2016-07-20

True Influence
B2B Marketing Terms You Need to Know in 2016

We know you’re an expert, but now and then a marketing term can pop up that leaves you flummoxed, after all, new buzzwords are popping up all the time. Our marketing terms guide will get you back on track instantly, so you and your  team can return your focus back to your client’s latest project, or to closing that sale, with no one the wiser.

If you’re looking for THE definite guide to B2B marketing terminology for 2016, this is it. Have something to add? Leave us a comment and we will keep this post updated.

A

A/B Testing. Also known as split testing, a way to improve engagement and conversion rates, typically used to comparing the performance of email campaigns and landing pages. A control and test will be compared with slight variables made to the subject line, format or call to action.

Account Based Marketing. Account-Based Marketing (ABM) is a framework focused on targeting specific accounts or account segments, usually by purchase history, firmographics, product need, or strategic value. ABM uses Click Demand Generation techniques with the objective of adding new accounts or increasing revenue per existing account instead of focusing on individual leads.

This approach, instead of sending out messages to as many people as possible, puts the focus on individual accounts as markets of one.

Advocate Marketing.  The combination of customer service and marketing to have customers satisfied. A satisfied customer is rewarded for the advocacy they perform for the company.

Affiliate Marketing. Performance-based marketing where a business rewards an affiliate for each visitor brought by the affiliate’s own efforts. Affiliates commonly use organic search rank and PPC marketing.

Affinity Marketing.  A partnership between a company and an organization that aggregates people sharing the same interests to bring a larger consumer base to the opposite party.

Always Be Closing (ABC). A phrase used to remind sales to always look for new customers, pitch products or services to those individuals, and then complete the sale. ‘Always Be Closing’, as a strategy, is about the salesperson being persistent but also knowing when to cut losses.

Analytics. Determining the success of a marketing campaign is all about the crunching of numbers, and analytics – essentially reviewing data to determine the effectiveness of a marketing campaign and ensure the best return on investment – is a measurement of that data that helps you make smarter marketing decisions.

B

Backlink. A link from one website to another. Backlinks from high authority websites can significantly increase the search ranking of the referent website, while links from less authoritative sites can hurt search ranking.

Behavior-Based Marketing When you click on a website, especially one that sells a product, ads for that product suddenly start showing up on your computer, as if the machine has become a stalker. That is behavior-based marketing, which uses user activity to target potential leads.

B2B marketing. Business to business marketing is advertising done by one business to attract another business.

B2C marketing. Business to consumer marketing is advertising done by a business that sells directly to a consumer, such Kellogg’s.

BANT. An acronym used by sales reps to determine a prospects likelihood to buy. BANT stands for: Budget – Do they have the ability to spend? Authority – Do we know who will ‘write the check’? Need – What are the indications that they might need our solution? Timeline – And when will they need it?

Black Hat SEO. Refers to the use of aggressive SEO strategies, techniques and tactics that focus on outsmarting search engines, and usually do not obey search engines guidelines, making that page subject to search engine penalties. Some examples of black hat SEO techniques include keyword stuffing, invisible text, doorway pages, and adding unrelated keywords to the page content or page swapping. See White Hat SEO.

Blog. . A regularly updated website or web page. Either operated by a single person or a group from the same company. Often written informally or conversational style, it’s usually intended to be informative. One of the components of inbound marketing.

Big Data. Large data sets that are analyzed by computers to reveal patterns, trends, and connections, especially relating to tracking human behavior and interactions.

Bounce rate. Bounce rate is a measurement of the number of visitors to a website who leave after landing on the home page, without clicking to view any other pages or content. Bounce rate can also refer to emails that are unable to be delivered to a recipient due to an invalid or outdated email address.

Branding. The marketing practice of creating a name, symbol or design that identifies and differentiates a product from other products. Branding also applies to how the company communicates online with customers, personality, and culture.

Buyer Personas. A representation of your target customer based on data. A persona informs you what a customer is motivated by, what their hesitations may be, and what they may be thinking and/or doing as they consider their options. Much more than a one-dimensional profile of the people you need to influence, they highlight insights about your buyers’ decisions.

