Industrial and Manufacturing Marketing Blog

Do You Believe in Industrial Websites?

Just like the classic ’60s hit song “Do You Believe in Magic?” by The Lovin’ Spoonful, I am wondering if manufacturers and industrial companies believe in their industrial websites.

I am not so sure manufacturing companies are fully convinced that their website is a real sales tool. My doubts stem from some of the things that I hear in my regular conversations with these companies. Here are a few actual sound bites:

  • We are still using our first website that was created by our president’s 23-year old son-in-law
  • We didn’t want to spend too much money so we hired an offshore programmer from a freelance site to design our company’s website
  • We spent a lot of money on SEO and PPC programs but our site hasn’t generated good quality leads
  • We are not very happy with the look of our site and we want a good designer to make our site look really “cool”
  • We put up a website because all our competitors have one
  • We don’t really use the website because 80-90% of our new business comes from referrals and repeat business

It may seem like I’m being flippant but there is a serious message here. Today, it is imperative that you consider your industrial website to be as important as your star salesperson. That’s because the way your industrial customers interact with you during their buying cycle has changed significantly over the past few years.

They are online doing a significant amount of their initial purchase-related research long before they will contact or engage with your sales team. If you are not convinced, take a look at these two findings from two different research studies done by GlobalSpec:

  1. 48% of industrial professionals spend six or more hours per week on the Internet for work-related purposes and 28% say their time on the Web for work is more than nine hours a week. (Source: 2011 GlobalSpec Economic Outlook Survey)
  2. 78% of industrial suppliers indicate that their company Web site is one of their top three sources for connecting with prospects far outpacing other outlets such as tradeshows, direct mail and print advertising. (Source: 2011 GlobalSpec Marketing Trends Survey)

Here is a quote from MarketingSherpa’s findings from their 2011 survey of 1,500 B2B marketers:

Organizations devote one-quarter of their online marketing budgets to their websites. Even the best marketing efforts are for naught if the website is not optimized (in terms of performance and design) to communicate the “offer” and trigger a “response.”

First impressions do matter; especially since today’s impatient industrial buyers are apt to make snap decisions about their preferred suppliers. You can’t expect your customers to take you seriously and do business with you if you don’t believe it’s worth investing more than a thousand dollars or two on your website, the very face of your company to the world. Your industrial website must be a true reflection of your company, its products and services.

I am not suggesting that you dive right into a site redesign or spend a bunch of money and expect the site to magically produce results. Designing an industrial Website for optimal B2B lead generation doesn’t happen by accident. It requires careful planning, paying attention to many details and first-hand knowledge of what engineers and technical buyers want to see on your site.

I suggest that you take the following steps to ensure that your redesigned industrial website produces leads and drives sales.

  • Evaluate your current site to determine its weaknesses and gaps. Read my post, “Website Evaluation Comes Before Site Redesign” for more on this
  • If necessary, hire an outside industrial marketing consultant to do a thorough internal discovery, competitive analysis and develop a go-to-market action plan
  • Get together with your sales team, channel partners, product engineers and sales support people. Pick their brains for what they know and are hearing from your customers
  • Talk to some of your long-time customers and get their feedback on what they want to see on your site to make it easier for them to do more business with you
  • Map out your sales process from the first point of contact to the RFQ and close. Determine how the new site will drive that sales process (See Align Industrial Websites with Sales Process)
  • Determine your success criteria and who will be responsible for measuring and reporting
  • Appoint an internal point person who understands your website needs and will be the project manager. This is who should be talking to web development companies about their capabilities and prices. Don’t task an admin assistant to call around for prices and fill out a spreadsheet
  • Have an open and honest discussion with 2 or 3 companies on your short list to get a good feel for how they work, their grasp of your industrial customers and their industry experience. Be prepared with a rough idea of your budget. Being coy and saying, “we don’t know” is an exercise in futility for both parties
  • Ask for web design proposals that detail full scope of work, delivery milestones and total cost of the project

After going through these steps, you will be in a much better position to evaluate different web design proposals. You’ll truly be able to do an apples-to-apples comparison instead of looking at the price alone. Download our free Step-by-Step Guide to Web (re)Design guide to get a head start in the process of redesigning industrial websites that generate leads and drive sales.

Achinta Mitra

Achinta Mitra calls himself a “marketing engineer” because he combines his engineering education and an MBA with 36 years of practical industrial marketing experience. You want an expert with an insider’s knowledge and an outsider’s objectivity who can point you in the right direction immediately. That's Achinta. He is the Founder of Tiecas, Inc., an industrial marketing consultancy in Houston, Texas. Read Achinta's story here.
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Comments:

  1. Achinta, Thanks for the great article. At our firm we believe that the website is a company’s online salesperson, and it’s increasingly vital to implement inbound marketing techniques for business, especially in the manufacturing industry. We recently published a research study called “Inbound Marketing for Manufacturers,” where we examined the current usage of effective, online marketing tactics for U.S. manufacturers by comparing 113 typical New Jersey manufacturers along with the top 25 manufacturers in the state as determined by number of employees. It can be found at http://www.grmwebsite.com/inbound-marketing-for-manufacturers/ and showed a lot of interesting insights as to what the manufacturing community is implementing, in the state of New Jersey. Thanks again for the informative post!

    • @Emily,

      Thanks for your kind words and the comments. We share the same view about the importance of a website. Thanks for the link to your research study, “Inbound Marketing for Manufacturers.” Hey, you stole the title of my next whitepaper! 😉 Oh well, it’s back to the drawing board. I’ve downloaded my copy and look forward to reading it.

      Regards,
      Achinta

      • Great minds think alike! Hope you enjoy it and I look forward to reading your posts in the future.

  2. Thanks Achinta – great article. We’ve found with many of our clients that we are up against a long-term culture where revenue is perceived to be a function of sales, and that marketing is a luxury. One way that we’e been effective in opening up our clients’ minds to the new sales cycle reality is by showing them results of very simple social media audits (based both on their company name and their industry) and showing them how many of their relevant constituents and personas are engaged in online research and conversation. It’s easy to make the point then that if they don’t have a well thought out and executed digital strategy, they are missing the boat.

    • @Michael and @ Barry,

      Thanks lot for the kind words and your thoughtful comments.
      The adoption rate of social media is pretty low among manufacturers and industrial companies. Of what little there is, it is mostly passive. This poses a challenge when it comes using social media metrics to show these companies what they may be missing.

  3. These points really hit on some of the challenges I’ve encountered in pushing B2B clients to look within and spend quality time on their web efforts. It’s always interesting to see which companies can’t quickly verbalize what they “do”. I pose that question as a lead-in to discussion point before discussing sales cycle.

    Keep up the good work!

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