Business.com Conversion Tracking Released from Beta

May 19, 2009

Following a very successful beta test with over 70 participants, we’ve now made Business.com Conversion Tracking available free to all Business.com advertisers.

Business.com Conversion Tracking is now available to all advertisers within the Business.com Account Management System

Business.com Conversion Tracking is now available to all advertisers within the Business.com Account Management System

The most exciting aspect of this launch is we’re now offering a simple, free solution to the “last click” attribution problem I wrote about in our study of B2B web analytics market share. In short, the problem is that B2B advertisers who rely on web analytics solutions which attribute 100% of campaign ROI to the last click before conversion get an overly simplistic, and inaccurate, view of the contribution made by different online marketing campaigns to overall results. And its a problem that’s getting worse as the B2B sales cycle lengthens and business buyers interact with more online advertising before finally purchasing, registering for a free trial, signing-up for an event or otherwise converting. This conversion attribution issue was the second hottest topic (behind Twitter) when I spoke at Mediapost’s recent Search Insider Summit – there’s solid recognition among top brands and agencies that conversion attribution is a problem and that “last click” tools don’t provide the full story.

In essence, Business.com Conversion Tracking punches a hole in the black box of “last click” web analytics, allowing Business.com advertisers to easily see how their Business.com campaigns and keywords are performing to support campaign optimization. We designed Business.com Conversion Tracking to be both extremely easy to implement – 44% of B2B web sites don’t even use web analytics today, and a major reason for this is the complexity of implementing many of the solutions available today – and to work as a complement to existing “last click” or more full-featured web analytics tools. The specific benefits vary by the type of web analytics solution, if any, a company uses today:

For B2B Companies Without Web Analytics

For the 44% of B2B web sites without web analytics today (yes, scary, but its true), Business.com Conversion Tracking offers both clear return-on-investment (ROI) metrics for their Business.com advertising and a very simple 3-step process to implement conversion tracking.

For B2B Companies Using “Last Click” Web Analytics 

For those companies using “last click” web analytics tools like Google Analytics, Urchin Software by Google, Nedstat or others, Business.com Conversion Tracking uncovers data often not available, or incomplete, in these web analytics tools. This includes the ability to monitor the true impact of Business.com campaigns on registrations, quote requests, purchases or other transactions.

For B2B Companies Using Advanced Web Analytics

Advanced web analytics solutions like Omniture, WebTrends and Coremetrics enable B2B online advertisers to track the influence of multiple campaigns throughout the business buying process on eventual conversions. As we saw during the beta, Business.com Conversion Tracking is still very appealing to companies using these more advanced solutions because it takes literally just a few minutes to implement, saves time by making campaign ROI metrics conveniently available within the Business.com account management system and offers a useful check against third-party systems.

To learn more, visit the Business.com Conversion Tracking FAQ page or see the Business.com Conversion Tracking announcement.


Web Site Traffic for the 2009 BtoB Media Power 50

May 18, 2009

Business.com was recently named to BtoB Magazine’s Media Power 50 annual list of the most influential business-to-business marketing vehicles. This is the fourth year in a row that we’ve been named to the list which also includes household (or should I say workplace?) names such as The Wall St. Journal, BusinessWeek, Forbes, CNNMoney and more.

When the BtoB Media Power 50 list is announced, we get another great opportunity to answer the question we frequently hear from B2B advertisers and agencies – how big is Business.com?

The answer is surprising to many, but its a bit more difficult to tell this year because BtoB decided to combine print and online properties into a single entity on the list. For example, The Wall St. Journal print edition and WSJ.com are now reported as one in the list. While this change makes sense, it also makes it difficult to interpret the circulation and web site traffic stats for each of the winners.

So how big is Business.com? The chart below compares the number of unique web site visitors in April, 2009 for each of the BtoB Media Power 50 General Business category members:

2009 BtoB Media Power 50 - General Business category

2009 BtoB Media Power 50 - General Business category

Business.com has more unique monthly visitors than all members of the General Business category except for CNNMoney.com. This comparison is based on quantcast.com estimates for March, 2009.

Surprised? As we often say, Business.com is one of the best kept secrets for reaching a large, targeted audience of active business buyers online. For more information, visit the Business.com Advertising Center or call us at (888) 441-4466 (within the U.S.) or (310) 586-4185.


Improve B2B Conversion Rates by Reducing Buyer Risk

May 4, 2009

Have you ever been absolutely sure that your product or service was the best solution for a particular prospect, only to find out that they chose to go with another vendor? What about that great product comparison whitepaper you developed which generated an amazing number of sales leads but no sales? Or the by-the-book email nurture campaign that just doesn’t perform like it should?

