The sales department is probably the most important department in a business. This department has important functions and responsibilities to ensure the survival of the brand. As a business owner, you can offer support along the sales funnel to help employees convert leads to sales.
A sales funnel is a term used in marketing to capture and describe potential customer journeys, from prospecting to purchase. There are several steps in the sales funnel. The steps vary in number according to your company’s sales model.
Having a comprehensive sales funnel allows you to lead your potential customers through the buying process and towards purchase completion. Additionally, it can help you keep potential customers in the sales process.
In this article, we look at what a sales funnel is and how it can help your sales department.
Why Is a Sales Funnel Important?
The most important function of a sales funnel is to understand your customers’ purchasing journey. It also helps you identify the stage of the journey your customer is in. Insights like these can help you decide which marketing channels to activate.
The sales funnel allows your marketing team to customise and optimise their activities and messaging to increase conversions. Some other features of a sales funnel include:
- Helps streamline the customer journey.
- Helps you sort and rank your leads.
- Allows you to better allocate your resources for marketing.
- Provides you with an accurate forecasting of sales volume(s).
- Allows you to better measure and optimise to fit your target audience.
- Improves customer targeting.
- Increases conversion rates.
- Increases customer loyalty.
These are just some of the reasons a comprehensive sales funnel is important for businesses. The advantages of having it are beneficial to businesses of all sizes especially because sales are important.
The Stages in the Sales Funnel
As mentioned previously, not all companies will have the same number of stages in their sales funnel. However, a traditional sales funnel has six stages to it. The stages are as follows:
1. Awareness
This stage has the largest number of people at the top of the sales funnel. These potential customers are not ready to be prospects yet and have recently had their first interaction with your company and its offerings. These individuals don’t know much about your brand, but they are aware of its existence.
2. Interest
This stage is where you pique the interest of customers who recently entered the awareness stage. If they are showing interest, they will spend time getting to know more about your company and what it offers. They will browse your website or catalogue, read your blogs and reviews from previous or current customers, and even investigate prices.
3. Evaluation
During this stage your prospective customers will put more effort into learning more about your company and its offerings. Some may reach out to your customer service team with specific questions or to get access to more information.
By this stage, the interested customers would have assessed your offerings to your competitors. You must answer their questions and help them understand how your products or services can solve their problems or needs.
4. Negotiation and Decision-making
By this stage, the prospective customers would have decided on purchasing your product or service. In some cases, they will negotiate over the prices, terms of purchase or both. It’s fair to assume that by this time they have an intention to purchase something.
5. Sale
By this stage, you would have negotiated all terms of the sale and come to a mutual agreement. Once all is in order, the prospective buyer pays for the product or service and becomes an official buyer.
6. Renewal or Repurchase
The sale is not the final stage of the sales funnel. This stage is about contract renewal or repurchase. Here the customer must decide whether to carry on with the same seller with new negotiations. This is followed by a renewal or repurchase.
Using these six stages, you can get an idea of how a basic sales funnel works in a business.
How to Build Your Own Sales Funnel
Building a sales funnel doesn’t have to be time-consuming. You just need to know your leads, prospects and customers. The following steps will help you build your own sales funnel.
Step 1: Analyse Your Existing Customers
To develop a comprehensive sales funnel, you need to have a good understanding of your current customers. The more data you gather, the more effective your sales funnel will be. You can gather data by:
- Communicating with your customers.
- Tracking their interactions with your online and offline presence.
- Analysing their pain points, needs, goals and aspirations.
- Analysing any past solutions you have implemented.
This data can help you identify similar audiences and share the right marketing materials to attract potential customers.
Step 2: Entice Your Target Audience
In this step, you need to capture the attention of your target audience across online and offline platforms. This should convince them to become part of your sales funnel by using compelling content that educates and informs. This will show your target audience that you will meet their needs.
You can use organic content such as social media posts, blog posts and e-mail newsletters, and paid advertising such as influencer content. You need to align the content and campaigns with the interests of your target audience.
Step 3: Develop a Good Landing Page
All the content that you develop needs to lead prospective customers to your landing page. Your landing page is where you make your first impression on potential customers. The landing page must effectively communicate who you are as a business, what your offerings and what needs these solve.
Lastly, your landing page must have a clear call-to-action which will take the potential customer further down the sales funnel.
Step 4: Create a Powerful E-mail Campaign
A good email campaign needs to inform and educate your leads and help them understand how your products/services meet their needs. Focus on converting the leads into paying customers instead of sending them unrefined product pitches.
Step 5: Always Follow Up
Once your customer buys a product or service, they do not leave the sales funnel. Instead, they stay at the bottom. You want to keep them at the bottom and make sure they return for a repurchase. You need to keep them engaged with frequent communication, thank them for the purchase and incentivise them to return with discounts and new product campaigns.
Your sales tool is a flexible tool that you can optimise continuously for your business. Feel free to change it according to market conditions and any new offerings you may have. The most important thing is to ensure that your sales funnel captures the widest number of prospects you have and brings them down to a robust pool of loyal customers.
For more information on how to create a successful e-mail campaign for your business, read our article.
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