5 B2B Best Practices to Get More Website Leads

5 B2B Best Practices to Get More Website Leads

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When it comes to B2B lead generation, what impacts the most?

Many B2B business houses tend to spend a lot of time, pouring water into leaky buckets. Rather than fixing the bucket i.e. the marketing funnel, they pour more water i.e. traffic into the bucket to keep it to the brim. This tendency leads to inflated acquisition costs and below-average results in terms of generating leads.

Landing pages are most crucial, particularly- the forms. Forms separate your leads from non-leads. Structures on your website indicate on your conversion rates and overall lead generation results.

Let’s say around 1000 people visit your landing page, maybe about 1% tends to convert. The fundamental reason is that most people tend to procrastinate, some feel that they will convert late, and some tend to find a different alternative. So what is to be done now? An urgency arises, in such a situation to turn at the moment. Here comes the main gameplay of optimizing your website for conversion. It is an ongoing process. There is always a next step you can take to bring in more leads and make that 1% go up the chart.

You must be feeling a dire need to optimize your website for lead generation. Questions might arise in your mind like how do I improve my landing page? What strategies should I follow? How to get more website leads?

Exclusively for you, we are covering website lead generation best practices that will help experienced business owners to take the next step in optimizing their website for lead generation and conversion, Let’s begin!

A website is one of the most potent tools most business owners possess when it comes to generating leads.

  • All potential new leads should be brought back to your website aka remarketing
  • When a person visits your website, there are several ways in which you can get them to convert i.e. (content marketing, email marketing, lead nurturing, Social media marketing)

Map Your Customer Journey and Website Flow

It is evident that when a person visits your website’s homepage, it needs more than some kind of action in order to convert and become a lead. If each step is not transparent, it becomes hard for visitors to convert.

A clear path needs to be set for visitors to follow through the website to convert from just leads to buyers. The more, the merrier is the motto. It means that the website must draw more traffic and every page of your website has to correspond to the ideal customer journey that you want visitors and leads to follow.

Every website and growth agency lead generation efforts start and end with that path, implying that every web page you create has to serve as a specific stepping stone toward conversion.

Every step should build a bridge towards the next step.

One of the ways to approach this outlook can be using Google Analytics Behavior Flow and filter for website visitors who become your best leads and best customers. It indicates which pages target audience visited along the way and help you identify where in the journey potential leads who did not convert fall off.

Google Analytics Behavior Flow

Build One Landing Page for One Persona (Buyer)

One of the biggest mistakes that most B2B business houses make with their website is that they use the same content to attract different segments of their customer base. If you create a landing page designed to convert all of your buyer personas, chances are, it will not be so effective since every buyer has a different opinion, mindset and preference.

It is therefore needed to create multiple landing pages –

one for each of your buyer personas

Let’s say you create a landing page exclusive that addresses the pain points of your audience, and another landing page for your visitors who visits due to interest, create one landing page for end-users focusing on your product and a separate landing page for their managers, so on and so forth.

Breaking out separate landing pages in that way, can get even more target audience and is effective to bring in “quality leads

Send a Consistent Message All Over Your Digital Presence

The message you are sending to your target audience, if inconsistent, creates a mismatch in their expectations. If your website does not do what it promises its target audience, then it leads to

  • High exit rate of the visitors
  • Lower conversion rate
  • Poor user experience

Issues like High exit rate, high bounce rates, and low session durations can also negative effect.

According to Google, “the experience you offer affects your Ad Rank and therefore your CPC and position in the ad auction.”

The solution to these problems is to ensure everything that leads visitors to a given page of your website sends the same message and sets the same expectations.

Example –

  • Your advertisement copy – paid social media ads, display PPC ads, Google Ads, etc.
  • Your SEO, meta title and meta description
  • Social media posts

Get Your Capture Form Right

If you want to convert website visitors into leads, then you need to have some kind of capture form included in your website design. That is “Basic Marketing 101“.

