1. www.HubSpot.com
The 2011 State of
Inbound Marketing
February 2011
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2. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Contents
Introduction ............................................................................................................................................ 3
The State of Marketing Costs & Budgets ............................................................................................... 4
Inbound Channels Convert Leads into Customers ............................................................................... 10
What‘s Important to Marketers? ........................................................................................................... 13
Conclusion and Additional Resources.................................................................................................. 16
Appendix.............................................................................................................................................. 17
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3. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Introduction
Summary
This report is based on a January 2011 survey of 644 professionals familiar with their business‘
marketing strategy.1 The key takeaways are:
Inbound marketing channels are maintaining their low-cost advantage: Inbound
marketing-dominated organizations experience a cost per lead 62% lower than outbound
marketing-dominated organizations.
The gap between spending on inbound vs. outbound continues to widen: In 2009,
inbound marketing had a 9% greater share of the lead generation budget; in 2011 its share
was 17% greater.
Blogs and social media channels are generating real customers: 57% of companies
using blogs reported that they acquired customers from leads generated directly from their
blog.
More and more business are blogging: Businesses are now in the minority if they do not
blog. From 2009 to 2011 the percentage of businesses with a blog grew from 48% to 65%.
Businesses are increasingly aware their blog is highly valuable: 85% of businesses
rated their company blogs as ―useful,‖ ―important‖ or ―critical;‖ a whopping 27% rated their
company blog as ―critical‖ to their business.
Overview of Inbound Marketing
This report is designed to help businesses and marketers understand the current usage and results of
inbound marketing. Inbound marketing is a set of marketing strategies and techniques focused on
pulling relevant prospects and customers towards a business and its products. Inbound marketing is
becoming widely accepted because it complements the way buyers make purchasing decisions
today—they are using the Internet to learn about the products and services that best meet their needs.
Inbound marketers offer their audiences useful information and tools to attract these people to
their site, while also interacting and developing relationships with individuals on the Web. Inbound
marketing tools include blogging, content publishing, search engine optimization and social media.
Inbound marketing contrasts with traditional outbound marketing, in which businesses push their
messages at consumers. With techniques that include direct mail, telemarketing and trade shows,
outbound marketing has become less effective over time as buyers have behaviorally and
technologically (e.g., TIVO, spam filters, ‗do-not-call‘ lists) tuned these interruptive campaigns out.
1
For more information about the survey please see the appendix.
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4. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
The State of Marketing Costs & Budgets
Inbound Consistently Delivers a Cost per Lead Dramatically Lower Than Outbound
Survey participants were asked to report the distribution of their spending and their average cost per
lead. Respondents who spend more than 50% of their lead generation budget on inbound marketing
channels report a significantly lower cost per sales lead than those who spend 50% or more of their
budgets on outbound marketing channels:
In 2011, the average cost per lead for outbound-dominated businesses was $373, while
inbound businesses reported their leads cost on average $143.
Inbound marketing-dominated organizations experience a 62% lower cost per lead
than outbound marketing dominated organizations.
This finding is remarkably consistent from year to year. Previous studies conducted in 2009 and 2010
showed strikingly similar results: the 2009 survey showed that inbound marketing-centric organizations
experienced a 61% lower cost per lead; in 2010 the delta was 60%.
Average Cost Per Lead
Inbound vs. Outbound
$400 $373
$332
62% Lower Cost per Lead
Avg. Cost per Lead
$200
$134 $143 Outbound Marketing
Dominated
Inbound Marketing
Dominated
$0
2010 2011
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5. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Three Out of Four Inbound Channels Cost Less than Any Outbound Channel
When asked to classify each lead generation category as ―below average cost,‖ ―near average cost,‖ or
―above average cost,‖ businesses consistently ranked inbound marketing channels as having costs
lower than outbound channels. PPC was the only inbound channel that was ranked among the
outbound channels.
Blogs, social media and organic search maintained the top slots as least expensive.
Blogs had the highest instance of being reported as ―Below Average Cost:‖ 55% of
companies who blog indicated leads from this channel were ―Below Average Cost.‖
Trade shows, PPC, direct mail and telemarketing were most frequently ranked as more
expensive.
