Phone Call Facts You Might Have Not Known
It’s the
rare American over the age of 12 who goes anywhere without his or her
smartphone. Businesses often overlook this fact in the age of Analytics and
AdWords by Google. That means they’re not paying as much attention as they
should to inbound calls. Marketing is far too competitive of a business to
allow that to happen. As your business handles its phone calls, we will examine
some things about them that you may have forgotten or assumed incorrectly.
Phone Calls Aren’t Going Anywhere
You may have
heard the argument that people prefer text and chat and have no time for something
as old-fashioned as a phone call. However, it’s simply not true. They may
prefer those mediums when talking with friends, not when contacting a business.
If you don’t believe it, consider this: Consumers made 30 billion calls to
businesses in 2013, and analysts predict they will make 73 billion calls in
2018. That is nearly a 150 percent increase!
It’s Easier to Make a Phone Call Than
Filling Out a Form
It’s rare to
go anywhere and not see someone using their mobile device. Whether it’s to look
up directions to a restaurant or surf on social media, Americans are attached
to their phones. In fact, they’re so committed to using them that people now
make more searches on their phones than they do on their desktops. That means
someone who arrives at your website via their smartphone has the following
options to consider:
·
Complete
a form
·
Talk
with a bot
·
Tap
the click-to-call button or dial the number to speak to someone right away
Of the three
options, the last one requires the fewest taps. When you don’t publish your
company phone number, a consumer might not view your business as legitimate.
More smartphone doesn’t mean less phone calls. The opposite is true, and that’s
good news for marketers.
Want Better Conversion Rates? Focus
on Inbound Calls
Which would
you prefer? A conversion rate of two percent or one at nearly 50 percent?
Assuming it’s the latter, you can achieve it with inbound calls. When a
prospect completes a form, it takes an average of 54 hours for him or her to
receive a response. That’s too long in our instant gratification society, and
it results in very low conversion rates.
When someone
calls your business, you already know they have an interest and are more likely
to follow through with a purchase. They simply need more information to help
finalize their decision. When you can provide details right now, you’re much
more likely to make a sale.
Track Your Inbound Calls if You Don’t
Want to Lose Money
You may
wonder why call tracking is necessary when you have
already invested in tracking how every online lead found you. Google Analytics
does a good job of using cookies to give you the data you need about every website
visit.
Unfortunately,
the trail for your lead ends when he or she decides to call your company using
the phone number on its website. That means you now know nothing about your
once-promising lead. He or she could turn into a conversion, but for all you
know, the prospect simply disappeared because you don’t have a click path for
phone calls.
According to
a recent study released by comScore, 63 percent of people who visit a website
complete their purchase offline. While that’s good for your bottom line, it
leaves you with no information about nearly two-thirds of your customers. That
means you lose future chances to refine your marketing efforts as well as
credit for getting the customer this far through the sales pipeline. That
doesn’t have to be the case when you invest in call tracking.
Call Tracking Defined
With call
tracking, you see the entire picture behind each customer’s path to making a
purchase. This includes all data about phone calls he or she made to your
company. You learn the keywords your prospect entered as well as which
marketing efforts directed him towards your company in the first place.
This
information enables you to make smarter decisions about investments in
marketing campaigns. You can tweak the ones that work best and drop the ones that
don’t perform. A well-run advertising campaign means additional phone calls,
greater sales volume, and an easier time making sense of it all when it comes
time to do the accounting work.
Simply put,
ignoring phone calls means throwing money out the window. Call tracking isn’t
hard to implement, and it eliminates customer blind spots that you really do
need to know about.
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