Buyer’s Journey. A widely-recognized term referring to how consumers move through a process in order to buy a product. It is a framework that acknowledges a buyer’s progression through a research and decision process that ends with them making a purchase.

C

Call to action. A call to action is a link in the form of text, an image or another point of access the allows visitors to either buy a product or subscribe to a newsletter, sign up for emails, download content or engage in some other kind of interaction with a company or website. An effective call to action – at the end of content, for example – makes visitors to a website more likely to become a lead.

Campaign. A specific series of activities used to market a product. All of the tools and efforts utilized in the effort are part of the campaign.

Channel Partner. A person or organization that provides services or sells products on behalf of a software or hardware vendor.

Cause Marketing. Cause marketing is a strategy links for-profit businesses and non-profits for mutual benefit, usually bringing in money for the non-profit and goodwill – and the added recognition and sales that come with it – for the for-profit company.

Click-through Rate. Also known as CTR, click-through rate measures the number of clicks that visitors to your site make as they travel from one part of your website to the next compared to the number of page landings, emails and other marketing efforts.

Content. Content – whether a blog or social media post, a photo, a podcast, a video or a slideshow –is information that engages people and encourages traffic to a website. Content marketing is important because it can attract Influencers and lead to shares, which boost potential traffic and customers.

Content Audit. An accounting of all currently published web content. It is an analysis of information on a website; the assessment of content and its relationship to surrounding information.

Content Curating. The process of gathering information relevant to a particular topic or area of interest. Services or people that implement content curation are called curators. Curation services can be used by businesses as well as end users.

Content Management System. A CMS is an application that makes creating, editing and managing a website easier for those who aren’t necessarily technical wizards. A CMS also makes your website easier for users, which will make navigation easier. Because web surfers expect their experience to be simple, encountering a problem is a turnoff, and will likely send them somewhere else immediately. A good CMS makes it more likely you’ll retain visitors.

Content Marketing. An approach focused on creating valuable, relevant, and consistent content to attract and retain a specific audience.

Content Shock. A situation where content supply is rapidly increasing while content demand is stagnant, creating an atmosphere where businesses have to pay consumers to get them to see the same amount of content.

Conversion (Rate, Path). When an individual of a marketing message performs a preferred action.

Cornerstone Content. A single page in your websites structure that is the main foundation for a targeted keyword. This content is usually very in-depth and it’s what people need to know about that keyword.

Content Optimization System. While a CMS is geared more toward ease for the creator, a COS is optimized toward customers. Again, if surfers experience any negative during their click-through experience, they will leave and won’t come back. A COS helps personalize the experience, and that makes visitors more likely to become leads or buyers.

Content Syndication. When content is made available from one website and duplicated to other sites, usually through content networks.

Cost Per Action. This method of paying for advertising, also known as pay per action, allows advertisers to pay agencies only when an ad does what the advertiser hoped it would, such as encourage clicks, impressions, signing up for newsletters or purchases.

Creative Disruption. In marketing, creative disruption occurs when a traditional marketing message if flipped to attract consumer attention. By doing the unexpected through messaging, a product has the potential to become more memorable.

Customer Relationship Management (CRM). Refers to practices, strategies and technologies that companies use to manage customer interactions and data throughout the customer lifecycle, with the goal of improving business relationships, assisting in customer retention, and driving sales growth.

D

Data-Driven Marketing. The analysis of data about companies or consumers, to gain marketing insight and make better decisions. This data may include social media interactions, web searches and browsing behavior.

Deliverables. Something produced by a project that is intended to be delivered to a customer. It could be a report, a document, or any other connecting block of an overall project.

Demand Generation. Targeted marketing programs that drive awareness and incite interest in a company’s products and/or services. Commonly used in B2B, B2G, or longer B2C cycles, demand gen involves multiple areas of marketing and is really the marriage of marketing and sales programs.

Direct Marketing. An advertising campaign that required the consumer to take an action in response to the communication. Direct marketing most often takes place at point-of-sale (POS) transactions, in postal mail campaigns, email marketing and telemarketing.

Doorway page. Usually the home page of a website, this is the page where keywords and other links that boost search engine ranking comes into play. The more effective your doorway, page, the more likely visitors are to click through your content.