Below Average Cost per Lead,
% Respondents by Lead Channel
60%
Majority reported blog leads are cheaper. Outbound
Inbound
% of Respondents
40%
55%
47%
20% 39% 36% 33%
27%
19%
0%
Blogs Social Media SEO Telemarketing Direct Mail PPC Trade
(Organic (Paid Shows
search) search)
Above Average Cost per Lead,
% Respondents by Lead Channel
Trade Shows were most frequently
40% reported as more expensive than average
% of Respondents
Outbound
47% Inbound
20% Channle
29% 27%
21%
13% 13%
9%
0%
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6. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
The Majority of Businesses Are Increasing Their Inbound Marketing Budgets
―How does your 2011 Inbound Marketing budget compare to your 2010 budget?‖ the survey asked. ―If
your 2011 inbound marketing budget changed from your 2010 budget, what drove that decision?‖ The
answers to these questions show that the majority of businesses are consistently increasing inbound
marketing budgets:
54% of those surveyed are increasing their inbound marketing budgets.
89% are either maintaining or increasing their inbound marketing budgets.
This increase was observerd two years in row.
Among the 54% of respondents with increased inbound marketing budgets, the most
commonly cited reason was ―past success with inbound marketing.‖
The majority of businesses attributed their decreasing budgets to the ―economic
conditions‖ (71%) or ―a change in management‖ (15%).
How does your Inbound Marketing budget for the current year
compare to your budget for the previous year?
60%
Majority reported increases in inbound
% of Respondents
40% budgets two years in a row.
2010 compared to 2009
51% 54% 2011 compared to 2010
20% 37% 35%
12% 11%
0%
Higher No Change Lower
Why Are Businesses Changing Inbound Budgets?
80%
Higher 2011 Inbound
Budget
60%
% of Respondents
Lower 2011 Inbound
Budget
40%
71%
50%
20%
21%
14% 15% 15% 11% 0% 0% 3%
0%
Change in Economy Other Past Success Past Success
Management with Inbound with Outbound
Marketing Marketing
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7. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Distribution of Budgets Continues to Shift To Inbound Channels
We asked survey respondents what percentage of their lead generation budgets would be spent on
each of 9 marketing channels: ―direct mail,‖ ―telemarketing,‖ ―trade shows,‖ ―email marketing,‖ ―PPC
(paid search / AdWords),‖ ―SEO (organic / natural search),‖ ―social media,‖ ―blogs,‖ and ―other.‖ Those
nine channels were grouped as follows (email marketing can be used both as an inbound and an
outbound marketing tool so it was not classified):
OUTBOUND NOT
INBOUND CHANNELS CHANNELS CLASSIFIED
PPC Direct Mail Email Marketing
SEO Telemarketing Other
Social Media Trade Shows
Blogs
The results show that:
The average portion of budget dedicated to inbound increased from 38% to 41% from 2009
to 2011.
The net effect is that the gap continues to widen - inbound marketing had a 9% greater
share of the lead generation budget in 2009 in comparison to a 17% greater share in
2011.
Average Distribution of Lead Generation Budget
2009-2011
100%
Not Classified
33% 37% 35%
80% Outbound
Avg % of Budget
Inbound
60%
29% 24% 24%
40% 17% gap
9% gap
20% 38% 39% 41%
0%
2009 2010 2011
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8. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
A more granular view of the data shows that:
Marketers are allocating more of their lead generation budgets to social media and company
blogs.
The average budget spent on company blogs and social media increased from 9% in 2009 to
17% in 2011.
Marketers are decreasing the portion spent on PPC, direct mail and telemarketing.
Inbound Lead Generation Budget
Average Distribution, 2009-2011
40%
10%
11% PPC
16%
SEO (organic search)
Avg % of Budget
13% Blogs
13%
20% Social Media
13% 6%
7%
9%* 11%
8%
0%
2009 2010 2011
*2009 includes Blogs & Social Media in the same category.
Outbound Lead Generation Budget
Average Distribution, 2009-2011
40%
Avg % of Budget
10% Telemarketing
6% 5%
20%
Trade Shows
11% Direct Mail
11% 13%
9%* 7% 6%
0%
2009 2010 2011
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9. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Small Companies Continue to Spend More of Their Budgets on Inbound Marketing
In a continuation of a trend identified in previous reports, small businesses are attempting to level the
playing field by focusing on lower-cost inbound lead generation techniques.
