Loading...
Answers
MenuWhat are some growth hacks a startup needs to approach to hit the sales target?
I am part of a bootstrap startup called AeroLeads and I am investigating for some suggestions that can provide some dominant approaches to hit the sales target.
Answers
You could start with my APELA framework.
Awareness:
The first consideration is the size of your target audience. If your product or service is only relevant to a small number of people, it will be more effective to reach them directly by LinkedIn or email.
If on the other hand, they are numerous then indirect will be more effective (E.g. paid search and social, partnership marketing and targetted advertising)
If the buying cycle for your product or service is long (e.g a car) then you must create awareness and maintain recall. This is best achieved by capturing contact details via inbound content-based marketing (automated ideally) and sending out a regular newsletter.
If on the other hand your product or service has a short sales cycle (e.g. coffee)then you need constant visibility.
Either way, you need awareness and recall.
For more about APELA and the next 5 stages of the customer engagement chorology:
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/meet-apela-chronology-customer-engagement-mark-walmsley/
God luck
Mark Walmsley
mark@markwalmsley.co.uk
Growing a business is no easy feat. Every dollar counts.
But what if we could “hack” our growth? Instead of paying $20 to acquire a new customer, we could focus on projects that continue to bring us new customers long after we’ve finished improving. Paying for the hack once and enjoying growth long after the fact sounds like a good deal to me.
Well, that’s exactly what I’m going to show you how to do. By the time you reach the end of this article, you’ll know:
What a viral loop needs in order to actually work
How to use social proof to get more customers
What a high-growth home page looks like
The main challenges from product integrations
Let’s get started and dive right into the first growth hack: site speed!
1. Site Speed
A slow site turns customers away. It has a direct impact on your wallet. In fact, “a 1 second delay in page response can result in a 7% reduction in conversions.”
I’ve even seen tests where a 500ms delay dropped conversions by 10%.
Most likely, your site isn’t just facing a 1 second delay; it’s probably 2-3 seconds slower than it could be. Simply by reducing the time it takes for your pages to load, you could increase conversions by 15-21%. With just one growth hack, that’s a 15% increase in your customer growth this year.
So how fast is fast?
Ideally, you want a page load time of under 2 seconds. For the vast majority of sites out there, this is a feasible load time that you can get at a reasonable cost. It’s a nice sweet spot before you have to pull out the expensive Jedi site tricks to get any faster
2. Social Proof
Your site should OOZE social proof. Seriously, it should be everywhere. Put it on your home page, your landing pages, your account signups, and your thank you pages. If you have a blank spot on your site and you’re not sure what to do with it, use some social proof.
See, we use the actions of others to guide us through decisions in our daily lives. Whenever we’re uncertain about which action we should take, we automatically look to those around us for guidance. If you’re at a fancy restaurant that has silverware you’ve never seen before, you’ll look at other people to see how they’re doing it.
Not only do we look to others for help, we also look to them for reassurance. When we see people taking the same action we have, it calms our fears and tells us that we’re going in the right direction.
Just by including social proof in your site, you’ll encourage people to become a customer and you’ll reassure them at each step of the process.
Here’s the social proof “tools of the trade”:
Testimonials
Good ol’ testimonials, the most popular (and one of the most effective) type of social proof.
We know businesses are biased and that they’ll always put themselves in the best light. So your marketing message is always much more powerful if someone else says it. You can overcome that skepticism by getting quotes from past customers.
Here are a few examples.
quicksprout testimonial
Logos
There’s two popular ways to do this. The first option is to use the logos of your biggest clients.
neil patel social proof
Your second option is to use logos from the biggest media sources that have talked about you.
IWTYBR social proof
But let’s say that you don’t have any big name clients. In fact, you don’t have ANY clients. And the media hasn’t mentioned you at all. Is there a way to still use authoritative logos?
Absolutely. Use logos of products and services that you or your product work with. So if your product integrates with Gmail, Outlook and Yahoo Mail, put those logos on your site. And if you provide freelance services, you could display the logos of products that you have experience with in your field. It won’t have the same punch as listing well-known companies as your clients but it definitely helps.
Customer Statistics
How many customers have used your business this month? As you soon as you reach a respectable volume, definitely get that number in front of people.
The best part is you can pick and choose how you display this customer activity to present yourself in the best light.
Let’s run through some examples.
