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App of the Week – LeanData Revenue Ops Platform – Routing, Matching & Attribution

App of the Week – LeanData Revenue Ops Platform – Routing, Matching & Attribution

LeanData

Often times in this blog we highlight smaller apps, often with a small price tag, that can provide nice little tweaks and additions to your business. That isn’t to say that some of the bigger and more robust apps aren’t worthwhile. For example, the LeanData Platform is a fantastic offering for companies who want a powerful platform that connects sales and marketing in a streamlined way, and provides valuable insights!

LeanData helps the fastest growing companies improve the buyer experience, accelerate time-to-revenue and increase operational alignment. The LeanData Revenue Ops Platform automates a variety of GTM strategies to accelerate productivity and growth.

Check it out here!

 

Will Google buy Salesforce?

Will Google buy Salesforce?

Over the last month there has been some serious speculation that Google will attempt to pull off a behemoth of a deal and acquire Salesforce. Kicked off by the RBC Capital Markets prediction that Salesforce could be purchased for around $250B, and backed up with the Google’s Cloud services not so private announcement last year that they are aiming to become at least the #2 Cloud by 2023. What better way to jump start that than by acquiring Salesforce?

A number of online sites and pundits have pointed out that while this acquisition would certainly jump Google into the #2 spot, comparing Google Cloud and Amazon Web Services (AWS) to Salesforce, isn’t exactly apples to apples. AWS, the leading cloud services provider, enables developers and businesses to build their own services and applications, while Salesforce, is a CRM solution that provides solutions, based on their own proven infrastructure.

What that all means for the potential acquisition is that Google might have more to consider than just Salesforce’s cloud ranking. The synergies that could be realized by having Google and Salesforce under one roof could be very powerful, but at the same time, Google would need to be careful to preserve what makes Salesforce so powerful, namely, it’s passionate focus on building the world’s best CRM.

 

-Ryan and the CloudMyBiz Team

 


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Understanding Campaigns in Salesforce

Understanding Campaigns in Salesforce

Campaigns in Salesforce are one of the more underutilized objects in the CRM. Properly using campaigns admittedly takes a decent amount of planning and setup to yield any significant benefits. However, it can definitely be worth your time if you do it right!

Campaigns are ideally used to track marketing efforts, connect leads and contacts, and give you data on how effective that campaign was towards creating opportunities and sales. So no, you probably shouldn’t use them to make a list (that’s what list views are for!) In this article, we will take a quick look at some important elements of campaigns and how you can use them to your advantage!

Lead Source vs. Campaigns

One way in which campaigns can be misunderstood and misused is by using them more like a lead source field. Campaigns are designed to track specific marketing efforts, from start to finish. Which means the lead source is only a small aspect of the campaign.

For example, say your team went to a trade show this month and collected a nice list of new leads. Beforehand, you would have created the campaign for that specific trade show, recording the date, place, people involved, and any expenses associated with that campaign. As you enter the leads into Salesforce, you would assign them the Lead Source of “Tradeshow”, and if you like more specific details, add the name of the show and date to the “Lead Source Detail” field.

Once you get that list and add it to the campaign, you kick off whatever post show follow up you have in mind, emails, calls, etc. You can even attach important resources to the campaign in Salesforce, such as brochures or flyers, so that everyone involved can have easy access! As the campaign goes along, you will be able to see which members have converted to opportunities, and if you have added your numbers diligently, get cost to opportunity value for that one specific trade show!

One final benefit of using campaigns is that you can’t attribute more than one lead source to a lead. But as any marketer knows, leads often have many touch points associated with your various efforts. Campaigns allow you to indicate all of the different interactions a lead is having with your marketing materials, so you can get a fuller picture of how the funnel is working.

Campaign Hierarchies

Continuing on the example above, we can then add in the practice of campaign hierarchies to track the results of many similar campaigns over time. Depending on how you want to build them out, you can do two, three… however many layers you want.

For our example, let’s then say we create another campaign of “Trade Shows 2020”. Using the parent field on the campaigns, you can associate any individual trade show campaigns to this hierarchy. After attending and running a few different tradeshow campaigns, you can go into the “Trade Shows 2020” campaign, and see detailed results and statistics on how successful your trade show efforts have been that year, and see comparisons on which ones worked the best!

 

 

Define Your Fields

Another best practice is to plan out and define some standard campaign and campaign member fields before you get going. Specifically, the “Campaign Type” and “Campaign Member Status” fields.

Campaign Type

Campaign type will help you predefine the general type of initiative the campaign falls under, such as email, referral program, seminar, etc. Ideally, you want to pick a set of list options that are general enough to cover all efforts your business will be involved in, while keeping them specific enough that everyone knows what you are talking about. Keeping the campaign types consistent across many years will ensure you can quickly sort and retrieve metrics on the effectiveness of the different initiatives.

Campaign Member Status

This one can take a bit of planning, but can be oh so important to your long term tracking. Similar to above, you should define a concise picklist of options, such as “sent, called, responded, etc.” that will indicate how that lead or contact is associated with the campaign. You may need to create a series of custom values here, depending on what type of campaign it is.

So with all of that laid out, you should have everything you need to better understand and use campaigns in Salesforce. As a final word, don’t forget to check back on them often and see what results you have been achieving!

 

Click to learn more!

 

-Ryan and the CloudMyBiz Team

 


 

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App of the Week – Asana for Salesforce

App of the Week – Asana for Salesforce

Familiar with Asana, the project management and collaboration platform? If you aren’t it is one of the more popular sales enablement and collaboration tools on the market, helping create tasks and streamline messaging between sales, marketing and delivery. Released only a few months ago, this app allows you to use the Asana collaboration tools directly in Salesforce!

Asana for Salesforce allows you to drive seamless collaboration between sales and other teams so you can deliver amazing customer experiences

 

Check it out here!

 

Better Marketing with Handlebars Merge Language for Pardot

Better Marketing with Handlebars Merge Language for Pardot

It’s every email marketer’s nightmare. An email campaign goes out and the merge tags don’t carry over as intended. This can happen for a variety of reasons. Sometimes it is because of poor data quality and bad data entry habits on the part of the team. This can certainly be frustrating, especially as the solution is a time consuming data cleanse. Alternatively, the cause may just be insufficient complexity in the merge language.  

Well, if you are using Pardot for your marketing efforts, you will now be able to upgrade your merge language to “Handlebars Merge Language” and make better and more personalized emails. 

 

 

How exactly does HML improve your ability to write emails? In a nutshell, it provides the ability to write “IF” statements. IF statements allow you to specify specific conditions to display content a certain way if the relevant field has dat, and then for that string of content to display completely different if that field has no data. 

Previously, Pardot merge tags would simply give you the option to have the data fields populate from Salesforce, and if that field is empty, you would have to write a generic entry to fill that gap. The most common example is “Hey %%first name%%”, with a backup value of “there” for the field. So you would either get the result of “Hey John”, or “Hey there”. It works, but it certainly isn’t very personal or flexible.

With the new HML tags though, you can set up so that the first result would be the same, “Hey John”, but if the first name isn’t known, you can make the whole string completely different, such as, “To whom it may concern” or if you want to have some fun “Hello you beautiful person”.

Click here for more details and examples of how HML tags will work in Pardot.

 

-Ryan and the CloudMyBiz Team

 


Want to get started with Salesforce? 

Need some custom consulting or development to enhance the Salesforce you already have?

 

Contact us