In 2011, small businesses (1 to 5 employees) plan to spend 49% of their lead generation
budgets on inbound marketing.
In comparison, medium-to-large businesses (50 or more employees) only plan to spend 36% of
their lead generation budgets on inbound marketing.
Small business are only giving 10% of their budget to outbound, while medium-to-large
business are allocating 28% of their budget to outbound channels.
Small businesses plan to spend dramatically more of their budgets on social media and blogs.
Medium-to-large businesses plan to spend more of their budgets on outbound methods,
including trade shows, direct mail and telemarketing.
Avg. Distribution of Lead Generation Budgets
Small vs. Medium to Large Businesses
20% 19%
16% 17% 1 to 5 Employees
Over 50 Employees
13% 13%
Avg % of Budget
12%
10% 10%
10%
8%
6% 7%
4%
3% 3% 3% 3%
0%
Social Media SEO Blogs Email Trade Shows PPC Direct Mail Telemarketing
(Organic Marketing (Paid Search)
Search)
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10. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Inbound Channels Convert Leads into Customers
Social Media and Blogs Generate Real Customers
The use of social media and company blogs as marketing tools not only gets your company better
brand exposure, but it also generates leads that result in real customer acquisition.
57% of those using company blogs have acquired a customer from a blog-generated lead.
Similarly, 57% of companies using LinkedIn have acquired a customer from that channel.
Facebook and Twitter users reported customer acquisition rates of 48% and 42%,
respectively.
Customer Acquisition by Channel
60% 57% 57%
48%
% of Channel 42%
Users who
40%
Acquired a
Customer
Through that
Channel 20%
0%
Company Blog LinkedIn Facebook Twitter
Customer Acquisition through Blogs is Directly Related to Frequency of Posts
If your blog is underutilized, you are leaving customers on the table. The 2011 survey shows a direct
correlation between blog post frequency and new customers acquired.
Frequent Blog Posts Yields Customers
100% 89%
78% 76%
% of Blog Users 72%
Who Acquired
a Customer 49%
through 50%
33%
Their Blog
0%
Multiple Daily 2-3 Times Weekly Monthly Less Than
Times a a Week Monthly
Day
Frequency of Blog Posts
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11. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Most Company Blogs Publish at Least Weekly
Despite the evidence showing that increased blogging correlates with increased customer acquisition,
blogging frequency remained relatively steady between 2009 and 2011.
In 2011, 71% of respondents indicated they blog at least weekly.
Frequency of Blog Posts
2009 v. 2011
80%
2009
62% 61%
60% 2011
% of Repsondents
40%
29%
23%
20% 15%
10%
0%
Daily Weekly Monthly or less
Facebook Is More Effective for B2C; LinkedIn Is More Effective for B2B
The effectiveness of a particular social media channel depends upon the type of business. While both
B2B and B2C companies are able to acquire customers through any of the four channels surveyed,
Facebook is clearly more effective for B2C businesses and LinkedIn is clearly more effective for B2B
businesses. Both business types found similar and relatively high success with customer acquisition
through a company blog.
Customer Acquisition by Channel
B2B v. B2C
80% B2B
67% B2C
61% 63%
60% 55% 53%
% of Channel
Users who 41%
Acquired a 39% 39%
40%
Customer
Through
that Channel
20%
0%
LinkedIn Company Blog Facebook Twitter
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12. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Channel Effectiveness by Industry
A deeper dive into the customer acquisition results shows how the effectiveness of blogs, Twitter,
Facebook and LinkedIn varies by industry. The major takeaways from this data include:
Blogging was most effective in Higher Education, Professional Services & Consulting, Software
& Biotech, Communications & Media and Retail. All of those industries had over 50% of
respondents indicating customer acquisition through their blog.
Twitter was highly effective in the Retail industry.
Facebook most frequently generated customers for Retail (80%) and Higher Education (72%).
LinkedIn was most effective for businesses in Communications & Media,
Banking/Insurance/Financial Services, Manufacturing, and Professional Services & Consulting.
