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Sales Lead Process for Nonprofit
Sales lead process for Nonprofit
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FAQs online signature
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Which are the four steps of the lead generation process?
4 Most Important Stages of the Lead Generation Process Identifying potential leads. Identifying potential leads can be a difficult and time-consuming process, but it is important for businesses to get it right in order to maximise their chances of success. ... Qualifying leads. ... Reaching out to leads. ... Nurturing leads.
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What are the 4 L's of a lead generation strategy?
The 4 L's of a Lead Generation Strategy Lead Capture. Odds are that about half of your visitors will never return to your site if you do not adequately capture some bit of information from them. ... Lead Magnets. ... Landing Page Conversion Techniques. ... Lead Scoring.
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How do you generate leads step by step?
The 7 Steps of Lead Generation Research Your Target Market. ... Create Engaging Content. ... Promote Content Across Your Business Channels. ... Nurture Existing Leads. ... Score Leads. ... Pass Leads to Your Sales Team. ... Evaluate Your Lead Generation Process.
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What are the stages of lead generation?
The entire process of lead generation can be summed up in five simple steps: Understand your buyer persona. Create engaging content. Attract the right audience. Capture their information. Qualify your leads.
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What are four main stages in lead management process?
Step 1: Collect and organize your leads. The first step to managing your sales leads is to have a way to efficiently collect, store, and organize new leads. ... Score your leads. Not all leads are equal. ... Nurture your leads. ... Collaborate with your team.
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What is the sales lead generation process?
Lead generation is the process of finding potential customers for your business and nurturing them until they become paid customers. Lead generation, or lead gen, specifically focuses on individuals with a high intent to purchase.
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What is the lead method of sales?
The lead process, sometimes referred to as the lead management process, is how your business finds potential customers and clients. This may be done using several different methods, including networking, cold calling, emailing or using specialized, data-driven sales prospecting tools.
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What is the leadership structure of a non profit organization?
The nonprofit administration is often led by an executive director, who reports directly to the board of directors. In addition to the executive director, chiefs, advancement vice presidents, and development directors will typically comprise the administrative team. These are the decision-makers and the reviewers.
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Hi, I'm james from Mindwize, a full service fundraising agency that works with nonprofits all over the world. Today we're going to run through an introduction to lead generation four non-profits covering the most important fundamentals in around 10 minutes. We'll cover what lead generation is, why nonprofits should do it, we'll look at different types of lead gen campaign, how to maximise your success using a test learn and optimise process, and we'll look at building a diverse portfolio that helps secure your donor acquisition program. Let's get into it! And we'll start with a question for those who aren't sure: What is non-profit lead generation? We'll define it as an online campaign involving a non-financial action whereby the non-profit captures the supporter's direct contact details for further engagement. At a minimum those direct contact details will usually include email address, and they often include a phone number as well. Lead generation is often - but not always - the first step in a two-step donor acquisition strategy, and we'll talk about that a bit more in a few minutes. Now a second key question: Why should non-profits do lead generation? Well lead gen is kind of like super food for your organisation. It's a really healthy activity because it grows your online community and engagement, which in turn help you achieve your strategic objectives such as core program objectives, raising brand and message awareness, fundraising and donor acquisition for sure, volunteer recruitment, and it can help you do a whole lot of other things. From a marketing perspective, lead gen feeds a non-profit's funnel, providing a first touchpoint from which you can step up the commitment of your new supporters to the cause. Or put another way, it lets you start relationships with people who are interested in your cause or aligned with your values. And when you think about it, people are actually qualifying themselves as good supporter prospects when they take your survey or sign your petition. However you put it, growing your community of supporters makes your organisation stronger in many ways - provided of course you engage and guide them well from that first interaction. Which takes us onto two-step campaigns. As i said before, non-profit lead gen campaigns are often driven by fundraising objectives. We can call these two-step campaigns, with the first touchpoint being lead generation, and the second being donor conversion. Two-step campaigns can involve a range of different channels and complexity. Up the simple end of the spectrum is something like this - we're running ads on Facebook, Instagram, maybe Tiktok, and we're driving traffic to lead forms that are set up within those social platforms so there's no web page setup required. When someone takes that lead gen action they receive a thank you email and they go into a donor conversion phone program. So it's fairly straightforward. Up the more complex end of the spectrum is something like this. Here we've got dedicated campaign landing pages for lead generation and donor conversion and we're using a range of channels to drive traffic to that lead gen landing page, including social ads, organic social, paid search and even email so that your existing subscribers can share with their friends. After someone takes that lead gen action they go on a multi-channel conversion journey including an immediate online ask, an email journey, retargeted ads and telemarketing. Now both simple and complex user flows are viable; the best choice for you really depends on your campaign objectives. But in either case, it's really important to think of the whole supporter journey and experience from the first touchpoint through to donor conversion and onboarding. You really must plan out everything from creative to systems to data flows to ensure a more smooth supporter experience throughout the whole journey. If you do this right, you'll really maximise your campaign donor conversion results. But actually, maximising