E

Earned Media. Once known as word-of-mouth, earned media is advertising that comes from Influencers, someone who uses your product and talks about it on a Facebook post or their YouTube channel, for example. It’s usually free, and it’s effect because it’s the most honest form of marketing available.

Ebook. An electronic version of a printed book that can be read on a computer or handheld device designed specifically for this purpose.

Email Marketing. Marketing a message to a group of customers, or potential customers, using email. Every email sent could be considered email marketing. The email could send advertisements or anything of the nature and is meant to instill trust and awareness. Email marketing is traditionally the preferred way to reach B2B buyers.

Engagement rate. This measures the interaction, whether shares, likes or comments, that a piece of content – a post, a comment, a meme, a video, etc. – receives. Interactions let you know how effective your messaging is, and if you need to make changes to reach your target audience. Engagement marketing uses content aimed at that target audience.

Ephemeral Marketing. Marketing catered toward the mobile-to-mobile transmission of multimedia messages that automatically disappear from the recipient’s screen after the message has been viewed. The word “ephemeral” describes something that only lasts for a short period of time, such as Snapchat.

External Links. A common hyperlink found on a web page that connects to another web address, image, or document found on the different website. External links will take you out of the current domain, whereas the opposite type – internal links – will keep you in the same website. If you link to an outside website, or one links to you, it is an external link.

F

Focus group. A focus group is usually a group made up of a new product’s target audience that scores the product based on opinion.

Form. An area that is placed or linked to on your website, blog, or social media sites so that a visitor can sign-up to receive a newsletter or email. They typically ask for at least a name and email address. They may also be referred to as email opt-in forms, web forms, or sign-up forms.

Friction. While you might think the more the merrier, when it comes to your website, anything that is too busy, too confusing or to muddled causes friction, and friction – a bit of annoyance that can include too much text, distracting or useless navigation menus or even colors that don’t match the message – can be enough to drive visitors to another site.

G

Gamification. The concept of applying game mechanics and game design techniques to engage and motivate people to achieve their goals. Gamification taps into the basic desires and needs of the users impulses which revolve around the idea of Status and Achievement.

Geo-targeting. With the advent of location tracking, advertisers can use geo-targeting to generate location-based content (Location Based Marketing) or websites based on a person’s location.

Green Marketing. New marketing approaches used interchangeably with environmental marketing and ecological marketing to market products with the assumption they are better for the environment. “Green Washing” is when a company used Green Marketing in deceptive ways for financial gain.

Growth Hacking. A fast, unique way to figure out the most effective ways to grow a business. Growth hackers focus on building and engaging the user base of a business.

Guerrilla Marketing. A way for a businesses to promote their products in an unorthodox way. This style of marketing requires a lot of energy focused on capturing the attention of the public on a more personal level.

H

Historical Optimization. Republishing old blog content so it’s fresh, modern, and has the ability to produce more traffic than it had before.

I

Impression. In online advertising, an impression is when a viewer is given an opportunity to see an ad, whether or not the ad is clicked on by the viewer. When an ad is displayed, it is counted as an impression.

Inbound Links. A link coming from another site to your own website. “Inbound” is generally used by the person receiving the link.

Inbound marketing. Using information in various forms of content to lure visitors in, especially with content that would be of interest to your target audience.

Inbound Methodology. The best way to turn strangers into website visitors, visitors into qualified leads, and leads into customers and promoters of a business.

Influencer Marketing. When attention is placed on reaching specific individuals who have influence in an industry. Those people are called Influencers and they have influence over potential buyers in the industry and are sought out by journalists for bylines. Influencers are targeted most notably on Twitter.

Infographic. An infographic is visually captivating content that helps digital marketers tell a story or introduce a concept visually.

Integrated Marketing. A marketing strategy that stresses the importance of a consistent, seamless, multi-dimensional brand experience for the consumer. This means that each branding effort – across television, radio, print, Internet, and in person – is presented in a similar style that reinforces the brand’s ultimate message.

Internal Links. A common hyperlink found on a web page that connects to another web address, image, or document found on the same website. Internal links will keep you in the same domain, whereas the opposite type – external links – will take you to a different website altogether.