One major reason for these, according to a fascinating new study from Enquiro Research, is that the standard model of business buying as a thorough, rational, step-by-step process just isn’t accurate. Instead, this study of over 3,000 business buyers suggests  that B2B buying is driven largely by attempts to control personal and organizational risks. In other words, according to the authors, “99% of B2B buying is about covering your butt.”

These insights put a  new spin on the drive to improve B2B conversion rates – if business buying is driven more by risk mitigation than rational optimization, what does this mean for landing page content and offers? How can B2B online marketers create the lowest-risk environment for prospects to increase registrations, quote requests or purchases?

In a world where risk protection dominates rational evaluation in the business buying process, the following are important for improving B2B online marketing conversion rates:**

Understand Business Buyer Risk

To reduce business buyer risk and improve conversion rates, its essential to understand the extent to which your company, products/services or offers may be perceived as risky by your target buyers.

Purchase consideration clearly matters – there’s less risk in asking someone to provide their email address for an e-newsletter subscription than there is in a $100,000 purchase. Market position also matters, but its not just your company’s standing in the Fortune 500 or Inc. 5000 that makes a difference. Is your company the dominant player, or just entering the market, in the specific product or service for which you want to improve conversion rates? For example, few would doubt that Google’s “conversion rate” for signing-up new pay-per-click advertisers, where they’re the clear market leader among general search engines, is much higher than their conversion rate for radio advertising in their recently discontinued Audio Ads program.

For those of you marketing low price/low consideration products or services from a dominant, market-leading position, good news! There isn’t likely to be all that much you can do to improve conversion rates by reducing business buyer risk since risk is so low already.

On the other hand, B2B marketers working to establish their offerings in new markets and/or selling higher-consideration purchases may have considerable opportunity to improve conversion rates by addressing business buyer risk factors.

Become an “Approved Vendor” Through Teaser Offers

B2B online marketers struggling to drive conversions of a high consideration product for a relatively new business that hasn’t established a dominant market position are in a very difficult position. Even with a brilliantly conceived and executed marketing program focused on an accurate, rational view of your products’ superiority, quality conversions that lead to sales are still likely to be relatively rare. More often than not, prospects will fall through because they “got a great deal from an existing vendor” or “went with a vendor that’s already approved.”  None of the standard advice about improving conversion rates through better landing page design will put a dent in this issue because its not about making it easy for your prospects to see what they should do and act. Instead, the problem is not being on the approved vendor list in the first place.

So what do you do? Become a champion for a teaser offer (e.g., simplified product, free 30- to 60-day trial, etc.) that lowers the perceived risk of getting started for your target audience. To be an “approved vendor”, whether formally through the AP department or simply through the trust built up via multiple, positive interactions around the teaser offer, gives you a considerable leg up on future business. Its not as simple as landing page design but, if better landing page design was all you needed, you wouldn’t be reading this.

Use Search Marketing to Drive Word-of-Mouth

The Enquiro research suggests that word-of-mouth can be hugely influential during the business buying process, particularly for “blank slate” purchases where the buyer/company has no prior experience with purchasing that type of product or service. While search marketing is an extremely powerful tool for getting your message in front of business people searching for solutions, B2B search marketing tends to focus much more on driving prospects to whitepaper or webinar registration pages, or to ecommerce sites, than driving people to view and participate in conversations about a company’s products or services (for an exception, see Office Depot’s success incorporating customer reviews into paid search campaigns).

If your target buyers see your solution as moderately to highly risky, there’s reason to believe that alllocating  a portion of the search marketing budget toward driving more online and offline word-of-mouth activity will positively impact conversion rates. While it may not happen overnight, fueling the conversation can reduce the perceived risk of conversion.

Address Buyer Risk in Your B2B Demand Gen Program

One of the major challenges in driving online conversions or creating a more effective B2B demand gen programs is personalization – making each landing page, e-newsletter or offer as relevant as possible to the target prospect – and addressing business buyer risk gives us another opportunity to make demand gen practices more personally relevant. To improve conversions by reducing business buyer risk, you might consider the following changes to your demand generation program:

  • Match prospects with happy customers that came from similar “risk” profiles – rather than matching a “blank slate” prospect with a reference customer that’s been with you for 20 years, have them talk with customer that made their “blank slate” purchase with you within the last couple years. Also, consider getting references from multiple people involved with the decision to purchase your product or service, and matching prospects with references at their same job level and role in the purchasing process.
  • Consider linking to customer reviews or forum conversations from your conversion pages – giving prospects more than one option sounds like landing page heresy, but this may not be the case for higher consideration purchases and less established brands. If visitors to your landing page have any doubts at all about converting, at least take them to content that reduce the perceived riskiness of converting.
  • If you sell primarily to large companies, get creative with landing page technology-  consider doing a reverse IP lookup on visitors to your landing pages, identifying the company and serving a dynamic content block on the page indicating that your company is already an approved vendor for the visitor’s company (if you are). Sounds creepy? Possibly for very early stage offers, but less so when a prospect visits for detailed spec sheets or to request a quote. NOTE: this won’t work well for small companies.

