Industrial Marketing Agency - Tiecas

Industrial Marketing Blog

Inbound Marketing won’t Boost Short-term Sales for Industrial Companies

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Inbound marketing is a frequent topic of discussion in my daily conversations with Owners, CEOs and Business Development professionals from manufacturing and industrial companies. Irrespective of the size of the company, they all have one thing in common – they want to boost sales as quickly as possible.

These industrial professionals have heard about inbound marketing being the “in” thing these days from marketing consultants like me and from other sources. However, it is a shock to them when I tell them “Inbound marketing is not a short-term fix. It is a long journey.”

They don’t want to hear that, they want their phones to start ringing, RFQs coming in and their sales team involved in deep conversations within 30 days.

Those are unrealistic expectations in my opinion. Here’s why; unlike a one-off ad or direct mail campaign, inbound marketing requires assessment of your current marketing programs to identify weaknesses, developing a strategic plan of action, implementing tactics, auditing existing content to identify gaps, creating new content and repurposing old ones, tracking, measuring and refining the process. These steps take time, at least six months for all the moving parts to mesh together like a finely tuned engine that will drive lead generation and generate sales.

That doesn’t mean you have to wait six months to see any measurable results. A well-planned and executed inbound marketing program will produce incremental improvements and quantifiable results every month in the first 3 to 5 months before lead generation really takes off in the sixth month or earlier. The great thing about inbound marketing is that it will continue to generate sales that are exponentially larger than the cost of the consultant’s initial retainer.

I understand the skepticism about what I’m saying and accept the fact that my motives may be suspect – trying to convince someone to sign up for a long-term marketing consulting retainer. Let me provide you some evidence from other experts to validate my position.

In this short video, you can listen to small business marketing expert and successful author, John Jantsch (@ducttape) of Duct Tape Marketing explain why building a content marketing strategy is a long-term commitment, and not for the short-term.

[youtube width=”524″ height=”295″]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XYwK8xVl40[/youtube]

“Be Patient! It took two years for us to really see the fruits of our labor, but the wait was worth it. By setting and sticking to a specific inbound strategy, we were able to grow our newsletter subscribership from zero to 11,000 and increase traffic to our three sites by 600 percent. Inbound marketing takes time to be effective, so don’t bail on it after six months — even if you’re not seeing the results you were hoping for.” Brian Zimmerman (@BrianZimm1), Managing Director of OpenView Venture Partners, an expansion-stage venture capital firm for technology companies.

“There are no magic wands, no hidden tricks, and no secret handshakes that can bring you immediate success, but with time, energy, and determination you can get there.” Darren Rowse (@problogger), Founder, Problogger.

“If you have more money than brains, you should focus on outbound marketing. If you have more brains than money, you should focus on inbound marketing.Guy Kawasaki (@GuyKawasaki), Former Chief Evangelist, Apple Co-Founder, Alltop.Com.

Here is an excellent infographic from Marketo (@marketo) that visually explains what inbound marketing is all about. Pay close attention to the sections on Why Inbound Marketing Matters to your Company, and Staffing and Budgeting for Inbound Marketing. Scroll down to the bottom to see where it falls short.

The CMO Guide to Inbound Marketing Infographic by Marketo

While I have no doubts in my mind about the effectiveness of inbound marketing within the industrial sector, the strategy does have its shortcomings if you are looking for a quick boost to your sales.

Now that you have a better idea of how long it takes and where it can fall short, head over to my company’s website for help with launching an inbound marketing program for your industrial company.

Do you use inbound marketing? Share your experiences about what it takes to increase industrial sales using this marketing strategy.

Achinta Mitra

Achinta Mitra calls himself a “marketing engineer” because he combines his engineering education and an MBA with 35+ years of practical manufacturing and industrial marketing experience. You want an expert with an insider’s knowledge and an outsider’s objectivity who can point you in the right direction immediately. That's Achinta. He is the Founder of Tiecas, Inc., a manufacturing marketing agency in Houston, Texas. Read Achinta's story here.
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Comments:

  1. Chris Markham - Data Driven Marketing Strategist @ Bizfix says:

    Achinta, that’s a really sound evaluation of the timescales involved. Of course the obvious question is why would anyone want a short term fix. Want a 1000 followers or 10,000 leads sure you can buy them in a heartbeat with enough pay per click, but you’ll have to buy them EVERY TIME you want more leads. By delivering remarkable content you get permanent returns. We are still getting leads from content we published 2 years ago. If we had spend money on PPC what kind of return do you think we’d be getting on that 2 years down the line?
    Chris Markham

    • Achinta Mitra says:

      Chris,

      Thanks a lot for your comments and for sharing your own experiences with inbound marketing with content. Your success story confirms my position on inbound marketing and is the same advice I give to my clients, it is a process that pays long-term dividends.

      Regards,
      Achinta

Ready to Start a Conversation?

Let’s chat to determine if this will be a good fit for both of us. It will be a friendly conversation to get to know each other better, not a high-pressure sales pitch.

Post Categories

Archives