International Marketing. At its simplest level, international marketing involves the firm in making one or more marketing mix decisions across national boundaries. At its most complex level, it involves the firm in establishing manufacturing facilities overseas and coordinating marketing strategies across the globe.

Internet of Things (IoT). The idea of connecting any device to another with the capability to reach the Internet. This includes phones, video games, drying machines, watches, and anything else.  This also applies to component, such as engines or GPS devices. It is a massive network of connectivity from all around the world, in all facets of modern technology.

Interactive agency. As advertising becomes more complex and moves beyond traditional print and television ads, an interactive agency offers a mix of traditional adverting experts along with staff devoted to Web design and development and internet marketing. Some agencies are even involved in product development, including apps aimed at marketing/advertising tracking or distribution.

K

Keyword. Keywords or keyword phrases are terms that if used in content help your pages get indexed, so they turn up in search results through search engines such as Google, Bing or Yahoo. Using the right keywords – ones that are suited to your target audience – will help you drive traffic to your site.

Keyword Stuffing. A search engine optimization (SEO) technique, in which a web page is loaded with keywords in the meta tags or in content of a web page. Keyword stuffing may lead to a website being banned or penalized in search ranking on major search engines either temporarily or permanently.

L

Landing page. There are generally two types of landing pages – click-through landing pages, which use content to persuade visitors to click through to another page, where they will find a call to action – and lead generation landing pages, which ask visitors for information about themselves such as a name or email address so they can be marketed to as potential leads.

Lead. A lead is someone who had shown interest in a product or service, either by filling out a lead generation landing page, subscribe to a blog or shared contact information at a B2B conference. While leads may or may not become customers, generating leads is an important part of the marking process, because one satisfied customer could lead to plenty of earned media, or word-of-mouth advertising.

Lead Generation. The initiation of consumer interest or inquiry into products or services of a business. Leads can be created for purposes such as list building, e-newsletter list acquisition or for sales leads. The methods for generating leads typically fall under the umbrella of advertising, but may also include non-paid sources such as organic search engine results or referrals from existing customers.

Lead Scoring. A methodology used to rank prospects against a scale that represents the perceived value each lead represents to the organization. The resulting score is used to determine which leads a receiving function (e.g. sales, partners, tele-prospecting) will engage, in order of priority.

Lead nurturing. If someone has given you their contact information or ordered a free or reduced-rate item offered as a way to lure them something bigger, regular reminders through email or via social media or pop-up advertising is a good way to maintain engagement with your target audience members, reminding them that you have content available in which they have shown interest. If you have a monthly subscription series, for example, sending regular snippets of information from that paid content will let them know what they are missing, so they are more likely to stay engaged and interested.

Location Based Marketing (LBM). A direct marketing strategy utilizing the GPS location of your device to push offers from businesses near you.

Long Tail Keyword. A multiple keyword phrase – usually made up of three and four words, but can be much longer—that is specific to what people may search for to find your product. Long tail keywords are easier to rank for, but have less search volume.

M

Marketing Automation. Marketing automation is the use of tools and data to ensure that businesses are marketing to the right clients – those that have shown interest in the product or service – and are reaching the right leads as well.

Marketing performance measurement and management. MPM uses data and present performance standards and customer experience and satisfaction but also overall outcomes.

Marketing Qualified Lead (MQL). A lead that shows interest through interaction via an email signup or contact form. MQL’s usually need to be researched further to see if they are a real prospect and converted into a Sales Qualified Lead (SQL).

Market segment. A market segment is a group of consumers who respond to marketing in a similar way based on a common need, much like a target audience. Market segmentation is the division of one large audience into various subgroups, targeting products to those best suited for them.

Mobile marketing. Mobile marketing is providing advertising and marketing aimed at mobile devices including smartphones and tablets, often personalized based on location, searches, etc.

Mobile Optimization. If you’re website is formatted so that’s it’s easy to navigate and read on mobile devices, you’ve mastered mobile optimization. Being mobile-friendly also raises your ranking on Google, so it’s a smart marketing move.

N

Native advertising. Native Advertising is advertising and marketing that seems part of its environment, such a product used in a television show or your favorite radio personality touting a favorite product. While it is at its core paid advertising, it is meant to feel more natural.

