice’s commercial landing pages. The report shares data-driven insights into when B2B buyers perform research, when they convert into customers, and how to best follow up with leads through strategic outreach.

Even if you haven’t collected a lot of data about your own visitors’ behavior yet, you can benefit from Software Advice’s insights.

Key Takeaways from the Software Advice Report

Here are the salient points from the B2B Buyer Behavior Report:

1. Speed Is Everything

Software Advice drove traffic to landing pages. These landing pages encouraged visitors to submit a form providing their telephone number and requesting someone from the Software Advice sales team to contact them.

If the Software Advice sales team called a lead within 5 seconds of receiving their information, they qualified 30% more leads than their average rate.

How to Use Data About B2B Buyer Behavior to Improve Conversions image fast response higher qualification 600x299

A delay as little as 11 minutes proved costly. These leads qualified 5% less than the average rate, and it only got worse the longer the length of the delay. When you’re selling high-ticket items, this could create a tremendous blow to your business.

How to Use Data About B2B Buyer Behavior to Improve Conversions image 11 minute delay lower qualification 600x320

 

The B2B Buyer Behavior Report distinguished between two types of lead contacts – direct and indirect – and recommended different approaches for each. Direct contact, according to the report, was when a lead requested a price quote, product demo, or more information. In those scenarios, a swift outreach was instrumental.

If your leads are establishing indirect contact with you (this could be something like submitting their email address to download a lead magnet or access other gated content), there’s less need to reach out to them so aggressively.

2. The Middle of the Week Had the Most Buyer Activity

The B2B Buyer Behavior Report also revealed significantly higher traffic levels, conversion rates, and qualification rates in the middle of the week than any other time.

Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays were Software Advice’s highest activity days.

How to Use Data About B2B Buyer Behavior to Improve Conversions image midweek high activity 600x380

 

The demands on your sales team will probably fluctuate throughout the week. Recognizing the importance of a speedy follow-up (see insight #1), you’ll have to ensure you have enough resources available for these high-activity days. If a lead submits a form on a Thursday, but your sales team can’t get back to them until Friday, they’re less likely to quality than if you had followed up on Thursday.

Software Advice also recommended scheduling sales team meetings on Mondays and Fridays to account for higher demand in the middle of the week. These two days are also preferable for sales team members to attend conferences, personal appointments, and take time off for vacations.

3. Buying Activity Was Highest During Working Hours (and Peaked at the Lunch Hour)

Software Advice received most of their traffic – 53% more than their average rate – between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. CST. It wasn’t just traffic that spiked, either. Visitors became more receptive to converting (filling out a form on a landing page) and qualifying between 9 am and 12 pm.

How to Use Data About B2B Buyer Behavior to Improve Conversions image higher conversions work hours 600x393

 

Traffic levels peaked at 12 p.m. Traffic for that hour was almost double the average rate. This suggests that a lot of B2B buyers do research during their lunch hours.

How to Use Data About B2B Buyer Behavior to Improve Conversions image lunchtime peak

 

What does this mean to you? Have your sales team at work and ready to go at the beginning of the workday. If you’re on the West Coast, this could mean having sales staff at work as early as 6 a.m. (when most East Coast residents are starting work).

Another key takeaway: make some of your sales team available during the lunch hour, or you risk missing out on the highest-activity time of the day.

Traffic and conversion rates tapered off in the early afternoon and throughout the evening with one exception. Between 9 p.m. and 11:59 p.m. CST, Software Advice’s conversion rates actually increased 13% higher than average.

How to Use Data About B2B Buyer Behavior to Improve Conversions image late night conversions 600x281

 

This time window could be a good opportunity to send emails, whitepapers, and other content designed to nurture leads. Your sales team isn’t around, but you can still make the most of that high-converting window.

4. Conversions and Qualifications Were Seasonal

For Software Advice, conversions peaked during the first few months of the year. The report attributes this to budget renewals and new funds becoming available.

Something interesting happened during the summer months. Fewer leads submitted forms on landing pages than average, but a higher percentage of them were qualified through a follow up phone call with Software Advice’s sales team. This is probably because the sales team had more time and resources available to focus on fewer leads, making for more effective follow up.

These seasonal fluctuations were unique to Software Advice’s business, so they might not apply to you. Ultimately, you’ll have to collect and analyze your own visitor data to spot any seasonal shifts.

5. Holiday Buyer Activity Was Unpredictable

The B2B Buyer Behavior Report also analyzed visitor data around holidays to determine their impact on activity levels and the ideal lead outreach strategy.

The report found that the following holidays (in the U.S. market) were “worth taking off,” as visitor activity and conversions dropped off dramatically:

How to Use Data About B2B Buyer Behavior to Improve Conversions image holidays to take off

Other holidays experienced less dramatic decreases in activity and conversions. If you have the resources available, consider keeping your sales team (or part of your sales team) in the office on these days:

How to Use Data About B2B Buyer Behavior to Improve Conversions image holidays to work

Software Advice also made an interesting discovery about the week before Christmas. They found that, during that week, visitors converted at the same rate as they did on other business days in December. So it would be worth working during that time if you can.

A Lead Outreach Strategy You Can Tweak to Fit Your Business

Creating the best possible lead outreach and conversion strategy is a game of subtle, incremental improvements. It’s this continual optimization, combined with tailoring your website to generate more leads on the front end, that will pay off for months and years to come.

The perfect system for you will depend on what you’re selling and your target market. But you can use the insights from Software Advice’s B2B Buyer Behavior Report as a great jumping off point to establish your own best practices. Then you can tweak your approach over time using data you’ve collected about your own visitors’ behavior.

More details, please refer to : eCommerce website development

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