For nearly two decades, B2B marketing organizations have focused heavily on attracting and engaging users with website content. And as the data below from Hubspot reveals, the strategy works. Generally,...
For nearly two decades, B2B marketing organizations have focused heavily on attracting and engaging users with website content. And as the data below from Hubspot reveals, the strategy works.
Generally, B2B sites receive many more unique visitors per month than B2C sites, or all other sites:
# of Unique Monthly Website Visitors | All Websites | B2B Websites | B2C Websites |
---|---|---|---|
1 to 10,000 | 39.6% | 41.2% | 39.1% |
10,001 to 40,000 | 24.2% | 25.5% | 23.8% |
40,001 to 100,000 | 21.0% | 16.7% | 22.5% |
100,001 to 2 million | 13.9% | 14.7% | 13.7% |
2+ million | <1.2% | 2.0% | 1.0% |
For most B2B organizations, however, simply attracting visitors is the easy part. Getting these visitors to self-identify by filling out an on-site form — to download an ebook, for instance — is hard. Really hard.
We conducted research to find out why.
In a recent survey conducted by 6sense Research, respondents reported that, on average, only 3.5% of their web visitors filled out forms.
This number is consistent with findings from other research:
In our study, we found statistically similar form-fill conversion rates across industries (such as technology, manufacturing, and professional services), across regions (APAC, EMEA, NorAm, LatAm), and across company sizes.
Interestingly, SVPs and C-level marketers tend to have rosier views of these conversion rates (4.2%) than respondents who were closer to the action (3.4%).
(Note: As 6sense Research continues to collect more data, this result may change, but it comports with other findings, which will be presented in a future article. The data suggests that executives differ markedly in their assessment of an organization’s performance from their frontline employees.)
The many thousands (or millions) of visitors who never complete form-fills should play a more important role in how B2B organizations recognize and prioritize selling opportunities:
My 25+ years of experience as an analyst at SiriusDecisions and Forrester strongly suggests that within the leads data of a typical B2B organization, 1.5 to 2.5 individuals per buying group fill out on-site forms. The rest conduct research and consume content anonymously.
At 6sense, our ratio of form-fills to account is around 2. As organizations adopt more targeted, account-centric go-to-market practices, these ratios tend to grow. (After all, when an organization increases its marketing investment on a smaller set of accounts, the natural, most logical outcome will be more anonymous traffic and more form-fills from that set of accounts.)
Since the data say that for approximately every three unique visitors who fill out a form, there are 97 visitors who don’t, it stands to reason that out of all the individuals from a single buying team who fill out a form, many other team members do not.
Even stipulating that buying team members are more likely than others to fill out forms (which we have no evidence to support), there’s still likely to be more anonymous visitors from a buying team than there are those who fill out forms.
The conundrum of getting anonymous visitors to convert into form-fillers isn’t a new one.
Organizations have tried to improve form-fill conversion rates for as long as there have been forms. In the early days of digital marketing, most organizations put all high-value content behind forms, hoping to capture visitors’ contact info. But after years of being hounded by incessant sales calls and emails, people are now very circumspect in how and when they fill out forms.
So, rather than demonstrably increasing form-fill rates, more forms tend to lead to greater frustration on the part of buyers — and less ability for vendors to influence them.
Recently, more and more companies are removing their on-site forms and enabling users to freely access content. These companies reckon that when real buyers are in-market to buy, they’ll eventually reveal themselves.
This is the strategy that 6sense both employs and recommends to its customers. It’s explained in detail in our CMO Latane Conant’s book, fittingly titled No Forms, No Spam, No Cold Calls. On our own website, we’ve consistently decreased the volume of content behind forms while also doubling revenue year-over-year for three consecutive years. (Our current form-fill conversion rate is less than 1%.)
But to do so and remain viable requires that you use the signals provided by anonymous visitors to finely tune the organization’s focus on deals that are in-market. This means de-anonymizing web visitors and — for organizations with multiple solutions — tracking which solutions anonymous visitors are showing an interest in.
Here’s a simple thought experiment that reveals the importance of these anonymous visitors:
De-anonymized visitors are not necessarily a substitute for visitors who self-identify. However, a similar thought experiment reveals that a certain number of anonymous visitors will trump the value of an MQL.
For example:
In the real world, this puzzle is even more complex because in many cases, you won’t just have MQLs. You’ll also have form-fillers who aren’t yet MQLs, plus MQLs, plus anonymous traffic.
Add third-party intent signals to the mix, and you have a very robust, but complex, set of signals with which to identify buying teams.
A modern approach utilizes all available intent signals across the entire buying and selling process. Acquire and combine third-party intent signals with de-anonymized web traffic, pre-MQLs, and MQLs to create one powerful, coherent signal of which accounts are really in-market.
This is the approach I advocated for at SiriusDecisions and Forrester for years, and it remains the approach I advocate here at 6sense. In fact, helping B2B organizations solve this “97% problem” is why I came to 6sense. Our customers harness the power of the other 97% of website visitors to prioritize selling opportunities for their teams.
These selling opportunities convert to customers at a substantially higher rate than others — at often more than double the rate, in fact.
So let’s recap:
It’s time for B2B marketers to give up their designs on increasing conversion to form-fill rates. They should instead create compelling content targeted at the right personas, then use all buying signals — both anonymous and known — to prioritize opportunities for their teams.
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