To generate better-qualified leads, you will need to take it a step further and optimize your capture form for not only your unique audience but also for your business.

The best method is to offer something your audience deems valuable in exchange for their information. Basic -” helps them solve a problem” like a 30-minute consultant call or a quick chat.

Balance the type and amount of information you gather (like phone numbers and other contact information) with that perceived value. The more value your visitors expect to get from you, the more information they will be willing to hand over.

Conversion optimization activities, optimizing your form’s Call To Action and submit buttons also falls under this best practice along with a combination of placement, web design, and A/B testing.

Use Retargeting to Capture (Who Didn’t Convert)

No matter how consistent and compelling your website might be, there will always be visitors who fit the persona of your best leads but still do not convert – the worst part of digital marketing. It does not imply that those potential customers disappear and they cannot be converted. This is where Remarketing “ makes its marks.

The biggest disadvantage of retargeting advertisements only target one individual, and most of the times that do not work for B2B businesses. You need to find tools that will allow you to target retargeting advertisements to an entire business/organisation. For this, it is recommended to use website visitor identification software along with some retargeting tools that focus on B2B.

Conclusion

Majority of website visits end without conversion, but there is always something more you can do to get more qualified companies to convert into leads. With the best practices above, you can take it to the next step and start generating more and more qualified website leads and increase your business profitability. Experiment with them to see exactly what works for you. Test the methods that convert the most, test the lead magnets that will convert best. Keep testing until you find what works best for your target audience and this helps you acquire more leads, make more sales. Tell us what do you feel?

via Noupe https://www.noupe.com

April 9, 2020 at 10:00AM

Orange Whip

Orange Whip

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Orange Whip

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In the right hands, a whip can be an incredibly painful and precise weapon. But most of the whips we’ve seen are made from leather or paracord. This TikTok clip posted by masterlolik_yt shows how a heavy length of chain can be even more dangerous as a whip as it literally makes oranges explode on contact. More here.

fun

via The Awesomer https://theawesomer.com

April 8, 2020 at 02:45PM

Making Skateboard Lumber

Making Skateboard Lumber

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Making Skateboard Lumber

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We’ve seen lots of nifty objects made from old skateboard decks, but what Woby Designs is showing off here is something different. By laminating together 20 wood decks, he was able to create a usable lumber with a colorful pattern running through its center. The prep work looks like the most time-consuming part.

fun

via The Awesomer https://theawesomer.com

April 8, 2020 at 12:30PM

Netflix now lets you lock your personal profile with a PIN to keep kids (and roommates) out

Netflix now lets you lock your personal profile with a PIN to keep kids (and roommates) out

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Want to let your kids poke around Netflix without them wandering their way beyond the kids section? Got a roommate who keeps inexplicably forgetting to use their profile and is totally screwing up your “Continue Watching” list?

Good news! Netflix is now letting users set a PIN to keep individual profiles locked down.

The new feature comes as part of a wider update this morning focusing on improved parental controls.

Other new features include:

  • Filtering titles based on their maturity rating in your country. Useful if you want someone to have access to more than just the kids section while still blocking off anything beyond, say, PG-13.
  • Disabling auto-play on a kid profile to make Octonaut marathons a bit more… intentional.
  • Blocking specific titles by name. Need a break from Boss Baby? Maybe add it to the list for a while.

It’s all pretty basic stuff… but with more people working from home with kids in tow right now, it’s a good time for all of it to land.

Looking for the new controls? Visit Netflix.com in a browser, make sure you’re toggled into a non-kid profile, tap the dropdown arrow in the upper right, hit “Account”, then look for the “Profile & Parental Controls” section — everything should be nested in there, with individual settings for each profile on your account.

technology

via TechCrunch https://techcrunch.com

April 7, 2020 at 04:06PM

Oil Platform Fly-through

Oil Platform Fly-through

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Oil Platform Fly-through

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With the help of Tac Gas, drone pilot NURK FPV had the rare opportunity to visit an abandoned gas and oil platform. There, he zigged and zagged his aerial camera through the rusted out facility, capturing some fascinating and truly unique visuals. The over-water footage had us hanging on for dear life.

