Strictly Marketing Magazine July/August 2016 Issue 4 | Page 19

Not Managing as a Practice In most companies, lead management is not conceived or executed as a specific practice. Rather, it is habitually managed as an ad-hoc set of disparate activities that have grown organically over time. The Lead Management Framework (LMF) below details the six key areas of an effective Lead Management practice. Establishing Metrics If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it. Peter Drucker. Let’s begin by admitting if we can’t measure it, we can’t manage it. Taking the time to develop a set of performance Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for lead management is a key step to creating a practice that results in predictable revenue. A KPI is a value you choose to measure. It might be tactical (measures the effectiveness of your marketing activities), operational (measures the efficiencies in your processes), or revenue related (measures attribution, pipeline and revenue). Defining a Sales Ready Lead Step 2 in the Lead Management Framework is to carefully define a sales ready lead. This key activity begins to define a common language used by marketing and sales and presents the ideal opportunity to begin a business collaboration with sales. A sales ready lead is determined using demographic data (size of company or title) and digital body language (online actions). The value of digital body language is continuous in that it helps score a lead (part of defining sales ready) and provides on-going insights for making better sales pursuit decisions. Creating One Common Lead Funnel with Stages and Statuses Step 3 in the Lead Management Framework uses the common language e