There are many schools of thought and methodologies defining what inbound marketing should look like. Most of them position content marketing, social media marketing and SEO as the core of inbound marketing. From a 20,000-foot view, this has definite merit. However, with the right technology, enough content, well-developed personae and a good understanding of the brand, inbound marketing strategy can be much more stratified and robust.
The anatomy of a robust inbound marketing campaign has similarities to the human spine. The human spine has five ordered sections – cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacrum and coccyx – all of which are required to be in working order to live a pain-free, normal and productive life.
An inbound marketing strategy has five ordered sections, too – owned and earned media, landing pages, lead nurturing, sales interaction and retention. And all of them are required to widen the sales funnel, create acceleration through it and to optimize Marketing’s impact on revenue. If there’s a problem with any of the sections Marketing’s impact on revenue will not be optimized and the inbound campaign will be in poor health.
Owned and Earned Media
This is the section that most marketers equate with inbound marketing – publish lots of owned and earned blog posts and articles frequently, organically distribute them through social media and watch Google drive traffic from its SERPs. This process produces lots of benefits, but without a strategy for the other sections it will be difficult to show real ROI.
Purpose: Generate traffic, educate prospects, grow brand, produce thought leadership, build community, produce outside advocates, reduce churn
Tip: Publish blog posts with frequency and consistency. According to Kuno Creative’s Content Marketing Manifesto, publishing five to ten posts per week led to a 633% increase in leads versus just two to three posts per week.
Landing Pages
This is a critical aspect of an inbound marketing campaign. Having lots of good free content is great, but morally bribing website visitors for their email and IP address using gated content is just as important. Once this information is captured, the visitor is no longer anonymous and their content consumption can be tracked and scored. It also allows for future email communication.
Purpose: Capture email and IP addresses
Tip: Analyze and value the inbound and outbound marketing channels that led to conversion with attribution modeling. Use this data to adjust tactics in the first section.
Tip: Deploy A/B or multivariate testing to optimize call to action click-through rates and landing page conversions.
Lead Nurturing
With email addresses captured and other attributes known (other form fields, website behavior, social media profiles, IP address, etc.) lead nurturing, segmentation and scoring can begin. Delivering the right content on the correct channel at the best time separates the wheat from the chaff and empowers the wheat to organically identify themselves as sales qualified leads over time. It also creates an efficient method for identifying and removing unqualified leads from the funnel.
Purpose: Generate more sales qualified leads faster (widens the sales funnel while creating acceleration through it).
Tip: If lead nurturing is a new or unrefined tactic access Eloqua’s Lead Nurturing Toolkit for tactical refinement.
Sales Interaction
Marketing should only deliver leads that are worthy of a sales person’s time. Analyzing and adjusting lead score criteria over time is critical to ensure this happens. However, just as critical is the open flow of communication and lead feedback between Marketing and Sales.
If the inbound marketing strategy is effective, Sales should find their prospects to be highly educated, qualified and ready to do business.
Purpose: Efficiently generate customers
Tip: Connect marketing automation tools with a CRM to help facilitate closed-loop marketing and open communication between Sales and Marketing.
Retention
A big portion of the retention initiative is accomplished by producing copious amounts of earned and owned media, building passionate communities in social media and being highly visible online. These are all activities that should already be deployed if the inbound marketing campaign is healthy.
In addition, Marketing can produce and deliver advanced content created specifically for current customers. This content can be in the form of surveys, guides, cheat sheets, training videos, process infographics, etc. However, this can all be for not if deliverables aren’t fulfilled and expectations aren’t met or exceeded.
Purpose: Reduce churn
Tip: Marketers should keep open communication with fulfillment and account management in order to feel the pulse of current customers. This can help identify possible future churn to target with content before it’s too late.
In high school, anatomy class was a place for students to giggle about the curriculum. However, understanding and implementing the entire inbound anatomy presented above is no laughing matter. In today’s ultra-competitive environment getting inbound right can mean the difference between business success and mediocrity. Getting it right tomorrow may mean the difference between business success and failure.