fun

via The Awesomer https://theawesomer.com

April 7, 2020 at 12:55PM

Firedisc Propane Cooker

Firedisc Propane Cooker

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Firedisc Propane Cooker

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This portable cooker works differently from other propane grills. Rather than open grates, the Firedisc has a smooth surface that can cook just about anything you’d make in a pan or a griddle, from eggs to pancakes to meats, and you can even use it as a fryer. Its curved edges keep food warm, while its center cooks nice and hot.

fun

via The Awesomer https://theawesomer.com

April 7, 2020 at 10:15AM

500-year-old manuscript contains earliest known use of the “F-word”

500-year-old manuscript contains earliest known use of the “F-word”

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"Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries!" <em>Monty Python' and the Holy Grail</em>'s family-friendly approach to swearing handily avoids the F-word.
Enlarge /

“Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries!”

Monty Python’ and the Holy Grail

‘s family-friendly approach to swearing handily avoids the F-word.

Scotland has much to recommend it: impressive architecture, gorgeous Highlands, and a long, distinguished intellectual tradition that has spawned some of the Western world’s greatest thinkers over several centuries. It’s also, apparently, home to a medieval manuscript that contains the earliest known usage of the swear word “F#$%.”

The profanity appears in a poem recorded by a bored student in Edinburgh while under lockdown as the plague ravaged Europe—something we can all relate to these days. The poem is getting renewed attention thanks to its inclusion in a forthcoming BBC Scotland documentary exploring the country’s long, proud tradition of swearing, Scotland—Contains Strong Language.

The Bannatyne Manuscript gets its name from a young 16th-century Edinburgh merchant named George Bannatyne, who compiled the roughly 400 poems while stuck at home in late 1568, as the plague ravaged his city. It’s an anthology of Scottish literature, particularly the texts of poems by some of the country’s greatest bards (known as makars) in the 15th and 16th centuries. According to a spokeswoman for the National Library of Scotland (where the manuscript is housed), “It has long been known that the manuscript contains some strong swearwords that are now common in everyday language, although at the time, they were very much used in good-natured jest.”

The five sections to the compilation are devoted to religious themes, moral or philosophical themes, love ballads, fables and allegories, and comedy, especially satire. The latter section is where one is most likely to encounter the swears, particularly in the poetry of William Dunbar and Walter Kennedy. Both poets feature in the poem where the notorious F-word appears: “The Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedie.”

Flyting is a poetic genre in Scotland—essentially a poetry slam or rap battle, in which participants exchange creative insults with as much verbal pyrotechnics (doubling and tripling of rhymes, lots of alliteration) as they can muster. (It’s a safe bet Shakespeare excelled at this art form.)

Dunbar and Kennedy supposedly faced off for a flyting in the court of James IV of Scotland around 1500, and their exchange was set down for posterity in Bannatyne’s manuscript. In the poem, Dunbar makes fun of Kennedy’s Highland dialect, for instance, as well as his personal appearance, and he suggests his opponent enjoys sexual intercourse with horses. Kennedy retaliates with attacks on Dunbar’s diminutive stature and lack of bowel control, suggesting his rival gets his inspiration from drinking “frogspawn” from the waters of a rural pond. You get the idea.

And then comes the historic moment: an insult containing the phrase “wan fukkit funling,” marking the earliest known surviving record of the F-word.

Of course, as the BBC Scotland documentary notes, that first “F#%$” is nothing compared to author James Kelman’s 1994 stream-of-consciousness novel, How Late It Was, How Late. The work is noteworthy not just because it won the Booker Prize and is written in a lowbrow Scottish dialect, but also because it uses the F-word over 4,000 times. Bannatyne would be proud of the legacy his first “F$#%” wrought.