AWeber gives a list of a people that have just signed up on their own signup page:
aweber social proof
You get names, locations, and how recently they signup up. For someone on the fence that’s trying to decide whether or not to finish filling out the form, this social proof gives great reassurance that other people are also doing the exact same process right now.
37signals uses social proof by telling us how many customers are using Basecamp right on the basecamp homepage:
basecamp social proof
Another good option is to display the number of Twitter followers, email subscribers, and Facebook fans you have.
Here’s how SEOmoz has used this on their blog:
seomoz social proof
Case Studies
This is a more developed version of the testimonial. But instead of using an entire quote from one of your customers, you tell their story.
Generally, a case study will start by describing the problem of the customer. Then you’ll tell the story of how that customer used your product or service to achieve everything they were looking for.
When you weave quotes, benefits of your product, and details on how the customer solved their problem into a cohesive story, it’s easy for other people to see how they’ll benefit.
Here are some examples from great case studies:
How Hyundai Increased Requests for Test Drive by 62% Using Multivariate Testing
Signups Increased by 60% After Actually Removing the Signup Form
The 20-Something Who Quit Her Job and Made $50,000
“How I Nearly Doubled My Salary as an Introvert”
3. On Ramp Programs
How are new customers introduced to your business? If someone buys a product from your ecommerce store, do you treat them the same as someone that’s already purchased dozens of products from you?
And what about people that sign up for the free trials of your SaaS product? Do they get the same experience as your power users?
When someone becomes a customer for the first time, they will critique everything you do. It’s a critical juncture. Either you’ll fulfill their needs and they’ll become a loyal customer or something will be missing and you’ll lose them forever. You only have one shot to turn a new customer into a loyal fan.
There’s a couple of ways to ensure that you keep as many customers as possible.
The New User Experience (NUX)
Brand new customers have different needs that your regular customers. So if you have a SaaS product, give new customers a unique user experience that helps them start using your product.
Go ahead and give them a step-by-step process to get started, call out critical features they should be aware of, and help them navigate everything.
This is exactly what Airbnb does when you create a new account. First, you get a welcome box that offers a quick tour:
airbnb onramp
As soon as you click on the “take a tour of this page” button, you get a popup explaining one of the features of the page:
airbnb onramp callout
Email Drip Campaigns
Whenever someone gives you their email, you should have a series of emails that get sent to them on a predefined schedule. We call it a drip campaign, because the emails consistently drip to your customers one at a time.
This is the perfect point to give your new customers valuable content that they weren’t expecting (this builds more trust) and you can also start introducing them to other products or features of your product. A popular model is to use a 3:1 ratio between valuable content and other offers. In other words, try sending three emails right after someone becomes a customer that helps them solve their problems. On the 4th email, provide an offer for another product of yours. Be sure to test different ratios with your customers to see what they get the most value from.
4. Barebones Home Pages
Many visitors won’t enter your site through the home page. They’ll hit some random page you’ve worked your SEO magic on. Or maybe they find a page that was shared by one of their friends.
But as soon as they become even slightly interested in your offer, they’ll go straight to the home page to figure out what you’re all about. That’s when you either make the sale or they disappear forever.
For most sites, the home page is by far the most complicated page on the entire site. There are videos, hundreds of links, multiple calls to action, and a general mess of random stuff. So when visitors are making the critical decision on whether or not to bring your business into their lives, why are you making it difficult for them to make a decision? Remember, people are risk averse and their default decision is to turn away. They’re looking for an excuse to walk out the door.
It’s your job to give them a reason to stay. And a complicated home page will never help you do this.
Go bare bones on your home page. Cut it down to the essential elements. This includes one headline to describe your value proposition and a call to action. Everything else is secondary.
Let’s go through some of the companies that have achieved unbelievable user growth rates in the last couple of years. This is how the big dogs do it:
Dropbox
There’s a video and a call to action button telling you to download the product. That’s it. No fuss or tomfoolery here:
dropbox homepage in 2012
Twitter
Over the last few years, Twitter has definitely matured into a robust social media platform with plenty of features. Surely they must need a complicated home page to convey the full value of Twitter to new people? Right?
Nope, it’s as simple as it gets:
twitter homepage in 2012
Two sentences of copy, a single photo, and sign up/sign in boxes. Nothing more.