About the Author: Chad H. Pollitt is Director of Marketing at Slingshot SEO. Since 2002, he has played an integral role in designing, developing, deploying, executing and tracking robust web marketing strategies for hundreds of companies and organizations and is an internet marketing expert. He holds a BS in Entrepreneurship from the Indiana University Kelley School of Business, an Internet Marketing Masters Certification from the University of San Francisco's prestigious School of Business and Management and is a Certified HubSpot Partner.
Eververs:
Thanks for the comment. Sounds like you're a pretty advanced marketer if the above is common for you. That's great to hear.
As the new internal Director of Marketing it's my job to efficiently deploy the above process as our marketing strategy. As an agency, we don't provide all of the parts of the strategy discussed above. However, that could change in the future.
Regarding your "scientifically grounded" question, I've worked with some variation and honed the above strategy over the last two and one half years. If by scientific you mean backed up by analytics and results the answer is yes. From a search prospective I consistently see triple digit percentage gains in organic traffic after deploying the above for six to 12 months. Hope I've adequately addressed your questions.
@CPollittIU
I must confess that I'm not yet using all the softwaretools to support the processes, but apply the processes itself.Thanks for your reply. Good to see there is some decent analysis behind this article
Great visual for future reference as you're planning out strategy. Sometimes just a quick, visual reminder like this helps you refine your strategy and approach. Nice. Noted.
I like these idea of content marketing publishing blog posts with frequency and consistency for generate traffic and second is tracking visitors by their ip addressees and email address. Your anatomy of inbound marketing is really effective to implement today for increasing traffic. Thanks for sharing this useful post with us.
I was happy to see some mention of optimization in the landing page section. Perhaps it's because I am on my own personal CRO soap box lately, but I have found that CRO and in fact optimization in general really needs to be part of every process. For example, it's not just doing the things you itemize, it's about doing them really really well. If you are doing a great job generating more organic traffic, but none of that traffic is converting, you need to figure out if the problem is that the leads you are generating aren't right somehow, or if where they are being taken on the site isn't right, or perhaps it's some of both.
You are correct in saying that, like a spine, a weakness in any one area is going to effect the performance of the whole person (or campaign).
This is something I really try to educate my clients about. Iin this case, since I am in-house, it's the CEO. I remind leadership not to get fixated on just traffic, or just conversion rate (although I do agree with Avinash Kaushik's idea that everyone, regardless of industry, should be fixated on bounce and abandon rates). High traffic, but a horrible conversion rate aren't going to grow a business, and vice versa. It's all of these things, done well, like you point out, that makes things really "go."
danatanseo:
Thank you for such a well written response. Couldn't agree more! We're two birds of a feather. . . chirp, chirp :)
@CPollittIU
Great post and graphic. Interesting correlation about increasing blog posts to earn so much more traffic. Thanks
It's so true, too. The increase in traffic and conversions is dramatic when you post 5 - 10 posts per week instead of a couple.
Hey, I tend to believe that any kind of system like this is useful as it gives structure to the approach so that people understand what it is they are doing and why they are doing it.
Just simply having that framework so your efforts are part of a strategic whole rather than just throwing out articles, landing pages, adverts, guest posts (etc) and hoping it works always leads to better results.
Loving Tofu, Mofu, Bofu as well. :)
Thanks Marcus. Glad you like the acronyms. I like them, too. So much in fact someone at HubSpot promised me a t-shirt that says "MOFU" on it.
@CPollittIU
I have the blog post part of the equation but my Landing Pages and optimization of those Landing pages needs a lot of work. I'd love more resources or at least some place start with Landing Page design and conversion techniques...
Great post... Thanks!
Hanley
You may want to reexamine the value proposition of the intangible assets offered on your landing pages. If it's strong you'll get conversions even if the LPs aren't optimized. I generally see conversion rates for whitepapers/ebooks/case studies/guides between 25% and 50%. Videos tend to convert between 10% and 20%. Hope that helps. . .
@CPollittIU
Wow! i have already applied these tips for inbound marketing strategy.i learned about this funnel approach (BOFU < MOFU < TOFU) few months ago.
I'd love to see more post focused on "inbound marketing" rather than just SEO. I love the holistic approach, and it the evolution to inbound marketing is happening a lot faster than we thing.
I'm glad to see that now I have applied these tips. I like your idea of content marketing. Thanks for sharing this wonderful post with us.