Newsjacking. Using a breaking news story and putting a spin on it to draw attention to your content.

O

Omni-Channel Marketing. Like the older term, Multi-Channel Marketing on steroids, Omni-Channel Marketing provides a seamless and consistent experience to prospects and consumers over multiple devices and channels. This includes physical stores, websites, print ads, apps as well as all the range of devices like phones, tablets and laptops.

Organic Search. When your website ranks for keywords organically, or free. It often takes an investment in time and good content to get good organic search rank, particularly in competitive markets.

Outbound Links. Links from your website to another that can help or hurt your website authority.

Outbound Marketing. All of the techniques used in older marketing techniques like radio, TV ads, cold calling and door-to-door sales. Many Outbound Marketing practices in the tech-savvy world of today are seen as an annoyance and invasion of space.

Out-of-box experience. An out of box experience is the first impression a product makes, whether that includes ease of set up or installation for electronics or new hardware or other items or easy to understand instruction when putting together a piece of furniture, for example.

P

Pay Per Click (PPC). Also called cost per click (CPC), it refers to internet advertising. It is usually associated with search engine ads and can get very expensive if not done correctly or in a highly competitive market.

Pipeline Marketing. The sometimes long path customers take from lead to customer. Pipeline Marketing includes content marketing, lead nurturing and others to focus on customer generation instead of focusing on lead generation. Goals are based on overall revenue aligning sales and marketing on a singular goal.

Positioning. A part of branding, positioning is important to differentiate a company to give it unique placement and perception among competitors in their market

POV. Also known as, “Point of View”, a POV is usually given to a client by a marketing agency to asses ideal marketing channels. For example, whether they should spend more money advertising on LinkedIn than Facebook.

Prospect. A person or account who shows interest in what you are selling.

Programmic. Programmatic marketing uses computer software to buy digital advertising, rather than traditional agency-client interaction. The process is cheaper and more efficient, according to advocates of the technology.

Q

Q Score. A Q Score is a measurement of not only the familiarity, but also the appeal of a brand, celebrity, movie or television show. Q Scores are used in advertising, marketing and PR campaigns, since  landing a celeb with a higher Q score for a marketing campaign could be worth the extra money spent by drawing more attention to a product or service.

R

Relationship Marketing. A marketing strategy focused on campaigns developed for customer satisfaction and retention instead of sales.

Retargeting. Often used together with inbound, outbound and demand generation, it’s a form of targeted advertising which uses data gathered from previous internet actions (through cookies) to serve up related ads. Retargeting is in use when you see an Amazon ad following you from site to site based on your last Amazon search.

Return on Marketing Investment (ROMI). One of (or THE) the most important metric in marketing and uswd to determine the value of a campaign. Since direct impact is the only calculation reflected, marketers often add a value to brand awareness and other factors into this number to quantify the less tangible benefits of marketing.

Request for Proposal (RFP). Sometimes seen as obsolete (think Madmen), an RFP is a standard proposal sent to marketing agencies requesting stats, figures, company information and case histories (for example) with the intent of vetting them for an ongoing relationship.

ROI. ROI, known as Return on Investment, is an indicator of the benefits a business receives from an investment, and evaluates whether or not the investment was economically sound or profitable.

S

Sales funnel. A sales funnel is a marketing tool that gives you an overview of where prospects are in the stages of your sales cycle – top of the funnel folks are potential customers, middle of the funnel means your initial marketing tools have worked well enough to entice TOFUs to sign up for newsletters or other offers and bottom of the funnel customers are those closest to going in for the close, and a discount at this stage could help seal the deal.

Sales Qualified Leads (SQL). A lead or prospect that has been prequalified to have the interest and the ability to move onto the next stage in the sales process. They typically display intent to make a purchase and meet certain criteria.

Search Engine Marketing (SEM). Similar to SEO (below), SEM is a broader term and focuses more on gaining traffic to a website through non-organic methods, including paid advertising.

Search Engine Optimization (SEO). The many processes to optimize a website to organically perform well in search engines. This constantly evolving process includes onsite optimization as well as offsite optimization and includes content using keywords, link building (inbound, internal and outbound), gaining social proof and much more.