Quora
What about Quora? Most people still don’t know what Quora is since it hasn’t quite gone mainstream. But instead of trying to say everything, they also focus on the bare essentials:
quora homepage in 2012
Facebook
We all know that Facebook is eating the world. Well, their home page has helped them do it. I strongly encourage you to log out of Facebook (GASP! Say it ain’t so!) and take a peek at their home page. You’ll find this:
facebook homepage in 2012
There’s a two lines of copy about Facebook Mobile and the entire form to create an account. Even with the briefest of glances, I know exactly what I need to do next (fill out the form). Do you want to be the next Zuck? Then start learning from the guy and chop your home page down. Be ruthless.
Groupon
The daily deal space and dozens of knock-offs and competitors all vying for the same market space. With so much competition, Groupon had to find a way to grow just to stay alive.
And guess what, they used a bare bones home page to help them do it:
groupon homepage in 2012
One headline, one dropdown to select your city, and one button to go to the next step. Dead simple.
5. Product Integrations
This is where the pros play. Instead of trying to build a customer base from scratch, why not piggy back off what other businesses have already done?
This is exactly what Spotify did when they launched in the US. Instead of building their user base from scratch, they were one of the first companies to integrate their product into the Facebook News Feed.
spotify sharing on facebook
Here are some of the best platform integrations we’ve seen:
Paypal and Ebay
Zynga and Facebook
Spotify and Facebook
Airbnb and Craigslist
This may seem like a shortcut to growth but there are still plenty of challenges to overcome.
Where do you make your stand?
Each platform is different and you don’t have the time or resources to go after all of them. Maybe you decide to build your product on iOS. But Apple’s App Store is ruthlessly competitive. It can be nearly impossible to break into the Top 10 App lists.
Or maybe you go the Facebook route. But now you’ll have to deal with a developer platform that’s always in flux. Your integration works today but maybe it breaks tomorrow.
Each platform has its own quirks and formulas for success.
Can you get out?
Once you pick a platform, it can be nearly impossible to back out if it turns into a bad match.
Let’s say you were convinced 2 years ago that the Blackberry market was perfect for your product. So you blocked off several months of time for your engineering team to adapt your product to that platform. But now you’re not even sure if RIMM will survive another 6 months. And you desperately need your engineers to focus on other high-priority tasks but you’re forced to maintain a dead-end integration. How do you tell your Blackberry customers that you’ll no longer be supporting them?
This is exactly what Zynga is facing right now as demand for Facebook games wanes. A huge portion of Zynga’s growth came from Facebook but now it’s going to be very difficult to chart a new course.
6. Viral Loops
This is the holy grail of growth hacking. In fact, it’s the dream of any marketer. A viral loop means that if you start with 10 customers, they’ll bring more than 10 other customers to you. Each batch of new customers gets larger and larger as you go viral.
To be all shmancy pants about this, we say that we have a viral coefficient of more than 1.
If you have a viral coefficient of 1, that means that on average, each customer gets one more person to also become a customer. You’ve just doubled the effectiveness of every marketing campaign you’ll run.
If the viral coefficient is below 1, that means your growth will stall sooner or later without an injection of new customers from marketing.
Here’s the deal: building a legitimate viral loop that actually works is just about impossible. For it to work, you virality needs to be a fundamental part of your product. Taking an existing product and attempting to bolt on a viral loop just doesn’t work. People never go for it. Let’s go through a real example to see how this works.
Skype has an amazing viral loop that’s built into the fabric of its product. Once you’ve started to use the product, you’ll encourage friends and family to join you so everyone can easily keep in touch. As they start Skyping with you, they’ll encourage people in their network to also use it. Before long, Skype gets bought by Microsoft for $8.56 billion.
Other products that have virality built into the product include:
Ebay
Craigslist
Dropbox (shared folders)
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Paypal
Youtube
Groupon
When a product produces a viral loop, ridiculous growth is possible. Here’s the bad news: your business probably doesn’t have a viral loop. And if you try to force one onto your customers, you’ll probably just annoy them and turn prospects away. Some products are ideal for sharing, others aren’t.
Now, that’s not to say you shouldn’t increase your viral coefficient. Using refer-a-friend campaigns and making your product shareable could increase your viral coefficient from 0.2 to 0.6. Will you have a viral loop? No. But your marketing will be WAY more profitable.
The Bottom Line
Most companies try to grow by paying for each customer they acquire. If you get the margins right, this is definitely a viable strategy.
Or you can hack your way to growth. You’ll have to pay for the talent and time to set up the hack. But once everything’s in place, you can continue to enjoy the increased growth with little or no maintenance.
