For my whole career, both in marketing and sales, I have understood the concept and importance of the sales funnel. Conceptually speaking, the traditional sales funnel starts with awareness being generated at the top of the funnel (the widest part) and then having the prospect work down the funnel through the stages of interest, consideration, commitment and eventually having a sale made at the narrowest part of the funnel. The funnel framework worked fairly well in providing the foundation for understanding what metrics should be concentrated on and where resources should be deployed.
But what happens in a world where prospects have so many more tools at their disposal to evaluate your offerings on their own or where they skip stages of the process all together?
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Banks Need to Build Foundation for Effective Multichannel Marketing
While the BAI Retail Delivery Conference in Las Vegas doesn't officially begin until today, hundreds of attendees participated in a series of pre-conference workshops, including a session entitled, "Improving Acquisition, Onboarding and Cross-Sell Effectiveness with Multichannel Communication" which I was lucky enough to present with Matt Wilcox from Zions Bank and Tal Harry from Richter7. The workshop was attended by representatives from banks of all sizes and in various stages of multichannel marketing development.
During the session, we had several formal and informal surveys to determine where this limited cross section of the banking industry was with regard to their marketing mix.
During the session, we had several formal and informal surveys to determine where this limited cross section of the banking industry was with regard to their marketing mix.
Labels:
ATM,
direct marketing,
email,
Facebook,
mobile,
multi-channel,
onboarding,
Twitter,
YouTube
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