Email nurture campaigns are an effective way to engage leads. Learn sales experts' 14 best practices for successful email nurture campaigns.
Check out our guide on lead nurturing, which gives you an entire overview of nurturing and closing. At the bottom, you'll also find a complete list of our lead nurturing articles.
Lead nurturing represents the middle of your sales process where sales and marketers engage qualified prospects to increase their comfort and desire with a purchase. There are many lead nurturing activities that warm a prospect, including sales presentations, demos, calls, emails, and more. The best lead nurturers identify key activities to create a repeatable lead nurturing process that moves quality leads through the sales pipeline to deal close.
Rather than taking the full reader journey through the entire topic, you can jump to our complete list of niche-specific articles for any nurturing or closing situation: See them below. Otherwise, continue reading for an A-Z overview, beginning with how lead nurturing works:
After prospects are qualified, salespeople create a lead nurturing campaign to get leads ready to receive a sales pitch. To map your own process, examine the required actions and activities necessary to get leads in the buying mindset so you can deliver your pitch and overcome objections in an effort to close. Then, translate these activities into specific stages in your sales pipeline, including benchmarks leads must hit and actions necessary to move them from stage to stage.
Common stages within a lead nurturing process, including required salesperson activities and lead benchmarks, are below:
As you complete the activities in each stage, the benchmarks your lead hits will help you know when to move them to the next stage. Typically, these benchmarks are actions your lead must take, like accepting a presentation. Once they take the action or reach the threshold, you can move them into the next stage and start executing the activities involved in the new stage. The marketing team can also nurture the lead via email nurturing, content delivery, and other efforts.
CRMs play a significant role in lead nurturing. With a CRM, you can create tangible pipelines that reflect your nurturing phase’s stages. You can also manually move leads through the pipeline stages to track progress on deals and use CRM metrics to analyze your nurturing process, easily spotting weak points to improve on. Now, let's take a closer look at the common stages and associated activities of lead nuturing:
It’s important to divide your lead nurturing process into sequential stages, each with specific benchmarks for entry and actions a sales rep should take to push the lead to the next stage. Typically, salespeople send a sales email, make a sales call, conduct a live product demo, give a sales presentation, draft a business proposal, and then mark the lead as closed/won or closed/lost. However, feel free to switch the order or add your own stages to represent your unique process.
After a salesperson has received or generated a sales qualified lead, they’ll reach out through emails to make an introduction and convince the lead to take a phone call to learn more about the offer. Typically, the benchmark required for entry into this stage is an expression of interest in the product or service and their level of fit. A seller will likely send 2–4 emails in an attempt to get a response. The emails usually focus on how they can help resolve the lead’s pain points.
Here are some nurturing activities a seller might use to get leads through this email stage:
Alongside sending sales emails, a salesperson might also partake in social selling or other methods of outreach. And marketing might be sending them automated emails of their own. Typically, once a lead accepts the CTA for a sales call in the email, they are moved to the sales call stage.
After a lead has agreed to a call, a salesperson will hold a phone or video call where they give their first full sales pitch to the lead. The pitch will include a diagnosis of their problem, an introduction to the solution (the product or service), and the benefits of fixing the problem. It will also have a unique selling proposition (USP) explaining why this is the best option for the buyer.
Below are a few sales activities a seller might do in the sales call stage:
The actual sales call will last anywhere from 5–20 minutes, and the seller will attempt to both build a relationship with the lead through two-way conversation and convince them to take the benchmark-hitting action — typically accepting a longer demo or presentation of the solution. Depending on your product or service, hosting a consultation call may serve this same purpose.
After a sales call, the next stage for businesses that sell products is often a 30-minute live product demo over screen-sharing software where the seller shows the lead the software or physical product in action, focusing on 2–3 features that relate specifically to the lead’s pain points. The seller’s speaking points will revolve around the benefits that each feature will bring to the lead.
Below are some other demo-stage nurturing tactics a seller might employ:
In this stage, marketers might also send white papers and product videos and invite leads to attend webinars or events. Usually, the goal of a live product demo stage is to get the lead to attend a more in-depth technical demo or sales presentation. In the B2B space, it might also be to get a meeting with another decision maker.
