What happens if prospects seem promising, but then the conversion to sales-accepted/sales-qualified (SQL) doesn’t happen? Or, the deal doesn’t go ahead, marked as a ‘Closed Lost’ opportunity in Salesforce?
These are the prospects you want to win back. Marketing considered these leads qualified once, and sales even progressed the conversations. You could say they are the “low hanging fruit” – the most likely to be interested in your product or service – could you capture their interest again?
Here’s how you can build out a win-back campaign using Pardot and Engagement Studio.
Step 1: Set ‘Unqualified’ and ‘Closed Lost’ Reasons
You can’t treat every unqualified lead and each lost opportunity the same as the next.
You need context, in other words, why. Why was the lead not suitable? Why did the opportunity not go ahead?
Most Salesforce Admins create these fields on the lead/opportunity objects in order to capture this valuable information (and enforce it using validation rules). Do you have a picklist (dropdown options) named something like ‘Unqualified reason’ (on Leads) or ‘Lost reason’ on Opportunities? That’s where you will find the context.
What are those options in the dropdown (picklist)? You need to get hold of the list, and decide which are acceptable for you to continue marketing to.
Here are some common reasons:
Budget
No approval (from executives)
Timing
Solution not appropriate
Competitor
So, which should you include in your win-back campaign?
Budget: no
No authority: as in, they didn’t get approval from executives. This account is perhaps better sent for SDR prospecting.
Timing: yes, after a certain time period
Solution not appropriate: no (or add to a different campaign)
Competitor: questionable…
Step 2: How to Segment Prospects
This is all about setting up the static/dynamic Pardot list to collect the prospect you want to target. The prospects that you add to the list will flow into the Engagement Studio program.
In the introduction, I mentioned two segments that you may potentially target:
Marketing qualified leads (MQLs): marketing once considered these leads qualified.
Sales-qualified leads (SQLs): leads that had useful conversations with the sales team, even progressed to the opportunity stage.
You may decide to use one, or both. This is what the dynamic list/s could* look like:
Unqualified lead:
Prospect custom field — Lead status — is — Unqualified
*of course, this depends on how your Salesforce org is configured. Your organization’s sales process may not fit. These definitions are the most common I’ve seen from one organization to the next and could act as a good first building block for you.
Creating different paths according to the unqualified/closed lost reason. Or, you could leverage dynamic content to display different content without adding tons of complexity to the journey itself.
How will prospects leave the Engagement Studio program? Is it when they engage in a certain way? You will need to factor this exit point in, especially if you are using a dynamic list.
Step 4: Monitor
Campaigns like these can really put marketing ‘on the map’ in your organization. You could show reactivated prospects using a Salesforce campaign, updating the campaign member status when they are ready to rejoin the lead/opportunity lifecycle again.
The Author
Lucy Mazalon
Lucy is the Operations Director at Salesforce Ben. She is a 10x certified Marketing Champion and founder of The DRIP.