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FEATURE STORY
 
Webinars: Are they worth it?

Story posted: July 19, 2010 - 6:01 am EDT



Howard Sewell runs a marketing company—Spear Marketing Group, in Walnut Creek, Calif.—that helps b2b companies increase webinar registration. So he's probably not the first guy you'd expect to say something like, “Generally speaking, I'm of the view that webinars are too popular as a marketing vehicle.”

But that's exactly what he says.

“Our experience tells us, all things being equal, that more than twice as many people will download a white paper than will attend a webinar on that same topic,” Sewell said. “The reason for that disparity is simple: A webinar demands more of the prospect, namely his or her time.”

In fact, there's a surprising agreement among marketing experts that webinars are a less-than-ideal way to generate leads or close sales. So if that's true, then what are webinars good for? Why bother going to the expense and hassle of finding talent, creating a broadcast and promoting it?

According to Brian Carroll, CEO of InTouch Inc. in Arden Hills, Minn., they are worth it; the key is to know your audience and understand the limitations and strengths of webinars. “Webinars won't create sales-ready leads,” he said.

Instead, Adam Needles, director of field marketing and b2b marketing evangelist at Silverpop in Atlanta, says different kinds of webinars should be used for different stages in the sales cycle.

Earlier in the sales cycle, third-party, information-rich webinars are useful for buyers “who are wrapping their heads around a problem,” Needles said.

Later, they can be used to help educate customers who are very close to making a decision or who have already basically decided and want more technical and specific information on how to use a product.

“They are useful when the audience already has a familiarity with your company and product,” Sewell said. “For example, in marketing to customers, or partners or existing prospects, perhaps as part of a structured lead-nurturing program.”

In either case, however, measuring the ROI of any webinar is going to be difficult. The number of attendees is a valuable metric, but it's also a poor bottom-line indicator of the webinar's value, and it can be difficult to generate a cost-per-qualified-lead figure for any individual webinar.

In fact, this is an excellent argument for marketing automation, Needles said.

“In a complicated sale, there are multiple steps and multiples touches,” he said. “If you're automated, you can measure all the touches and track how they relate to sales.”

Although it might not be possible to assign a dollar-value ROI to any particular webinar, it may be put into context as part of a longer campaign to attract customers.

Marketers also boost the value of their webinars by making sure they reach the most people possible—which extends long past the initial broadcast.

“Whatever webinar you're doing, it's worth recording it,” Carroll said. “We've been able to show that 300% to 500% more people watch a recorded webinar than attend a live one,” Carroll said. “If you don't record it, you're missing out on more than half of your audience.”


6 Comments


Howard J. Sewell
Spear Marketing Group
July 19, 2010 01:52 pm

To expand on (and clarify) my short quote in the article: Webinars absolutely do have a role to play in B2B demand generation.

It's true that there are typically less expensive ways to generate leads - particularly in the areas of search, social media, and inbound marketing in general. However, Webinars break up the offer mix, and can serve as an ideal "next step" in a lead nurturing program targeting existing prospects. Webinars can also be highly effective vehicles in communicating with customers and partners, constituents who have a greater stake in attending a live presentation.

In most circumstances, however, relying too heavily on Webinars as a lead generation tool is simply setting the proverbial bar too high, and eliminating a large subset of prospects who may have a genuine interest but just don't have the time or the inclination to attend an event.

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Scott Albro
Focus.com
July 19, 2010 01:53 pm

Webinars provide a couple of things that whitepapers do not:

1. Webinars usually come with a deadline that may compel a certain portion of your market to engage at a certain time when they otherwise wouldn't. Remember that webinars are events - they are marketed as happening at a certain time.

2. Webinars and all events for that matter are better at creating conversations than static marketing collateral (e.g. whitepapers that are packaged in the most non-social format available - the PDF!). If you don't treat webinars as social events, then you are missing a key benefit.

