1. I D C W O R K B O O K
Optimizing Marketing and Sales Lead
Management With Marketing Automation
September 2008
Adapted from: CMO Advisory Services Best Practices Series: Marketing’s Lead Management Process, by
Michael Gerard, IDC #204760
Sponsored by Marketo
At many B-to-B vendors, the sales and marketing departments are not well aligned, especially around
their respective lead management processes. Specifically, companies are challenged in the areas of
lead definition, data collection, lead qualification / lead scoring, sales handoff, lead nurturing and
performance measurement.
This IDC Workbook explores the challenges related to lead management processes and how
marketing automation software can help alleviate these challenges by supporting process integration
and data flow. This Workbook also discusses approaches to sales and marketing automation and
provides sales and marketing departments with a question set for selecting sales and marketing
technologies and vendors.
Common Failures in the Lead Management Process
At typical companies, approximately half of the marketing budget is allocated for demand generation
initiatives as events, direct marketing and Web advertising. Approximately one-third of that total
demand generation investment is earmarked to directly support the sales force in the form of market
development funds, sales training and tools, and other channel marketing activities. Consequently,
the integration of marketing and sales is critical, yet nevertheless such alignment remains a challenge
for many companies. For example, at some companies, marketing sends responses to sales without
any cleaning or qualification, essentially giving sales permission to ignore marketing due to the low
quality of leads.
Companies looking to address the key points of failure need to examine the main stages of a
successful lead management process:
Lead definition. Devising a common definition of a lead based on an agreed upon taxonomy with
marketing and sales. This common definition is the foundation for an effective lead management
process, without which the organization will be unable to identify and nurture prospects with the
greatest potential, leading to lost opportunities and continued misalignment with sales.
Regardless, the majority of organizations today continue to operate without a global definition of a
lead.
Data collection and cleansing. Sales and marketing need to collect the data that is most important
for their relative functions. Data collection and cleansing are also essential to ensuring database
integrity for customers and leads. Although clean data continues to elude even the largest
marketing organizations today, recent IDC research indicates that this is an area earmarked for
IDC 699