The sales presentation stage could either come after a demo or a sales call stage. For service businesses, it will likely come immediately after the sales call. During this presentation, the salesperson verbally explains the value of the product or service to one or multiple buyers, typically with the backdrop of a sales deck (aka slideshow). The goal is to get a verbal expression of interest, either during or after the presentation, in buying the solution. In the presentation stage, sellers will commonly do the below stage-appropriate activities:
The sales presentation is usually one of the final stages of the lead nurturing process, and it’s a vitally important one. After it, the lead should have a clear understanding of the value you offer. At this point, a lead might even be ready for you to ask them for the sale and initiate the closing phase.
This stage is popular in complex B2B sales. You create and send a business proposal outlining your product or service, why it’s a good fit for them, and the terms and pricing of the agreement. This proposal is tailored to their internal processes, current technology stack, and other factors that will affect how you implement your solution. It’s more personalized than any previous sales actions since you’ve had so much time to accumulate details about the lead.
Here are some common sales activities you’d find in the proposal stage:
If included, this will usually be the final stage of the nurturing process. It’s followed by the closing step, where you’ll try to turn a verbal agreement to buy into a written one.
Your lead nurturing process tells your team what they need to do to get qualified leads into a buyer mentality. There are steps you can take to create a nurturing process that fits your needs, sales process, and business model. Keep in mind that the same business might have multiple nurturing processes — one for each unique product or service.
Here are the steps for creating a lead nurturing process:
You should always strive to improve your lead nurturing process through testing new strategies like adding more touchpoints, diversifying your communication channels, or using new lead nurturing strategies, which you can learn about below.
Throughout your different lead nurturing stages, you’ll use strategies to help the lead feel comfortable with and desirous of buying your offering. Below are some powerful lead nurturing strategies that will help you in this endeavor, such as being available to answer questions, running email nurturing campaigns, using social media, and more. You can adopt all six strategies or pick and choose the ones that work best with your lead nurturing process.
Consider testing several strategies throughout your pipeline to see which resonate with your leads best and help you move leads through your sales process efficiently.
Below are three examples of lead nurturing from different seller types: B2B or B2C services, B2B products, and B2C products. As a rule of thumb, the more complex or expensive the solution, the more touch points will be needed between the seller and the buyer because the buyer will need more understanding and trust to become comfortable enough to make the purchase.
B2B or B2C services, from event catering to financial advisory, will often speak with a lead, then give a virtual or in-person presentation, then follow that up with a written proposal to lay out and finalize the details. Here are the common stages:
If you’re selling writing, web development, consulting, accounting, or other service-based offerings, it’s crucial that you spend time forming a relationship with the buyer. Since they’ll be interacting with you routinely after purchase, they’ll want a partner who is both easy to work with and attentive to their needs.
B2B product companies, such as SaaS or equipment, usually have lead nurturing processes rich in live product demos and calls with various decision makers. Below is a common lead nurturing process these businesses will use:
Whether you’re selling a SaaS product, a piece of machinery, electronics, or supplies, you’ll want to focus on demonstrating why your product is the best fit for your lead's need. Focus your conversations and demos on the lead’s specific pain points and spend time discussing the features that will address them.
B2C product businesses in industries like consumer electronics or automobiles use slightly different lead nurturing tactics than B2B or service industries. Their process relies more on the marketing team’s nurturing efforts, and, if the product is low-priced, might even forgo detailed lead qualification or involvement from a sales team. However, in the two-step example below, we include a sales rep:
The lead nurturing for lower-priced products like a piece of jewelry or a T-shirt is often short. Sometimes businesses will get a purchase from a lead they just generated. For instance, a Facebook ad might send a lead to the ecommerce store where the lead buys something right away. Regardless, B2C product companies should still create a lead nurturing process for those less trigger-happy leads and to nurture buyers into customers for other products.
In each of the scenario examples above, we suggest the appropriate stages to include in the lead nurturing process. You can always add more touch points as needed. Whether you’re selling B2B or B2C products or services, the lead nurturing process you adopt into your sales process will strengthen your relationship with your lead and get them closer to a purchasing decision.
Lead nurturing is the process of consistently engaging with your leads to get them increasingly comfortable with your brand and desirous of your product or service. To do it well, personalize your nurturing to each new lead, share content that relates to their interests, and hold calls and meetings that give them the information they’re interested in. Once this stage is complete and your lead is satisfied with the information you’ve prepared, move on to closing the deal.