Metricks Blog

Previous
Next
Previous
Next

How to Optimize Your Bottom Funnel Marketing in 2022

how-to-optimize-bottom-funnel-marketing-in-2022
Share

If you’re interested in reading this, well done! It means the lead generation process has worked for you. You have attracted potential buyers and captured their information. You have nurtured them for a while, and now you have warm leads who are ready to take action. That’s why you’re interested in this bottom funnel marketing guide.

The bottom of the funnel is an opportunity to position your brand as superior to competitors. 

Flatter your products with big numbers and instil confidence in the decision to buy.

After capturing the attention of potential buyers, you’ll have to convince them your offer is the best.

You want your leads at the bottom of the funnel, and you have spent quite an amount of time, effort, and money to get them there. 

This is when your leads are ready to make the final decision on whether to buy from your eCommerce store or one of your competitors. In this article, we will discuss in detail several aspects of the bottom funnel marketing.

Table of Contents

What is Bottom Funnel Marketing?

bottom-of-the-funnel-marketing

In a nutshell, the bottom funnel is where you convert your leads into paying customers; the spot conversions occur.

The conversions that happen at the bottom of the funnel are a two-part process. Leads are stagnant here, still comparing alternatives and weighing their options. This is when you have to be very intentional with your messaging to give them that final push that would cause the conversion to happen.

Here B2B leads would need to speak with a sales representative, while B2C leads may never need any support to complete a purchase. 

The bottom of the funnel basically is where you;

  • Foster the decision-making process
  • Convince leads your product or offer is their best choice.

The number of leads you have at this marketing funnel stage is much smaller and is a more qualified fit to become paying customers.

As you’ve taken your leads through the earlier stages of awareness, interest, and desire, you’ve cultivated their zeal and trust.

During the next stage, these potential buyers will check, intend, and take the Action every business owner craves – purchase.

Let’s now examine what a good bottom funnel marketing looks like, and then we’ll explore why a good bottom funnel matters to any business.

Why Does a Good Bottom Funnel Matter?

Before we look at why a good bottom funnel matters for eCommerce brands, it is essential to know what to look out for to recognize a good bottom funnel.

At the bottom of the funnel, the main deal is convincing indecisive leads and converting them to paying customers. To achieve this objective, marketers must explain why their product is the best in a pool of similar products. Marketers do this by using campaigns or incentives to encourage the leads to convert to customers.

At this point, you should have noticed our four magic words to give you a grasp of what a good bottom funnel marketing should do.

  • Convince
  • Encourage
  • Convert
  • Increase sales

1. Convince

The leads at the bottom of your marketing funnel are warm leads, ready to make a purchase. However, there is a small problem here – your competitors.

These warm leads are on the fence. They know they have a problem and have an array of solutions to that problem. But they’re not sure which of these solutions would solve this problem. They’re waiting for that nudge to push them to make the right choice.

They don’t want to be made to look like a fool and regret the decision of buying from a particular eCommerce store. They’re looking for the assurance that they’ll get the right product from the right company at the right price.

Customers are indecisive by the time they enter the bottom funnel. You must find a way to convince them before one of your competitors do.

2. Encourage

A proven way to encourage your warm leads to buy from you, as seen previously, is to enable them to trust your product.

There are a few proven ways to do this;

  1. Offer discounts and coupon codes.
  2. Free trials (if you are one of the SaaS guys)
  3. Product comparisons
  4. Free shipping for first-time customers
  5. Reviews and testimonials

You’d agree that over 90% of customers you have encountered were interested in getting extra value for their money. There are no proven tactics to sell products other than advertising mouth-watering offers.

3. Convert

According to Marketing Sherpa, a conversion is “the point at which a recipient of a marketing message performs a desired action.” In other words, a conversion occurs when a lead responds to your call to action (CTA). This could be by signing up for a newsletter, submitting an email address, or requesting a demo, amongst other things.

metricks-contact-us-cta

But if you run an eCommerce business, my guess is you want leads to make some purchases and get your business a few dollars richer.

Conversions are the essence of having a funnel first, so what is the point if a bottom funnel doesn’t cause some of those to happen?

4. Increase Sales

A good bottom funnel should take two steps to be successful.

The first step is to convert leads to paying customers. The second step is to encourage the customer to always come back and shop again through post-purchase interactions. We will discuss this topic in detail later in this article.

Once this goal is reached, the business has earned more sales. This is a fundamental goal because companies rely on customers to buy their products, and this is a cycle that never ends.

ALSO READ: What Is A Marketing Funnel & How Does It Work?

I have never heard of such a thing as too many sales, have you?

Another quality of a good bottom of funnel marketing is its ability to boost the confidence of leads, so they feel comfortable making a purchase. Marketers need to educate leads about their items and establish credibility for their brands.

If your brand has won a few industry awards, do not hesitate to flaunt them. This would make your brand look more impressive than your competitors.

