“I know you are good at what you do, but I don’t see why marketing matters for our construction business; people see the silt fence signs and trucks. They know us.”
Silence
What I thought to myself was simply - #@%$? My entire validation as a marketing professional was questioned—a hairline from stating that my adult human existence didn’t matter.
“Does revenue matter to your business?”
Questioning why marketing applies to a construction business does have some truth to it. Why does marketing matter when you are in a traditional B2B business such as construction, trades, or manufacturing? You could be in an industry riding an economic wave depending on the market conditions. The building industry certainly experiences highs and lows. You aren’t printing money per se, but when times are good, they are good. You don't feel like marketing is the answer when times are bad. So why does marketing matter?
If revenue is a metric you measure, then yes, marketing matters for your construction business. So let’s walk through the one key performance indicator you should employ even when there is a money tree in your business’s backyard.
The cliche, “If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?" is a philosophical thought experiment that raises questions regarding observation and perception. What we perceive about our businesses is usually skewed. After years in business, we assume we have robust contact lists with customers waiting to throw their money at us.
According to research by Dun & Bradstreet, the sad truth is that 91% of data in CRM systems is incomplete, 18% is duplicated, and 70% is rendered stale each year.
When times are good, we become even laxer in our data hygiene habits. When times are bad, we turn to our contact lists to squeeze blood from the proverbial CRM stone, only to find them in a sad state. This disadvantage to your business is 100% preventable.
As you read this, dozens of contacts in your CRM became outdated. So how do you keep up? First, segment, then filter.
The revenue metric for every business to monitor revenue is their CRM's size and health segmented into two buckets — customers and non-customers.
Customer records in your CRM are hopefully in good order. They should include the customer’s purchase and communication history, including presale and post-sale. If your customer database isn’t in good order, or worse, it resides in multiple CRM systems, start with a tech-stack audit. Your marketing, sales, service, and operational functions should work off one CRM. If that isn’t possible, select a master CRM as the single source of truth and integrate key data points with other departments' CRM systems while working to de-duplicate your technologies as much as possible. Aligning your CRMs into one single source is critical to business success. You cannot scale your business for revenue if the foundational footers it is built upon are siloed from each other.
Non-customer records are a little harder to organize. However, a well-built email list is your best investment in future sales. Failing to cultivate a growing list of prospective customers to engage with your company leaves money on the table.
Now, you might be thinking this doesn’t apply to you. If the phone rings or things are so hot in your market at the moment, no one will wait because of supply issues in the industry.
Remember, one day; the phone will stop ringing. One day the economics fairy will correct the supply chain curve, or a recession will settle in, etc. Not all times are good times. Not all purchase decisions are immediate. Discounting potential customers engaged with your brand but not ready to buy today doesn’t mean they will not be tomorrow or even years from now. Consider a home purchase or remodel. The customer may have dreamed of their forever home for years, curated the perfect Pinterest board, taken multiple jobs, sacrificed vacations, and saved their money — what brand are you to stop communicating with them if they are engaged? Better yet, your brand should be helping to educate them along the way so that by the time they are ready to buy, the only brand is your brand.
Sitting with an extensive list of possibly thousands of emails? Here is a quick segmentation you can run on your database to give you an idea of how many in your list are genuinely active with your brand — don’t be surprised if the number is low:
There are thousands of ways to leverage a finely-tuned CRM into revenue. Correcting the alignment between your business's marketing, sales, service, and operations with the right people and processes is truly the art of revenue operations.
For purposes of focusing only on one metric — list health data — and having an actionable way to lift revenue quickly from data, we focus on email marketing and email automation. Of course, data isn’t just about email marketing. However, it is the heart of any good CRM.
Consider every dollar spent on email marketing on average yields $36. Email marketing isn’t dead — far from it. While social media channels get a lot of attention, the currency of B2B and large B2C transactions is email. If you don’t have a contact’s email address, you don’t have a contact. No one DocuSigns a contract by “sliding into DMs.” More importantly, 80% of customer retention communication transacts via email post-sale. According to a 2019 study by MarketingSherpa, 86% of surveyed adults wanted at least monthly emails from their preferred brands, and 62% chose to receive emails at least weekly.
Segmented marketing emails focused on sales campaigns are a given, but what emails should you be sending that are unrelated to sales campaigns that can turn into future revenue? The Illumine8 foundational build model includes the following for businesses in the building industry, including manufacturers, distributors, builders, and professional services: