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      5 Ways to Make Sure Your Sales Team is Ready for Inbound Leads

      5 Ways to Make Sure Your Sales Team is Ready for Inbound Leads

      After years of cold-calling and prospecting, your sales team is now (or soon to be) receiving inbound leads for the first time. The question is, are they ready? In our experience, most sales teams are not; they ignore the key differences between inbound (warm) leads and traditional (cold) leads – and in doing so, squander countless opportunities.

      Read on to find tips to help you and your sales team avoid these mistakes.

      Tip #1: Adjust your sales pitch

      When making cold-calls, the salesperson has a lot of ground to cover. They’ve got to make it through the “survival stage” – introduce themselves, the company, its products & services; they have to understand the prospect’s pain points and gauge their level of interest – ideally, before they hang up the phone (or delete the email). With inbound leads, this conversation has already taken place by the time you contact them.

      If done effectively, the inbound leads will already know the basics about your company. They will know about your services and products. More importantly, you will already have a good idea of their level of interest, depending on their conversion point(s). So, the conversation (or email thread) should focus on providing additional information; to answer their remaining questions and move toward closing the business. The salesperson will be able to quickly position themselves as a trusted advisor based on the useful content that has already been seen by the downloader.

      Tip #2: Know the offers

      Most sales teams are more than happy to receive an influx of inbound leads, but if they don’t know where the leads are coming from – and what the prospects are interested in – the conversations will be shallow, short and unproductive.

      If you’re generating leads from whitepapers, eBooks, and webinars, your sales team must also be familiar with these materials.  Often, the marketing team will create a new piece of content and distribute it internally, via email as a “heads up.”

      We suggest administering a short quiz on the contents and then letting the sales person follow up on these leads after they’ve passed the quiz. This is tough love, but it will ensure the salesperson can have an intelligent conversation with the prospect.

      Tip #3: Know their behavior

      If your company is leveraging inbound marketing, there’s a very good chance that you’re collecting and analyzing data on user behavior. So before your sales team reaches out to an inbound lead, make sure they can answer some basic questions. What steps did the prospect go through as they converted to a lead?  What offer did they convert on? What other pages were viewed on your website, and for how long? How should I approach this conversation? Have a tip ready to give to a prospect based on the information they are downloading.

      A little research upfront on the part of the sales team will save them a great deal of time down the road, which brings us to our next pointer.

      Tip #4: Prioritize

      Not all inbound leads are created equal. A lone whitepaper download will be lower on the inbound totem pole than, say, a “request a demo” conversion, which shows more legitimacy of a prospect.

      While your sales team should be following up with all leads, it goes without saying that they should spend more of their time on the leads who have expressed more interest in the product or service. Inbound leads are not “beggars” anymore; they are “choosers”.

      Tip #5: Give it time

      A typical sales team will hit the ground running with outbound leads, calling and contacting leads almost immediately. With inbound leads, however, they need to take their time (in more ways than one). For example, when a prospect downloads a whitepaper, don’t call them immediately – they probably haven’t even opened the document yet! Instead, set a reminder to contact them, depending on the nature of the lead.

      A pricing inquiry, for example, should get an immediate response.

      Give them at least a day for a whitepaper or case study download. Don’t be too eager.


      These are just a few quick tips on enabling your sales team to excel in an inbound marketing environment.

      For a more in-depth look at how you can get your sales team ready for inbound business, reach out to us!