Demand Generation and Lead Generation are two terms that are fairly common in any marketer’s vocabulary. When executed correctly, these individual tactics should work like a relay — one passes the baton onto the other, and the finish line is Customer Acquisition.
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It’s essential to get one thing right from the start: demand generation is not lead generation. The two are not interchangeable; they have distinct purposes and functions in the customer acquisition processes and should complement each other to help drive sales and grow your business.
In this article, we take some time to define and understand these tactics within the greater context of an inbound marketing strategy.
Demand generation falls squarely in the Awareness stage of the sales funnel. This is where you’re working hard to generate interest in your products and services among your target audience. Your efforts will focus on building brand visibility and educating your prospects about all the awesome things your goods and services can do. You’re sparking interest, establishing credibility, and letting the world know you’re out there and open for business. For these reasons, any content you utilise during this stage is typically ungated. What does this look like? Here’s a list of typical demand generation activities:
The clue is in the name; demand generation is about attracting a broad audience to your offerings and putting your business on your potential buyer’s radar.
Lead generation (when done correctly) is the process of identifying and capturing potential customers who have expressed interest in your products or services.
Why is there a difference between the folks who have engaged with your brand in the demand generation stage and those who are officially classed as leads? Well, it’s because leads have provided you with contact information, such as names and email addresses — they have shown intent or are likely to be interested in your offerings.
Here are some of the lead generation tactics you’re likely to encounter:
The primary objective of lead generation is to convert interested prospects into qualified leads for further engagement and sales opportunities.
Demand generation casts a wider net, targeting a broader audience to create brand awareness and generate demand. This is where your social media channels act as a potent tool. Use Facebook, Instagram or LinkedIn to start conversations, ask questions and engage your audience.
Demand generation content should address the pain points your buyer personas are like to have and lead them towards your unique solution. You’re building credibility as a legitimate voice in your industry and inviting relationships with prospects who may be willing to make a purchase down the line. At this stage, you’re in it for the long haul, so remember that these relationships are a slow burn, and you shouldn’t attack your audience with sales talk.
The power of storytelling is critical for demand generation. Leverage the success stories from existing customers to create and share video testimonials that validate your products and affirm the positive impact your solution has made.
So, in the demand generation phase, you’ve done plenty of work to drum up interest, get eyes on your offering, and validate your products and services. Now it’s time to tease out your ideal buyers amongst the crowd of onlookers. Who’s actually ready to buy, and who’s the right fit for your business?
Inbound best practice dictates that you should utilise your most valuable content here. You want to incentivise people to give you their contact details by offering something that’s going to be genuinely useful to them. This is where things like ebooks, whitepapers or exclusive video content come into play.
In essence, lead generation is where you convert the demand you’ve created into paying customers. To do this, you must capture the necessary details to personally contact and nurture the individuals who have expressed interest and intent to buy.
At this stage, your sales and marketing teams have to be closely aligned to ensure that the tactics you employ are effectively personalised and that the content, email nurtures, and retargeting ads you send out continue to have an impact. It’s essential to have a customer-centric website with plenty of thought put into user experience (UX), and last but not least, you need a robust customer relationship management (CRM) system to help you capture these leads and automate the nurturing process so that you don’t let any opportunities slip through the cracks.
By now, you should have picked up that demand generation and lead generation don’t function in isolation. You can invest a lot of money in demand generation, but if you haven’t set up the systems and processes necessary for lead capture, you’re not going to have great success in actually selling your products and services. Or, your phone may start ringing off the hook — but are all those leads useful? The lead generation part of your inbound strategy is where your audience is refined and distilled down to the best of the best; the people with whom your sales team can have meaningful conversations and turn into happy, paying customers.
Depending on whether you’re a B2B or a B2C, there will be a carefully applied formula when building your sales pipeline to ensure that your sales and marketing budget is effectively allocated to both demand and lead generating activities. This is where you stand to gain a lot by working with an experienced inbound specialist like us. We’ve carved out multi-pronged inbound strategies for businesses across many different industries. Whether your goal is to have more appointment bookings or you’d like to see greater website traffic driven through organic and paid media, we can help your business accelerate growth today. Discover how we can help you with demand and lead generation here.