Company Blog Twitter
Higher Education 67% Retail/Wholesale 63%
Professional Services/Consulting 58% Communications/Media 49%
Technology (Software/Biotech) 58% Technology (Software/Biotech) 48%
Communications/Media 56% Higher Education 47%
Banking/Insurance/Financial
Retail/Wholesale 55% Services 40%
Banking/Insurance/Financial
Services 47% Technology (Hardware) 38%
Technology (Hardware) 42% Professional Services/Consulting 31%
Manufacturing 38% Manufacturing 24%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
Facebook LinkedIn
Retail/Wholesale 80% Communications/Media 66%
Banking/Insurance/Financial
Higher Education 72% Services 61%
Communications/Media 56% Manufacturing 60%
Technology (Hardware) 42% Professional Services/Consulting 59%
Professional Services/Consulting 39% Technology (Software/Biotech) 53%
Banking/Insurance/Financial
Services 35% Technology (Hardware) 50%
Technology (Software/Biotech) 33% Retail/Wholesale 35%
Manufacturing 22% Higher Education 33%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% 0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
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13. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
What’s Important to Marketers?
Inbound Marketing Channels Continue to Grow in Importance
Based on the data regarding customer acquisition and lower average costs for inbound marketing, it is
not surprising that inbound marketing channels continue to grow in importance. Looking at the last six
months:
62% of businesses rated social media as being more important.
Social media and SEO were the channels most frequently reported as MORE important.
Direct mail was the channel most frequently cited as LESS important.
Businesses rated every outbound channel as LESS important than any inbound channel.
Which sources of leads have become MORE
important to you over the last six months?
70%
62%
60%
51%
Outbound
% of Respondents
50%
38% Inbound
40%
30%
22%
20% 16%
11% 10%
10%
0%
Social Media SEO Blogs PPC Trade Shows Telemarketing Direct Mail
(Organic (Paid search)
search)
Which sources of leads have become LESS
important to you over the last six months?
60%
50%
50%
Outbound
% of Respondents
38%
40% Inbound
33%
30% 25%
20%
12%
10%
10%
0%
Direct Mail Trade Telemarketing PPC Blogs SEO
Shows (Paid (Organic
search) search)
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14. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Blogs Remain Most Important Social Media Channel
Survey respondents were asked to indicate if their
Do you publish a company blog?
business publishes a blog. From 2009 to 2011, the
volume of respondents indicating that their 100%
% of Repsondents
company publishes a blog has shown rapid 39% 35%
52%
growth:
50% No
From 2009 to 2011, the percentage of 61% 65% Yes
respondents with a company blog grew 48%
from 48% to 65%. 0%
On the flip side, the likelihood of a not 2009 2010 2011
having a blog has been reduced from 52%
to 35%.
Respondents were also asked to rank the services that they use as ―critical,‖ ―important,‖ or ―useful.‖
The results indicate:
A whopping 27% of users rated their company blog as “critical” to their business.
85% of users rated company blogs as “useful” or better.
LinkedIn, YouTube, Facebook and Twitter were considered ―useful‖ or better by over 60%.
In contrast, MySpace, StumbleUpon, Digg and Flickr all had user bases where over 70%
considered the channel only ―somewhat useful‖ or ―not useful.‖
How important are these services to your business?
27% reported their blog was “Critical”.
Company Blog 27% 35% 23%
LinkedIn 16% 34% 21%
YouTube 14% 30% 28%
Facebook 18% 26% 23% Critical
Twitter 14% 25% 25% Important
Flickr Useful
Somewhat Useful
Digg
StumbleUpon
MySpace
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
% of Users
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15. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Company Blogs, YouTube, Facebook and Twitter Increasingly Valued by Businesses
The results of both the 2009 and 2011 studies reveal that certain channels are gaining importance over
time. The graph below shows the percentage of users who rated the channel as either ―critical‖ or
―important‖ in 2009 and 2011.
The results of this comparison show:
Company blogs are increasingly valued. The blog is the channel most frequently
reported as critical or important, both in 2009 and 2011.
YouTube, Facebook, and Twitter are also increasingly important. Facebook and Twitter gained
an additional 18%, and YouTube gained 20%.
Flickr, Digg, StumbleUpon, and MySpace had reduced importance.