When you’re ready to jump down this rabbit hole, consider these growth hacks:
Increase site speed
Use social proof
Build an on-ramp program
Use a bare-bones home page
Integrate your product with the right platform
Increase your viral coefficient
Every business needs two things to drive revenue:
Traffic
and
Conversion.
In 6+ years of doing consulting calls with business owners, the number one problem I've found they have is this:
Nowhere near enough leads needed to hit their money target. And they didn't even know it.
They were beaten before they started...and weren't aware before talking with me.
You need to back into the number of leads required based on the number of sales you need to make. Divide your revenue target by the average sale amount, eg $500K / $1000 = 500 sales.
And how many leads do you need to get those 500 sales?
Estimate conservatively first, then gather data to get to an actual figure as you go.
Say you figure you can get a 1% conversion rate. That's 100 leads to get a sale (think about all the filtering you need to do to get there.) 100 X 500 = 50,000 leads.
Consider that. For most people, they're thinking...vaguely...that they need around 5000. Beaten before they start. They'll never get there, to that $500K revenue target.
You can estimate your cost of customer acquisition this way. Again, most people aren't thinking about COCA, but it's one of the major numbers you need to know as a business owner. You can do the math and simulate your business: does the math even make sense before you begin?
This is a great question. I would first determine and clarify what your sales target is. Once that is defined I would then reverse engineer backward's to arrive at some numbers that can then fuel your daily sales "process" driven goals.
You will have "outcome" sales goals which are where you would like to go.
Then you will have "process" driven sales goals which are what you will need to do consistently each day to ensure you get there.
A simple sample would look like this:
Sales Goal is 10 new customers per month
You know if you talk to 10 leads you can close 3 of them (30%) which means you need to talk to at a min of 34 leads per month to hit your goals.
Next, you will want to determine what you need to do to actually get 34 leads to the "decision" stage of your funnel.
Look at your funnel from top to bottom (this will be different for everyone) but everyone can determine to some extent for example how many people you need to reach, visitors to your website, optins, etc.
You may determine that your process-driven goal each day is to cold email 10 new people per day which result in getting you your 34 sales conversations per month.
Or you will see that if you can drive 1,000 visits to your website per day that will result based on how your website and funnel converts in 10 new customers per month.
This will require you to sit down and outline your funnel and conversions. Once you have that number then you can have a clear focus on your process-driven goals from a sales perspective.
But once you know that you can arrange your "Growth hacks" to match that process-driven goal that will get you to where you want to go.
Regarding your "growth hacks" I would consider the following techniques as well that are really effective:
* Very niche specific and personalized cold email campaign with retargeting campaign
*Leverage the "Digital Dream 100" technique and have a dedicated sales person reach out personally one by one.
*Create in-depth case studies and leverage them with paid ads
*Create "Skyscraper" blog posts and leverage them with paid ads and retargeting
*Do some partnerships with some of your customers with fairly large audiences to offer your software for free to them in exchange for them promoting you on their blog, social media, etc.
I would be more than happy to go over any of these with you as I have done all of them very successfully and could break them down for you in more detail.
Tyler
Related Questions
-
What is the best way to sell to dentists?
Get specific with the "who" of your market (i.e. what kind of dentist? what is their specialty? whom do they serve? demographics and psychographics of both the dentist AND their patients?) And specific with your offer to them. What are you selling? What are they buying? And why do they want it (according to THEM... not you)? Get those factors right and they'll buy from you all day long.DB
-
What's a reasonable profit margin on merchandise?
Are you the manufacturer or reseller? If you are the reseller, typically about 40-50% above cost. Use the MSRP as an indicator.ZR
-
Need a good lead generation strategy for chiropractors for getting new patients. Ideas?