If leads are confident about a product or brand, a purchase is just around the corner.

Ultimately, the goal of any business is to grow through repeat sales, which is why a good bottom of the funnel marketing is vital.

Next, we will discuss some proven tactics that make bottom funnel marketing successful.

Top 10 Bottom Funnel Marketing Tactics for eCommerce

top-ten-bottom-funnel-marketing-tactics-for-ecommerce

 You don’t want to lose any leads once they have reached the bottom of the sales funnel, especially if you could have converted them.

Here are some of the most acceptable tactics to make the most of your bottom funnel marketing.

1. Free Trials or Basic Plans

 If you are a SaaS dude like me, I’m sure you already heard about the milk and honey we use to attract bottom of the funnel leads to take action on our landing pages.

Free trials and basic plans are effective tactics to convince leads your brand is credible.

It also proves you aren’t after their money if you do not need them to input payment details during the initial sign-up.

Providing hands-on experience on what they will achieve from your product is a great way to start. The free trial should describe the value propositions and include all your features.

In addition, you should run your free trial for a minimum of 14 days.  Allow leads to gain the whole experience and a maximum of 30 days so they don’t question your intentions.

2. Live Demos

Another way to ensure your bottom of the funnel leads experience your product is by walking them through a live demo. The demo should cover all possible solution points, product features, and beyond.

metricks-contact-us-cta

The lead’s present and future requirements are met during live demos, and cost savings are achieved. Consider scheduling three to four sessions if everyone is available since one session may not be enough.

3. Social Media

Ever heard of #buildingInPublic?

Building in public is a social media movement for founders, CEOs, and entrepreneurs. These folks share stories of wins, losses, and lessons on Twitter.

They appear authentic and build a community of other founders who eventually become customers. Although many founders use it as a gimmick to go viral and a ploy to get users, that isn’t the idea for authentic founders. They just have a story to tell and are hungry to learn from other founders.

Building in public is writing your own autobiography as a founder, CEO, or entrepreneur one tweet at a time.

If you’re hearing about this for the first time, get your Twitter account and be ready to join the community. 

The benefits of building in public on Twitter include:

  • Win social proof.
  • Grow an audience of niche followers.
  • Earn free marketing.

Building in public can generate viral word of mouth if done well and with your zeal coupled with the enthusiasm of a community. And as we know, positive word of mouth is one of the best ways to market a new brand or product.

Share relevant content or other web references that establish your value and benefits.

4. Blog Posts

In bottom funnel marketing, blog posts are a great way to communicate key features and answer implementation queries.

It is possible to create posts for specific buyer personas so that your content is more relevant and customized. Once you developed this content, you can distribute it through email, social media, user communities, or your CRM.

Unlike the top of the funnel blog posts, the bottom funnel blog posts shouldn’t be SEO friendly.

These contents are for very warm leads who have been nurtured and made to experience your product through the top and middle funnels.

Giving cold leads access to one of these content might throw them off balance and cause a leak in your marketing funnel.

5. Newsletters and Warm Emails

 The essence of newsletters and warm emails is often overlooked at the bottom of the funnel. Marketers think of newsletters and warm emails as a cliche method of seeking the attention of leads, because of a low click-through or open rate. Despite this, marketers who play the game right continue to see many conversions happen at the bottom of their marketing funnels.

As a marketer, you think of ways to engage your customers and boost sales. You have your answer if you can play it right in your newsletters and warm emails.

Newsletters have stood the test of time as an effective marketing tactic. You get to promote your brand, and leads get exclusive and personalized content at the bottom of the funnel.

According to McKinsey researchers, you’re 40 times more likely to get conversions from email marketing than from social media.

Be clear, concise, confident, and value-driven in your newsletter and warm emails. Strive to leave a lasting impression even if you don’t win the business. Maintaining good relationships can help win back lost business and increase repeat business.

6. Promo and Discount Codes

 As soon as you have warm leads at the bottom of the funnel, you should be able to convince a few of them to take action by offering promo and discount codes. This is particularly great for eCommerce.

You have seen a potential customer visit your website and add an item to the cart without purchasing. You could get the sale by emailing them with a discount code.

7. Customer Support

In a supermarket, consumers can feel and gauge products to see if it’s right for them but online shopping is filled with uncertainty and doubt.

It is your responsibility to stimulate that experience by providing them with support. There are many ways you can do this online, depending on what industry you’re in: SaaS or eCommerce;

  • 3D videos
  • Webinars
  • Facebook or YouTube lives answering FAQs

Educating bottom of funnel leads and customers about the product achieves two objectives. First, it assigns a human face to the company in the customer’s mind, which increases trust, which is highly valuable at this stage of the funnel. Secondly, it reduces buyer anxiety and doubt and boosts confidence in your brand.