Just two more reasons to use webinars as part of your marketing mix.

Scott

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Kathryn Kilner
BrightTALK
July 19, 2010 04:08 pm

The key difference between whitepapers and webinars is the level of engagement and the ability to track that engagement. Downloading a whitepaper requires a minimum level of engagement. Then it’s hard to know if those who downloaded it actually read it. It is more of a commitment to view a webinar, especially a live one that starts at a specific time. They often require more information to register and generally take longer to consume. Because of that, those who choose to attend your webinar are likely more interested in what you have to offer and marketers can use that information to know which leads to send over to sales. Furthermore, webinars capture data about who watches what for how long. They don’t guarantee that the viewer is at the computer viewing your content the whole time that the webinar is playing, but if the viewer participates in a vote, asks a question, or provides a rating, you have a pretty good idea that he or she is engaged in your event.

I agree with Ruth that whitepapers and webinars work well together. Marketers can repurpose content into both forms so that those interested can view it in the form that they choose. Here’s a case study with tips on how to do that: http://academy.brighttalk.com/success-stories/case-study-from-whitepaper-to-webcast-extend-your-content.html

Lastly, we’ve also found the on-demand viewing to typically be between 300 and 500 percent. Most of this viewing happens in the first 48 hours, so it is imperative to offer the on-demand version as soon as possible following the recording.

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Ruth Ann Barrett
Red Digital Marketing
July 19, 2010 10:42 am

This discussion should focus on the prime importance of offers and the varying degrees of obligation each requires of the prospect depending upon where the prospect is in the buying cycle and the management of the various prospects in the account. Sales to accounts are the measurement of success and basis for ROI of the marketing PROGRAM of which mail, email, webinars, events are all elements and depending on the offer and it's level of obligation the cost per response can vary between $20 and $450, but, generally no matter the cost per response the cost of delivering a qualified lead* to telesales is going to be $1,000 at least whether you paid $20 for ithe lead or $450 upfront as what ultimately makes the prospect valuable is the qualification done by outbound and sales at the Account level. No body likes
arriving at these basic conversion numbers and prefer to focus on trying to find the lowest cost per lead lead at the element or tool level (e.g. series of one shot campaigns executed late in each quarter) that generates quantity. McKinsey Consulting pointed out in a recent study, process trumps numbers so this nose to the numbers has lead many of us experienced direct marketers to be at odds with Marcom staff who are being driven by numbers and often the misleading ones. Comparing webinars, an element or tool, to whitepaper offers is comparing apples to oranges. The advice to record webinars and then be able to offer the content in both webinar and whitepaper formats is excellent.

*arriving at definitions of qualified leads sent to sales for further qualification can be basic: size of company, level and function of decisionmaker, plus project?, budgeted? All C-level responders in companies with $500m in sales revenue may be enough to be qualified as an A lead in a process that nurtures prospects in qualified accounts as customers as early as possible. Indeed they may ready be customers at the account level.

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Jim Morgan
Team Coach, TeamTrainers Consulting
July 19, 2010 10:50 am

This has been my experience as well. I have done Webinars sponsored by a global organization, well attended by their standards and well-reviewed afterwards, and received no follow-up. Putting it together took many hours because I wanted it to be more practical and more entertaining than the Webinars I have attended. They may have value, but as an entrepreneur with limited time, I am putting my efforts elsewhere. One project is a white paper, so thank you for confirming that I am headed in the right direction.

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Adam Needles
Silverpop
July 19, 2010 12:06 pm

Great dialogue above from Ruth Ann and Jim.

I think overall the synthesis is that webinars are not at all an opportunity for one-and-done demand generation. But I don't think anything is today. Every sale has a lot of touches over time, which is why we need to rationalize tactics and content to different buying stages and why we need to leverage marketing automation to both track and manage these offers so that we get a total picture of what happened at the end of the process.

Jon, thanks for driving this dialogue.

ABN

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