December 4, 2009
BtoB Online
Demandbase Professional for Publishers Debuts
December 1, 2009
DemandGen Report
Leading Demand Gen Solution Providers Connect To Form “The Marketing Cloud”
November, 2009
DestinationCRM
Climbing to New Heights of Lead Generation
November, 2009
Harvard Business Review
Paths to Revenue: Mid-Market CEOs Share Best Practices
October 12, 2009
DemandGen Report
Demandbase Adds Analytics To Provide Deeper Insights Into Lead Sources, Behavior
October 6, 2009
BtoB Online
Demandbase Enhances Customer Acquisition Solution
September, 2009
Business Week
To Generate Sales Leads, Develop an Inbound Marketing Strategy
Demandbase In the News
Jason Stewart
Mr. Stewart leads demand generation programs for Demandbase and is a recognized thought leader in the B2B lead generation and lead management space. He founded and leads the Salesforce.com user group in Salesforce.com’s headquarters location (San Francisco) and was one of the first 500 people to complete the Salesforce.com Certified Administrator process. He has spent 10+ years in B2B telesales, demand generation, lead management and marketing operations with a variety of businesses including Maxager Technology, MarketLive, and Inference Corporation. Mr. Stewart has advised emerging software companies including Spoke and Kieden (acquired by Salesforce.com). He earned his BA in English from Rutgers University.

Chris Golec
Mr. Golec is CEO of Demandbase – a provider of On Demand Software and Services to improve demand generation at B2B companies. Prior to founding the company in 2005, he co-founded Supplybase in the mid-90’s. Supplybase was a successful supply chain software company that created significant customer value before being acquired by i2 Technologies in 2000 as part of the largest software merger in history. Before entering the software industry, Mr. Golec spent the previous 10 years of his career with GM, DuPont, and GE serving in engineering, sales and marketing roles. He holds a B.S. in Chemical Engineering and an M.B.A.
Well, crikey, yes, conversion for conversion's sake just gives you more conversions. Shortly after I got into this game I started hollering about "deal gen not lead gen."
I've gotten to where I can't have a meaningful analytics conversation with someone who doesn't comprehend the question "What do we mean by 'lead'?"
This is also why (imo) Salesforce for Google AdWords is so important, as is tracking opportunities and revenue at the level of the individual landing page. It's harder in B2B than in e-commerce, but it's gotta be done.
Posted by: Dave deBronkart | November 18, 2008 at 12:03 PM
Re lead nurturing I don't (yet) use any lead nurturing tool, but in my view, that's a different subject, at least in the hands of a competent thinker.
Maybe I'm privileged, in a perverse way, because we sell appointment scheduling systems, and inevitably many of our "leads" come from people who wanted to make a doctor's appointment, and nonetheless filled out our form and downloaded our product literature. (You know this, but your readers might not.) So our very first job is to filter out the great majority who have no interest.
BUT: lead nurturing is in our future. IMO, in long-cycle B2B sales, you can view an early-in-the-cycle visitor as "go away and come back when you're ready" or you can engage them in conversation that earns repeat visits.
Like, having a worthwhile blog is a good start. You're about a year ahead of me there. :)
Posted by: Dave deBronkart | November 18, 2008 at 12:09 PM
I think we start to miss the point, when we start to over emphasize one point or another. Have you ever worked for a company that ran their business from the latest book? Meaning, whatever they had recently read in book, they tried to apply it word for word in their business and the business had lost it's own identity? I see this happen all the time with smart, progressive small business owners. Books are great, they help you make better decisions - hopefully better then the author first made. But, you have to understand your business, your industry, your passions and your employees and you can't mimic others. A lot of these measurements are the same way. Conversion is great - it's an incredible focus in fact. However, don't let conversion override your own authenticity as a firm. If marketing is about conversations and dialogue, then we should be listening more then we talk. Pushing any agenda more hurts the dialogue. Make sure you know who you are, who your customers are and keep your identity. It's all about balance - brand versus product, conversion versus "free", relevant content versus SEO. Balance and keep your identity.
Posted by: Justin King | November 23, 2008 at 09:06 AM
So I don't think the leads are getting worse. We just know sooner which ones are bad or good. And well can measure the ratio of good leads to bad.
At my organization, we are getting started nurturing. But we are still working through what signals=good, and which ones=bad. This is obviously a slow process, since we are always waiting on feedback from sales. But I think nuturing is on the right path. With the abundance of info out there...... we need all of the gates we can get to weed through the noise!
Posted by: Jame | December 06, 2008 at 12:48 AM