8. Affiliates and Influencers

Partnerships with affiliates can skyrocket the bottom funnel conversions and provide risk-free marketing.

You won’t have to spam someone’s inbox or push ads, because you rely on someone reputable to promote your brand to an audience that already trusts them.

Affiliate and influencer marketing are both priceless. An Adweek study says 74% of people rely on word-of-mouth recommendations. And over 80% of American consumers will find trusted recommendations before deciding to buy anything.

learn-more-about-metricks-cta-banner

That makes affiliate marketing as valuable as paid ads or even more. Consider creating an affiliate program. It is also a great way to engage current customers if you incentivize them to promote our products and brand on your behalf.

We’ll examine more ways to promote post-purchase interaction later in this article.

9. Video Training Courses

Another remarkable tactic to boost conversions in the bottom funnel is to create video training courses.

When your leads can see your team interacting with them via a video, it fosters a closer relationship with your brand. This is excellent for answering questions and addressing user pain points right before the conversion. And videos are the easiest way to show different use cases for your product.

10. Success Stories and Case Studies

Success stories and case studies are other types of content that can be used anywhere but are most effective at the bottom of the sales funnel. Sharing success stories and case studies is a powerful tool in your arsenal when someone is deciding whether to buy from you.

Success stories and user case studies are more persuasive power of statistics and proof with the engaging elements of storytelling. Their combined efforts help buyers visualize themselves as customers and prove what they will be able to accomplish.

ALSO READ: How to Build Most Effective Affiliate Marketing Funnels

Zapier never fails at this. They highlight customer stories and case studies. Focusing on the time saved and money made by customers through using Zapier, tapping into their value proposition.

How to Measure Bottom of Funnel Marketing Success

how-to-measure-bottom-funnel-marketing-success

1. Cost Per Acquisition (CPA)

Cost Per Acquisition gives you an insight into how much you spend to generate each sale or customer.

To calculate the cost per acquisition, marketers divide the cost of marketing campaigns by the number of conversions they get. If the investment outweighs the ROI, you might want to consider other alternatives, so you do not run at a loss.

Customer Acquisition Cost = Cost of Sales and Marketing divided by the Number of New Customers Acquired.

2. Customer Lifetime Value (LTV)

LTV measures the amount of value a customer brings into the business. LTV helps you weigh how your business model is performing throughout the period.

To get your LTV, divide the customer value (money spent) over the average lifespan of the customer.

LTV = Customer Value X Average Customer Lifespan

3. Conversion rates

 Conversion rate measures how often conversions take place.

The bottom funnel conversion rate is obtained by finding how many people in the bottom funnel converted to customers and made a purchase.

Conversion Rate = Total number of conversions / Total number of leads  X 100

Each bottom funnel marketing channel has different goals, so it’s crucial to analyze the success of each one. These channels might include;

  • Webinars = Number of attendees
  • Newsletters = Number of sign-ups / Open rates
  • Targeted blog posts = Click through rates
  • Warm emails = Click through rates

What is Post-Purchase Interaction and Why Does it Matter?

Customers know a brand is authentic when it stays in touch with them even after making the purchase. Post-purchase interactions are basically a brand’s effort to stay in touch with a customer after making a purchase.

If you run an eCommerce business, interact with your customers before their deliveries. This will instil trust and exceed their expectations. This indeed interests them and inspires customer loyalty.

Some top post-purchase strategies include:

1. Incentivizing your customers to promote the product they have just purchased

You can do this by launching an affiliate program with Metricks. They have a unique post-purchase widget that pops up and convinces your shiny new customer to sign up to promote the item they have just purchased. No matter what it is.

2. Create an Online Community for your Customers

Nothing beats a virtual space for all your customers to meet, network, and share personal experiences of your products. A brand utilizing this tactic is Binance, with over three hundred thousand customers active in their telegram group.

3. Loyalty programs

This is an avenue to incentivize customers to call again. This is not to be confused with affiliate programs that incentivize your customers to spread the word about your product. You could encourage customers to shop again by offering them discounts on their next purchase or going the route of a “buy one, get one free.”

The Takeaway From Bottom Funnel Marketing

You now have everything you need to make the most of your bottom funnel marketing.

As you have seen, it is an integral part of the marketing funnel because that is where all the conversions take place. Customers are on the fence. On one side of the wall, it’s you, and on the other side, it’s one or more of your competitors.

It’s a sensitive stage of the funnel. Leads have already narrowed their options to you and perhaps a few of your competitors. And it’s now up to you to do a better job than your competitors at convincing them.

You do better, you get the customer, and you don’t. You lose them. Simple as that.

How Can Metricks Help You

1. Free Trial

2. Fraud Prevention

3. Automated Payment System

metricks-contact-us-cta

Share

Quick Start Guide

free-ebook

Popular Articles

Join 500+ Others

Many visitors to this site sign up for our weekly email and receive updates every week.

Related Posts