When people read about smart content in HubSpot, they assume it is about serving the right content to the right audience. That’s part of the definition, but it starts with understanding who your customers are and what stages they go through in the customer journey. It works best when applied to complex sales processes that stretch over months, and prospects' requirements at each of the stages are fairly well understood.
Let’s start with how you would do this manually. Assume that you want to reach out to a lead from a prospect asking for more product details. You would send out communication that introduces the prospect to the product. It contains all the benefits the prospect would be interested in – At the same time, leave out some of the specifics that can be sent later to create more engagement opportunities in future.
To do this at the first level, it should talk about the overall category and the broad benefits. Most communication ends with the line, “For additional information, please get in touch with us”, and the contact details are provided. Now, assume that you have three important qualities for decision-making.
For, e.g., How easy it is to set up or how it compares with other products in the category or even how it saves the customer money in the long run. And invite the prospect to write back about what they would like to know more about.
There are two broad possibilities with the above offer: The customer does not respond or asks for details about one or more of the offers you made in the first outreach. When they respond, you get to know precisely what they are interested in and then create content that answers the prospect's doubts. Answering each of the questions detailed above tells you how the content bucket should be structured and built.
However, if the prospect does not respond, it could be because they were not interested or that they had some other product feature in mind. Make that the focus of the next communication to them. Identify three other things that customers in the market are looking for and ask them if they would like more details on these benefits.
The way smart content can be used and deployed depends on a clear understanding of what customers seek and find value in
So, the content structure is not just about frequency but levels of interest and how it should be mined. By having a defined set of requirements, content planning around the stages of the prospect journey can be organised and distributed.
Being smart about content is understanding customer perspectives. Sales, marketing and service departments are those directly interacting with customers and their reports or capturing customer feedback is invaluable. Field reports and service histories are rich sources of content buckets because they capture real experiences. You get a clear indication of how customers perceive the product and the problem they have. That is the starting point, both to rectify issues and reach out to new customers.
Layer this with the stages of a customer journey, and content dispensation becomes streamlined. Simply sending reminders to customers every few weeks is not a solution. What they need is reinforcement that your company is willing to go the extra mile.
Each email should have information valuable to customers. Today, drip email has come to mean sending out automated emails on a schedule. Instead, it should mean a steady drip of adding to the customer’s knowledge about the category and understanding the product better.
Once organized, HubSpot can deliver it with targeted efficiency and automation. From then on, it needs only to review how well the stages are working and how they can be improved.
Every company in its early stages has to figure out how to reach customers. The campaign promises and social media engagement become the foundation for how the website should be structured and built.
Smart content should be built on market data from the company’s own experience. Skilful distribution and stages are the next step.
There’s an anecdote from a senior manager at IRCTC, one of India’s largest e-commerce sites for booking train tickets. When the site went online, they simply replicated what had been developed painstakingly through millions of forms filled by customers at offline counters over decades of experience. They didn’t deviate from it when the site went online. All they did was work out the logic to connect operations and the UX that would be familiar, down to starting from planning the journey to checking out options and finally making the reservations.
In a matter of months, it became one of India's early successes in the internet and continues to ride high.
HubSpot can drive the smart content process when it has internal inputs. Content plans should be built on a foundation of what customers actively seek and then reinforced.
The same applies when prospects change into customers. With the knowledge of the journey, getting them on board and keeping them becomes the next goal.
Blueoshan’s consultants can help determine how smart content should be implemented and organised. By retracing customer journeys from the company’s experience, the goals and automation requirements can be assessed and built.
It is a complex process that requires patience to detail and find the points of intervention. But the rewards can be long-lasting