this group's lifetime supporter value isn't just about how many donors you can convert immediately after their first touchpoint. In fact if you engage your leads well and build your relationship with them over time, you'll find that there's a really long tale of conversion, meaning that you'll find some leads making a first donation to you six months, 12 months two years, four years or even more after first taking your survey, downloading your brochure and so on. And this means that your return on investment also keeps increasing over time - again, if you keep engaging this segment of non-donors well. Now i want to get more concrete. Let's look at some examples and categories of lead gen action. We'll just touch on these briefly - if you want to know more, keep an eye on our Youtube channel for more detailed videos on each of these categories. And as we go through these examples, just have a think about how they may translate for your organisation. First up: Petitions. Petitions invite people to join calls on a political or corporate target to change specific policies or behaviours. Petitions can spread really quickly and grow your community rapidly, at scale, if they focus on a topic of high relevance to your audience. For example this Greenpeace UK petition addresses a number of really hot button topics in 2022 including home energy prices, climate change, the Ukraine war, and it's targeted at the infamous Boris Johnson. A petition should also have a strong theory of change to convince the reader that enough people signing it can really help achieve its goals. And a real position is delivered to the target with the names of all the petitioners. Next, hand-raisers. A hand-raiser is a non-financial action asking the audience to affirm their agreement with a values-driven statement; like this one Mindwize did for Orbis International - "every child deserves healthy eyesight". The values invoked in the hand-raiser can give it a petition-like feel, but a hand raiser lacks the concrete policy calls and delivery strategy of a petition. Like petitions, successful hand-raisers focus on a topic that's relevant to or that triggers your audience. Third, value exchanges. A value exchange offers the audience something of personal value in exchange for their details and the chance to continue the conversation. For example, this anticoagulation pass from the Thrombosis Foundation in The Netherlands. This campaign type is more driven by self-interest or user benefit than something like a petition or a hand-raiser, but it can be just as successful. And of course subject relevance is as always key here. Moving on, here we have a survey and a quiz. The tone is different between the two but the format is essentially the same - a multiple question experience that gives information back to the participant based on how they answer the questions. Through interactivity like this, you can offer the participant useful information like in a brochure, but through a different kind of experience. Now what are key factors for success with surveys and quizzes? You guessed it, audience relevance; whether that's because you're over 40 and wondering about the risks of diabetes and heart disease, or you're curious about Australian animals and want to know which one you're most similar to. Fifth, behavioral pledges. When signing a pledge the participant commits to adhering to a certain values-driven behavior, like saying no to single-use plastic as in this example. A pledge can be a powerful lead gen mechanism if it delivers a strong theory of change so people feel that their participation will actually make a difference. Obviously it also needs to be about something that's relevant to people to attract their participation. Lastly, polls. A poll asks the participant a single question about a topic that resonates and is relevant to the audience, like childhood vaccination or the rights of women and girls. These two examples really show how a poll can focus on a hot topic that triggers response without making the specific policy calls of a petition. After all, if you ask a group of adults what they think about vaccination you'll very rarely be met with silence. Now we've just covered six of the common types of non-profit lead generation. There are many more including send-a-message actions, games, share your story or photo actions and many others. It's really important that you explore a range of these different campaign types to uncover all the possibilities for your cause. Now I want to move on to a couple of final strategic points on building a lead gen program in a way that minimises risk and maximises success. The first of those is using an ideate-test-learn-optimise cycle at the program level. Let's unpack how this process works. First, at ideation you want to tap into many brains and generate many ideas in a brainstorm session with a number of people, then collectively select the three that the group involved in the brainstorm feel have the best potential for lead generation. Next we multivariate test those three campaign ideas to split segments of the exact same audiences. It's important that we do this in the lowest cost possible way to generate data without spending too much money, and Facebook lead forms combined with Facebook Experiments for the multivariate test are such a way to do this. Next, once we have significant results, we analyse to learn which of these campaigns and creative work best for which audiences ing to your key metrics. It's really important at this phase to analyse all the metrics relevant to your primary campaign objective. So if you're doing a two-step campaign involving phone conversion for donor acquisition, don't just focus on the cost per lead; you really need to measure and factor in the phone conversion rate as well so that you get a cost per donor, which is actually your most important metric. Then lastly we optimise the program by rolling out the winning campaign or campaigns that delivered acceptable results. Ideally - budget permitting - this test and learn cycle is something that you can run periodically, and so in this way you can gradually build a portfolio of viable campaigns that you know resonate with your audience. A diverse portfolio of campaigns gives your donor acquisition program stability as you can guarantee a steady supply of leads. If a campaign becomes fatigued or redundant or you have to stop it for some other reason, you can pause or stop it, but you've got other campaigns on or ready to go to ensure that leads can keep flowing. Now this is an ideal vision; not everyone has the resources for this level of testing and rollout right away. But it's something to aim for. Even two viable and ready campaigns gives far more security than just one. Thanks a lot for joining me for this introduction to non-profit lead generation. There's a lot more to this topic, so do keep an eye on our Youtube channel for more useful videos on lead gen and digital fundraising, and please do get in touch at info@mindwize.org or via our website if you have any questions or want support for your digital fundraising program. See you soon!
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