I think Facebook is great for really targeting your audience and you’re on the right track. But I think you can have a better funnel than that. I find, for getting better conversion today, it is better to get your Facebook traffic off of Facebook as fast as you can to your offer and into your funnel. It is more effective for driving actual sales. If you’re just looking for social branding etc. then your funnel might be ok. A very effect strategy is to create either a video or report that you give away to your audience in exchange for an email. It should be something that helps solve or bring to light the problems patients are suffering from and how to go about solving them. Then mention how having a great Chiropractor can solve all of that and can be the most effective way to get ride of the pain. I would also have some things in there that would help them in other ways. Then I would send them to an event or webinar with your top Chiropractor and you in an interview / reveal-all type webinar to educate your lead and manage their fears of going to a Chiropractor. You could tell them that the first step is making an appointment for an assessment. You should make it easy for them to find the best and most effective Chiropractor in their area. You might have a discount on the assessment only available to them for being on the webinar to get them to sign up at the end of the webinar. By the way, once this is recorded, you can make this evergreen so you don't have to do a webinar all the time. As long as you are reaching more and new people with your Facebook campaign you won’t have to change the video all the time. Once you have people signed up to make an appointment, make sure they are also putting a deposit of a 100 dollars or something down. This will increase your show rate for the Chiropractors. Then give them a voucher for that Chiropractor, for more than you’re asking for at the deposit for services, to use with that Chiropractor. Allowing you to prevent cancelations etc. so that their getting their money back in the form of a voucher for services which, by the way, is not a discount and shouldn’t diminishing your Chiropractors Rates. This strategy I have used in several markets that has produced more prequalified leads and patients / customers. Remember to test, track and know your metrics. You’re going to need to make some tweaks in the beginning, but this can be very effective for you. So to recap: 1. Setup a landing page with your offer in exchange for an offer. You can build this in software like Leadpages.net or Megaphoneapp.com 2. Make your offer downloadable if an ebook or white paper or present your video after. I recommend using Wistia instead of YouTube for playback as you will be able to have heat maps of your video to know where your fall off points are. You can also make this page with the software mentioned above. 3. Use an email autoresponder to engage your lead and email them about the event you’re doing after they had time to read or download your materials. Or, if a video, I would just pitch them at the end with a link below the video to automatically register. 4. Put on a webinar with your guest using either GoToWebinar or Google hangouts if you know how to set that up. 5. Make sure you have your appointment getting page with your the down payment created. You can use several different type of scheduling services so you can automatically deliver the lead/ appointment to the chiropractor. To Note: The reason I don’t send the visitor to the webinar first is because it is better to get the visitor predisposed to your information before asking them to commit to a webinar and when you do it the way I played out, you will have a much better show rate. This is it in a nutshell. Obviously there is more to it. If you need another funnel idea I am hear to help. I have used other effective strategies in the past to also make money on the front end to make your advertising free. It just depends on what you want to do and how advanced you want to get. Hope this helps give you some ideas. :) If you need help implementing something like this just let me know.MH
-
Best sales funnel to scale $47 fitness infoproduct?
Scaling with paid/cold traffic is a very different kind of beast. Depending on your paid traffic source their motivations and behavior is different than that of a house list or affiliate / JV traffic. Usually paid (cold) traffic is more difficult to convert with a $47 initial offer. I've had success warming up this type of traffic, with clients of mine, before asking for that level of sale. There are some exceptions to the rule depending on how rabid your market is to buy, but the fitness niche is usually more skeptical. You can warm them up by starting with an email opt in to a lead magnet then present them with your $47 sales offer, theres a side benefit to this as well. The other way to warm them up is to start with a survey leading them into a customized VSL to your $47 product. There's also some major benefits here if you segment your traffic right. As far as after the initial sale in regards to the backend funnel itself my typical flow looks like this: Sales page > Up Sell #1 > Down Sell #1 > Up Sell #2 > Thank you page. However some of my clients have much more than 2 up sells in place in some funnels. The trick is that your up sells should flow logically to each other. Meaning make your first up sell a product that gets your target market to their desired solution faster and easier with the up sell. For your down sell, you can keep the same product / offer but lower the price or offer a payment plan. Hope this helps, let me know if you have any questions.BH
-
What should my consulting rates be as a freelance developer who can also do SEO, social media optimization and other marketing services?
Pricing for different tasks that require the same amount of time from you tells the Customer (and your subconscious) that you're working at a 5 on task x, but working at a 9 on task y simply because it costs/earns more. That seems to be a disconnect. Your time is your most precious asset, and I would charge for it whatever you're doing. If you build a site, and they are happy with your dev fee, but feel like you should charge less for SEO, simply let them find another SEO guy. That's their choice, but YOU are worth $xx.xx, no matter what you're doing. Also, in general, take whatever you're charging and add 10% to it. If you're still busy, add another 10%. Let the demand level determine how much work you do, and at what cost.SL
the startups.com platform
Copyright © 2025 Startups.com. All rights reserved.