% Respondents indicating Channel was Critical or Important
2009 vs. 2011
Gaining Importance
62%
60%
52%
2009
% of Repsondents
44% 44%
2011
38%
40%
26% 24% 25%
21% 21%
20%
14% 13%
11% 9%
6%
4%
0%
Company YouTube Facebook Twitter Flickr Digg StumbleUpon MySpace
Blog
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16. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Conclusion and Additional Resources
Traditional outbound marketing techniques – including direct mail, print advertising and telemarketing –
are becoming less effective. Buyers are not only finding ways to tune these messages out, but more
importantly, they now have the capability to evaluate the products and services they need on their own.
As a result, businesses are transforming their marketing efforts to focus more on inbound programs that
allow customers to find them. The State of Inbound Marketing report shows that businesses that more
aggressively practice this are capturing leads more effectively. Given the digital nature of inbound
marketing, the marginal cost per customer acquisition is typically close to zero, meaning that as buyers
continue to shift how they make purchasing, the cost per lead for a given business will continue to
decrease.
While it is clear that businesses are gravitating towards inbound marketing, some are moving more
aggressively than others. Those who move first are more likely to reap the tremendous business
benefits of this new era of marketing.
If you are interested in learning more about inbound
marketing and how to combine blogging, SEO and social
media for results, try HubSpot‘s free 30-day trial!
http://www.hubspot.com/free-trial
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17. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Appendix
We asked respondents to name the best and worst marketing programs they‘ve executed to drive leads
and sales over the past year. Represented below are their answers in a word cloud, courtesy of
wordle.net
Best Things People Did in Marketing Last Year:
Worst Things People Did in Marketing Last Year:
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18. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Customer Acquisition by Source and Industry
The graph below displays by industry the percentage of businesses who acquired a customer through a
specific channel.
Customer Acquisition by Channel
by Industry
61%
Banking/Insurance/Financial Services
66%
Communications/Media
Higher Education 72%
60%
Manufacturing
LinkedIn
59%
Professional Services/Consulting Twitter
58% Facebook
Blog
Retail/Wholesale 80%
50%
Technology (Hardware)
Technology (Software/Biotech)
58%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90%
% of Channel Users who Acquired a Customer
Through that Channel
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19. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Respondent Profiles
The State of Inbound Marketing report is based on surveys conducted in early 2009, 2010, and 2011.
The 2011 results are based on responses from 644 professionals who were familiar with their business‘
marketing strategy. These professionals included marketers, business owners, entrepreneurs, and
executives at companies of various sizes. 76% of these professionals worked in business-to-business
companies and the range of industries varied greatly. Industries represented in the sample included
Retail, Technology, Professional Services & Consulting, Banking/Insurance/Financial Services and
Communications & Media among others.
How many full-time employees does your My business primarily sells to other
company have? businesses (B2B) or consumers
(B2C)
201 or more B2C
17% 24%
1 to 5
39%
51 to 200
15%
B2B
26 to 50 11 to 25 6 to 10 76%
8% 12% 9%
What industry best describes your company? What best describes your role?
Other Technology Business
27% 19% Owner /
Retail / Partner
Wholesale 33%
6% Marketing
50%
Banking /
Insurance / Professional
Financial Communicati Services /
Services ons / Media Consulting
4% 14% 30%
Other
CEO /
8%
Executive
9%
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20. THE STATE OF INBOUND MARKETING
Sample Questions Asked
The survey was designed to collect data on the marketing practices and results for a wide range of
businesses. This is the third consecutive year in which this survey has been conducted. Respondents
were asked a series of questions related to their business‘ marketing programs the results they have
seen. Most of the questions fell within three categories:
- Marketing budget and sources of leads, including:
o What percent of your sales leads come from each of your lead channels?
o What percent of your lead generation budget do you spend on each of your lead
channels?
o Estimate the cost per lead for each of your lead channels.
- Trends in ―importance‖ and ―usefulness‖ of marketing channels and leads, including:
o Which sources of leads have become MORE important to you over last six months?
o Which sources of leads have become LESS important to you over last six months?
o How useful are social media sources to your business?
- Focus on blogs and social media
o Do you publish a blog?
o How often do you publish a post?
o Have you ever acquired a customer from the following social media / blog channels?
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