Friday, November 4, 2011

Commercial and residential roofing contractors have success from different online lead generation avenues

What makes the biggest impact on your online potential customer lead generation goals if you are a commercial roofing contractor? What about if you are a residential roofing contractor?
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According to the 2011 State of Digital Marketing Report, business-to-business (B2B) companies like commercial roofing contractors get the most online lead generation from search engine optimization (57%), followed by pay-per-click (25%), and finally social media (18%).

Business-to-consumer (B2C) companies like residential roofing contractors get lead generation in the same order, but with slightly different weighting (41% from SEO, 34% from PPC, and 25% from social media).

B2B companies like commercial roofing contractors are most active in Facebook (35%), Twitter (26%), and LinkedIn (25%). B2C companies like residential roofing contractors are by far primarily active in Facebook (75%), with Twitter (9%) and LinkedIn (6%) being significantly less important when it comes to generating online customer leads.

Of the companies in the study, 55% of companies have actually cosed deals from a social media lead. 41% closed deals from fans or friends on Facebook, 21% closed deals from connections on LinkedIn, and 20%  closed deals from followers on Twitter. There is no guarantee that this reflects the success of roofing contractors, but I would imagine it is directionally accurate.

In terms of digital marketing budgets, B2B companies like commercial roofing contractors spend 33% on SEO, 28% on PPC, 10% on social media, and 29% on other avenues. In contrast, B2C companies like residential roofing contractors spend most of their budgets on PPC (43%), 22% on SEO, 15% on social media, and 20% on other avenues.

2012 digital marketing budgets appear to be planned to increase or at least stay the same from 2011:
  • For search engine optimization, 53% said they would increase their budget, 43% said their budget would stay the same, and only 4% said it would decrease.
  • For pay-per-click, 40% said they would increase their budget, 51% said their budget would stay the same, and only 9% said it would decrease.
  • For social media, 60% said they would increase their budget, 36% said their budget would stay the same, and only 4% said it would decrease.

Finally, the topics that digital marketers said they would most like to learn about include overall cross-promotional digital strategy (62%), followed by social media marketing (46%), then search engine optimization (38%), and finally pay-per-click (29%).

The take-away is that most companies (i.e., your competitors) are spending real money in digital marketing. What did you spend in 2011? What are you planning to spend in 2012? Do you feel you have the right strategy?

If you would like to discuss your digital marketing budget or needs for 2012, please email Chris@RoofPal.com.

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