Game of Thrones‘ Tyrion Lannister tries to negotiate with the insulting Frenchman from Monty Python and the Holy Grail in this mashup from Funny or Die.

geeky

via Ars Technica https://arstechnica.com

April 6, 2020 at 07:34PM

Disney Works From Home With Its At Home With Olaf Digital Series

Disney Works From Home With Its At Home With Olaf Digital Series

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You don’t gotta go to work work work work work work work…
Image: Disney Animation (Twitter)

Like the great Fifth Harmony once said: “You can work from home, oh oh, oh oh.” Disney Animation is keeping kids entertained remotely with a new digital series all about Frozen’s Olaf, created at home by animator Hyrum Osmond and voiced by Josh Gad.

As stated on Twitter, Disney Animation is releasing a new recurring digital series called At Home With Olaf. The episodes will spend time with Olaf as he gets into mischief, presumably while his human friends are social distancing. The first clip, which you can watch below, is all about Olaf having some fun with his snow buddies during a solo snowball fight.

More Olaf is not necessarily good Olaf—lest we forget the tragedy that was Olaf’s Frozen Adventure—but it’s great to see Disney working on some fun projects to help keep kids happy during social distancing. And hey, if it keeps animators working from home, all the better. This isn’t the only project Gad’s been working on during the covid-19 pandemic; he’s also been hosting regular storytime sessions online.

The first episode of At Home With Olaf is set to debut online later this week.


For more, make sure you’re following us on our Instagram @io9dotcom.

geeky,Tech

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

April 6, 2020 at 10:48PM

AppGyver launches Composer Pro, its new no-code editor

AppGyver launches Composer Pro, its new no-code editor

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AppGyver, a startup that has been on the forefront of low-code development since it first launched in 2013, today launched the latest version of its visual development platform. This update, dubbed Composer Pro, has been three years in the making and promises to overcome many of the limitations of today’s low-code environments. It allows developers to build applications for the web, PC, Mac, iOS and Android, using React Web and React Native — and can be extended with plugins for those frameworks. And unless you are a large organization, Composer Pro is available for free — and that includes the ability to use the platform’s database service, CDN and publishing tools.

“We want the Composer Pro to be used to really remove the last limitations of no-code and making no-code as powerful as writing code. That’s what it comes down to and that’s when a whole new world opens,” Marko Lehtimaki, the company’s CEO and co-founder, told me.

As Lehtimaki told me, the company already has plenty of enterprise customers and is cash-flow positive, so with all investors aligned, the team decided that it could give away its platform to individual developers, schools and startups for free. The company’s over 100 enterprise users currently include the likes of DHL and Fingrid.

While the core of the service is obviously the visual editor, a lot of the platform’s power resides in its tools for visually creating logic functions and managing your database, for example. As expected, Composer Pro offers plenty of pre-built UI components and logic flow blocks for building your first application. The company is also creating a marketplace where developers can share (and potentially sell) their own components.

“After releasing Composer 2, we laid out a vision for what we wanted to do next and this was really at the core of it,” Lehtimaki said. “How do we bring the same level of expression of programming languages to visual development? Basically what we thought that this means is that in practice, everybody likes building blocks and to create these big, complex structures, but we wanted to make it possible to create those building blocks themselves without any line of code so that there would be no place where you would ever need to add code.”

While previous versions of the service made an early bet on HTML5, the team is now all in on React and React Native. The company argues that it has spent a lot of time on optimizing the code it creates, beyond what most developers are able to do to optimize their own React Native projects. With that, the company can now take the same code base, with an adaptive design on top, and build apps for virtually any modern platform.

If you really need to, you can get your hands dirty and still write formulas and custom JavaScript by hand, for example, but for the most part, you shouldn’t have to touch any code to build even relatively complex apps with Composer Pro.

That, of course, is the promise of virtually all low-code services, including those from industry giants like Microsoft, which continues to invest heavily in its PowerApps platform, for example. Appgyver’s generous free account makes it worth a look, though, especially if you are an indie developer.

 

technology

via TechCrunch https://techcrunch.com

April 6, 2020 at 01:18PM