I love this breakdown. I offer a ton of free resources on my site for lead capture/generation, but haven't thought about prioritizing it in such a way.
Hey Chad, congrats on the promotion to the main blog and I as well will likely be using your infographic to explain these concepts to others. Thanks!
Thanks George! Glad you find the infographic useful.
Congrats on getting promoted to the main SEOMoz blog - tres cool! It is a great post and well deserved kudos to you.
Thank you very much for the lovely comment! I'm grinning from ear-to-ear :)
Hi Chad!Great graphic, that will make my life easier when explaining strategic decision to my clients.The only thing I miss is how SEO and Social (expressly specific tactics) may be use at TOFU, MOFU and BOFU level. Probably it was not the purpose of the post, but I suggest it to you for a version 2.0 of that infographic :).
Ciao
gfiorelli1:
Great suggestion indeed. I'm one step ahead of you :)The graphic detailing what you've described has been made already. I have it in slide decks, but not online yet. It works like this:
Picture the above graphic as the normal, every day activity of a business. When that business does a product launch is doesn't stop it's normal everyday activity, but rather, launches a unique and new campaign. Rather than a product launch, however, inbound marketers do an "offer launch" for each new offer at each stage of the funnel. This is called the Inbound Marketing Campaign Structure.
Complete TOFU Offer -> Create Landing Pages -> Create Lead Nurturing Campaign -> Email Prudent Lists -> Blog About the Offer's Topic + Distribute via Social +SEO -> Analyze & Adjust -> Rinse & RepeatComplete MOFU Offer. . . Same as aboveComplete BOFU Offer. . . Same as above + Analyze & Adjust or Close. . .The campaigns described above leverage SEO in the blogging/social section of the structure. It's also referenced in the bottom graphic (Promote Offer Section) of the following post:
https://socialfresh.com/content-marketing-is-not-as-simple-as-writing-a-ton-of-blog-posts-every-day/
Very solid post!! Enjoyed your strategy of capturing IP addresses and email addresses....
Hi,
Disagree with defining PPC and SEM as Outbound. If your content is contextual and you're creating individual landing pages to address the need based on the search, that's Inbound.
Scott Miller@tuxmiller
Fair argument. However, PPC and SEM are interruption based forms of marketing and pay to play. There's not much "organic" or "natural" involved. Essentially, it's rented space. True inbound on the other hand is the gift that keeps on giving. It's analogous to a mutual fund IMO.
@CPollittIU
Good point here. Thanks you for nice post and tips.
Chad, I agree with Seot0p. Thanks for your clear, sharp thinking on this point. It's helping me think through my own stuff. As a newcomer to inbound marketing, I find this discussion invaluable. It clarifies what would be otherwise murky.
Robert - I'm glad you find the post invaluable and wish you the best in your budding inbound career!
I'm with you on this one.
But, it's a fine, fine line sometimes.
If a user types a query into a search engine and is actually *looking* to find an ad, then it's inbound. But, most users don't go to search engines to find the right "contextual" ads.
Good point Dharmesh! Outbound SO good it provides lasting returns and is sought after using inbound means.
Luckily we have awesome blogs and industry media out there developing prudent stories on ads like HubSpot's blog and Adage. When I search for ads that's generally what I find.
The Old Spice commercials on YouTube are probably the best examples of what you describe above.
However, my message to the traditional marketers chasing Old Spice like results would be a paraphrased analogy from Samuel Jackson in Pulp Fiction, "We'd have to be talkin' about one charming m#$@rf&*& pig" :)
@ChadPollitt
Hi Chad,
Looks like I'm the only one missing this...what is TOFU, MOFU, BOFU?
Tofu, Mofu & Bofu are generic representations of the different levels of the buying cycle. Generically speaking they represent the awareness, evaluation and purchase stage of a content engagement over time. Hope that helps. . .
@CPollittIU
Oh, I also forgot to mention that they stand for Top of the Funnel, Middle of the Funnel and Bottom of the Funnel.
Ahhh that was the code I was trying to crack. Makes total sense. Thanks again for the clearly laying this out. It is especially helpful to the "non-marketers" on a team who need the visualization...
A very interesting topic explained in a very intuitive way, is a great post that has helped me a lot.
