A day in the life of a marketer is akin to a juggling act. You have to plan out the day, check emails and respond to anything relevant, conduct a morning huddle with the team, monitor campaign performance, schedule social media posts, and more.

While these tasks are critical, they can also be overwhelming and consume a huge share of your time. Fortunately, marketing automation helps you eliminate repetitive tasks and focus more of your time on high-value items on your to-do list and big-picture marketing plan.

In this article, we’ll dissect how marketing automation helps reduce the amount of “things” you need to do in a day, turning back the clock and creating time so you can get more high-priority items accomplished.

Daily Tasks that Marketing Automation Makes Simpler

1. Lead Scoring

Lead scoring entails assigning leads a score in a bid to set apart more qualified leads from low-fit prospects. It’s an intricate and time-consuming process when done manually, but setting up workflows and triggers within your marketing automation software updates the lead lifecycle and saves you hours.

You set up automated rules and use the tagging feature to score leads based on how they interact with your channels. For example, you can tell BenchmarkONE to add a “CRM” tag to contacts that frequently visit the product page on your CRM website.

You can then configure automated rules such that when a lead with a “CRM” tag attains a score threshold, they are automatically added to the leads pipeline. Once the process is automated, you don’t have to lift a finger to score leads, saving you tons of tedious work.

Breakdown

To manually score your leads, you’ll want to first calculate your lead-to-customer conversion rate so you can use it as a baseline.

New Customers / # of leads generated

Next, take into consideration certain qualifiers, like industry, job title, marketing budget, actions they take on-site, etc., to help you to determine which are more desirable. Consider how many of your leads with those same attributes become customers to help you.

From there, you’ll want to figure out the actual close rate for each qualifier. Determine how many people become customers or qualified leads with those qualifiers.

Lastly, compare that to your lead-to-customer conversion rate. If it’s higher, you’ll know those qualifiers should get a higher score.

As you can see, this process requires time and detail. First, you need to make sure you have all the information you need, and then you have to do your calculations and assign your lead scores. With that in mind, let’s estimate that manually scoring one lead can take you approximately 20 minutes and that, on average, you generate 30 leads a week.

20 x 30 = 600 / 60 = 10 hours

2. Lead Nurturing

Once leads enter the pipeline, the next step is to convert them into customersLead nurturing can consume a lot of hours, especially if you’re dealing with hundreds or even thousands of leads.

However, with BenchmarkONE, you could set up a drip-email campaign to send emails to leads when they perform a specific action. You could deliver targeted messages to leads based on their score, pages they visit, filling out a form, or position in the marketing funnel.

Doing so saves you time and ensures you deliver messages to the right prospect at the right time. The result? You’re able to capitalize on the right moments instead of overlooking them because you’re busy doing other things.

Breakdown

Let’s stick with the 30 leads a week model and assume an email takes approximately 10 minutes to personalize and send. You’ll also want to consider the additional emails you’ll be sending within your drip campaigns. Let’s say you go with five emails per lead total.

10 x 5 = 50 x 30 = 1,500 / 60 = 25 hours

3. Campaign Promotion

One of your roles as a marketer is to amplify your promotions and brand awareness through campaigns, content creation, and social media.

These processes involve a lot of moving parts, and often need to work together to ensure your promos go as smoothly as possible. We covered email campaigns in point number two. However, email campaigns are just one side of the coin. Your social campaigns are just as important as they help you reach a wider audience engaged on other platforms.

When we get busy, things fall through the cracks, and more often than not, social media gets neglected for other things. But when you are able to prioritize social media, you’re not only able to grow your audience; you’re able to take advantage of posting times that will yield higher engagement.

Each social channel works differently. For example, to get the best results on Facebook, you should publish posts on Tuesdays and Thursdays between 8.00 AM and 12.00 PM and LinkedIn on Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 9.00 AM. If you’re busy doing other things at these times, you’ll lose out on peak engagement blocks that could ultimately make your campaigns super successful.

Automating social media is key because it ensures you’re not overlooking peak posting times and that you’re saving time with your social media strategy. Some marketing automation tools include social publishing and scheduling capabilities, while others integrate with social media software, allowing you to access your channels within the same platform.

Whatever situation you find yourself in, utilizing a social media scheduler is an absolute must. Statistics show that scheduling posts all at once can save you up to six hours a week, and maintaining a consistent social presence bodes well for potential new followers and customers.

4. Collaboration

Collaboration keeps marketing teams firmly fixed and working towards a common goal. While it’s indispensable, some aspects could be automated to save time for other high-value tasks.

Take team meetings, for instance. Meetings follow a near-identical process: you schedule the meeting, invite other team members, prepare the agenda, and finally, have the meeting. High-value meeting-related tasks, like planning the agenda, can take at least twenty minutes.

According to the latest statistics, marketing executives hold 12 meetings per week. With that amount of weekly meetings, the agenda planning alone takes four hours. However, with an all-in-one CRM, you can cut back on meeting time altogether.

An all-in-one CRM is a tool that has marketing automation capabilities and CRM wrapped into one seamless package. Your sales and marketing team can have access to all your customer data and interactions, keeping them aligned and cutting down on catch-up time regarding your priority leads and accounts.

Statistics show 71% of meetings are ineffective, which means that eight out of those 12 meetings executives hold a week aren’t actually necessary. By trimming the fat and eliminating those eight needless touch bases, you’d save two hours and forty minutes a week.

Save Over 8 Hours a Day

After adding up the hours saved and dividing it by five (assuming you only work five days a week, that is), the hours saved by marketing automation is astounding. Marketing has numerous aspects that could be automated to save time. We just highlighted a few of these tasks to give you a sneak peek into the time-saving benefits marketing automation affords you.

It’s important to note, however, that these numbers are mostly estimates based on our predictions of how long these tasks should take the average marketing professional. Some people may take more or less time to complete the various tasks we covered, and some teams may be larger or smaller, which also can contribute to efficiency. Either way, marketing automation truly does save you a ton of time, and as marketers, small business owners, and company leaders, who couldn’t use that?

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by Benchmark Team