 

What do you think?  What would you do to improve conversion rates by reducing buyer risk?

For more background, you can download the first whitepaper from Enquiro’s new business buying study, “Mapping the BuyerSphere“, from the Enquiro web site.

**These recommendations, and many more, are part of  Business.com’s presentation ”Improving Search Marketing ROI During a Recession: Top 10 Insider Tips,” during the Online Marketing Summit 14-city Regional Whistle Stop Tour from May 5th through July 2nd, 2009. For a 20% discount on OMS registration from Business.com, use discount code business.com20.


B2B Web Analytics Market Share – New Business.com Study

March 24, 2009

Ever wondered what the web analytics market share is for B2B web sites?

We just completed a VERY extensive study of over 27,000 B2B web sites and the third-party web analytics programs in use on those sites. You can get the complete study here – http://www.business.com/info/b2b_web_analytics.asp. This research was made possible by a wonderful Firefox plug-in, WASP (Web Analytics Solution Profiler) from immeria.

In addition to the most current, comprehensive assessment of B2B web analytics market share, the key findings are:

44% of B2B web sites studied used no web analytics or, less likely, used a custom, in-house solution – pretty difficult to optimize B2B online marketing campaigns in a recession (or anytime!) if you don’t have any data

43% of B2B web sites used a web analytics program showing only “last click” data which attributes a conversion to the last trackable link clicked before conversion. This only provides a peek at the end of the business buying funnel

Just 6% used a web analytics program that allows users to see the influence of multiple online marketing campaigns with which a business buyer interacts on conversions

The whitepaper also includes recommended solutions for optimizing B2B online marketing campaigns in a recession.

Have a look and let us know what you think!


Business.com Conversion Tracking beta Launches

March 24, 2009

In response to an increasing number of requests from Business.com advertisers, today we launched the beta release of Business.com Conversion Tracking. The new tool is especially critical for recession marketing because business-to-business (B2B) marketers are forced to deal with lengthening sales cycles, reduced budgets and staff cut-backs, and the need to keep leads flowing into the business at a lower cost.

As we heard from our advertisers, and found in our recent B2B web analytics study of over 27,000 B2B web sites, 93% of web sites don’t provide the data necessary to optimize online marketing campaigns - only 7% use a web analytics program that enables them to see multiple campaigns that influenced that conversion over time. The most popular B2B web analytics programs only show the impact of the “last click” preceding a purchase or other conversion.  The “last click” method ignores the impact of online marketing campaigns and keywords that influence prospects in the early and middle stages of the buying process.

I like to use the analogy that campaign ROI data ”last click” analytics programs provide is akin to saying that a new car purchase is 100% the result of the salesperson’s skill. Of course, salesperson skill matters, but its not the entire story and simply improving salesperson training won’t sell more cars. When a car buyer steps into a dealership today, they’ve already researched the purchase online, read related car review publications, talked with their friends and may even have seen an ad in the local newspaper about a sale on the car they want which leads them to visit the dealership ready to buy. Like new car sales, business buying is slowing down, and B2B marketers are not well served by assuming 100% of the credit should go only to the last action the buyer takes prior to purchase.

Business.com Conversion Tracking solves this problem for Business.com advertisers using either no web analytics program or a “last click”-type program. By creating and placing a simple tracking script on their web site, Business.com advertisers are able to see a count of all prospects who clicked on their Business.com listing(s) and eventually converted into a lead or customer. Business.com Conversion Tracking allows B2B marketers to easily track as many as six common B2B conversion types: viewing an important web page; registration for content or an event; a contact request;, a quote request; or a purchase (completed transactions or specific revenue/order size).

In our B2B web analytics study, we also found that:

·         Overall, 44% of the B2B web sites surveyed do not track web site activity or use a custom, in-house solution.

·         The remaining 49% use a third-party web analytics program which either only provides basic web site traffic data or utilizes the “last click” method.

The Business.com Conversion Tracking beta is currently open to a limited number of current Business.com advertisers. Interested direct advertisers or agencies should contact their Account Manager for more information or visit: http://www.business.com/trackingbeta.asp.

 

For more details on the study methodology, findings and web analytics program market share among B2B companies, visit http://www.business.com/info/b2b_web_analytics.asp to download a copy of the report “Unlocking the B2B Web Analytics Black Box.”.