Thanks for your post. I actually don't know where to start. I've started my website have a great way to recruit affiliates and pay them great, but struggling getting traffic.
Any ideas are much appreciated,
Jody Heath
https://ourneucopia.com
Congrats Dude on getting promoted to the main SEOMoz blog main page :)Great Effort.
I'm puzzled as how to ethically get people to register for general content sites in order to capture data. When not providing a direct service I'm not sure how comfortable I feel about this.
Great Illustration! The point is, each aspect is vital and must work with one another. Like the functions of the major organs in our body, inbound marketing does it as well. No doubt this will be the outcome in the long run with marketing industry.
Great Illustration! The point is, each aspect is vital and must work with one another. Like the functions of the major organs in our body, inbound marketing does it as well. No doubt this will be the outcome in the long run with marketing industry,
This post with the easy to read illustration just made my marketing plan presentation a thousand times easier. Cheers!
whoah - I don't think that is realistic in many organisations and prefer to reduce the frequency for the quality and the quality posts that are sufficiently pre-seeded, researched and outreached. At the suggested rate of output it hardly allows time for adequate planning.
Paul - I've heard this argument from clients many times in the past. Blogging isn't rocket science. With the right plan in place that leverages employees, ghost writers, copywriters, brand advocates and experts, publishing 2-3 quality posts per business day is not very hard. I've been there and done that too many times. Besides, if a business takes your suggestion to heart the moment their competitor leverages the different content producing personae and hits publishing numbers like the above is the moment they're at a serious competitive disadvantage.
@CPollittIU
I think you are correct Chad, that # of posts is manageable. Everyone I talk to or see on SeoMoz is always mentioning how they keep notebooks for ideas of content. Chances are if you have simliar notebook, you can crank out some quality blog posts.
Interesting Chad what takes this great post to the next level is the HQ graphic which is pretty much digest able…
I have to agree with most parts of the article but where you said posting more will led to more lead ratio, here I want to add that quality of post should not be hurt or else instead of making the brand you might break it.
Overall a good read!
Agreed - quality, problem solving and passion-filled content is a prerequisite for doing well with content marketing. Thanks for the kudos BTW!
I just realized I'm only scratching the surface of the first level!!
Thanks for the roadmap!
Ruben
Thanks for the infographic and good tips - will print that one out.
Good Article about Inbound Marketing. Thanks for share your knowledge..
Thanks for the infographic, it's quite enriching. I see that most of the phases involve free giveaways (trials, products, whitepapers and so forth) so I guess small businesses couldn't afford most of these levels. Am i right?
A very good tips for someone like me who still looking for a great marketing strategy. I'd like to apply this on my own https://smartinternetbusinesssolutions.co.uk
I'd like your idea on marketing, please continue to share this kind of post. :)
Nice framework to consult from time to time.
Just a very helpful post for us just starting out , thank you very much
Thanks for the post!
It certainly helps to define a goal for each content channel. The graphic you have used is certainly a good starting point, but there are inevitably crossovers between different kinds of content and different aims.
For example, there can be whitepapers that are designed just to educate, or they can be designed specifically around converting certain leads to a certain action. Equally, a video can be designed to educate or convert.
I guess what I'm saying is that different channels of media and different kinds of content can appear anywhere in the funnel, provided they are used correctly in accordance with their userbase.
Some fantastic information in the post though, extremely well written.
Sambarnes90:<br />Thanks for the comment. You're 100% correct - the content examples above at the top, middle and bottom of the funnel will vary based on strategy, channel and industry. The above is just supposed to be an example of one way to approach it.<br />Ultimately though, marketers that robustly track their leads that turn into customers should be able to accurately map content by channel, topic, persona and sales cycle without having to guess.<br />I'm a firm believer in using advanced behavior analytics to deliver the right content to the right person on the right channel at the right time in order to optimize profitable consumer behavior.<br>@CPollittIU
Oops. . . thought this would take break tags. . . :(
Because this comment box doesn't support html tags :D
I'm glad to see that I already applied these tips. Always nice to see an analysis like this to keep me sharp so I'm not forgetting anything.
I'm just curious, are these findings the results of best practices within your firm or "scientifically" grounded (as far as SEO allow for that)?