Search engine optimization. Search engine optimization, referred to as SEO, is a way to use keywords and other tools including images and links to help influence where a webpage shows up in search engine results. Do this right, and your page could show up on the first page of a search, enhancing your chances of making a sale. Yours will have to be a popular website with a high click-through rate, because search engines use plenty of data to determine how to rank your site.

Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs). The results a search engine (like Google or Bing) displays in response to a keyword query.

Sign Up Form. An area that is placed or linked to on your website, blog, or social media sites so that a visitor can sign-up to receive a newsletter or email. They typically ask for at least a name and email address. They may also be referred to as email opt-in forms, web forms, or sign-up forms.

Small and Medium Sized Businesses (SMBs). Also called Small and Medium Sized Enterprises (SME’s), and refers to businesses with numbers between 1 and 999 employees. In general terms, a small business has less than 100 employees, while a medium business has between 100 and 999.

Smart Content. Utilizing intelligence to create user-specific website content that changes according to their interest level, location, actions, and other factors.

SMART Goals. A mnemonic acronym that stands for Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, and Timely. SMART goals meet these criteria.

Smarketing. The process of aligning and integrating marketing and sales processes toward a common goal.

Social Media Marketing (SEM). Using social media channels like Facebook, Twitter and others to market a product or service. Social media marketing fits into the awareness stage of a buyer’s journey and part of inbound marketing.

Social Monitoring. Most often used on Twitter, social monitoring is when specific users, words or brands are tracked to identify opportunities to connect and share information. It’s also used interchangeably with “social listening”.

Social Proof. When marketers utilize share counts to encourage and influence readers to give it authority, making it more likely for additional shares from new readers.

Software as a Service (SaaS). Known as “on-demand software”, SaaS is a subscription-based software licensing and delivery model, the most popular being CMS and MA.

Style Guide. A manual of style used to establish a brand image and used in internal and external design elements of a company and its website for consistency.

Submission Rate. The percentage of views that resulted in a form submission by a user. This metric is used to determine Landing Page effectiveness.

Synergy. Multiple marketing channels working together to create the same message and important to marketing campaigns. The channels should be optimized individually to work best within those communities, but with a singular message.

T

Target audience. Your target audience is the core group of people your product is aimed at, and your marketing should be targeting.

Thought Leader. Close to an influencer, a thought leader is a known authority on a subject, but usually tied to an organization or company.

T-Shaped Marketer. A concept that’s been around for a while, but has recently been talked about as a “model for the future.”  A T-Shaped Marketer has a good knowledge in a broad set of skills or array of subjects, but deep knowledge in one or two of them.

Top of the funnel. Top of the funnel (TOFU) refers to marketing tools – emails, social media posts, blog posts, paid advertising, free trials and other campaigns – that help attract prospective leads and lure them into the funnel to become customers.

Traffic. Traffic is the amount of people who visit your website, similar to circulation numbers for a newspaper or magazine of viewership for a television show or a network.

U

User Experience. In marketing, user experience is almost entirely related to websites, thanks to the rise of digital marketing. It’s creating a positive user experience through design, navigation and content and aligning that experience with the branding, content, and goals of the company

V

Value Added Reseller. A company or person that adds features or services to an existing product, reselling it as a complete package. This most often occurs with software and electronics.

Viral content. When something goes viral – a blog, a photo or most often a video, is circulates swiftly through social media channels, reaching a wide audience.

Virtual Reality (VR). The new frontier for marketers, this technology replicates environments to immerse the user in real or imagined scenarios utilizing artificial sensory experiences. Particularly in B2C marketing, the rise of VR presents a new opportunity to reach buyers.

W

Webinar. A seminar, Q&A session or other presentation that occurs live on the Internet with participants in different locations. This high-value content is usually “gated”, requiring the participant to sign up though a Landing Page.

White Hat SEO. The opposite of Black Hat SEO, the goal of White Hat SEO is to ethically work with search engines in the usage of strategies, techniques and tactics instead of outsmarting them. Users of White Hat SEO value long-term investment in a website and avoid actions that could lead to blacklisting.

White paper. A white paper is a marketing tool that uses content – in the form of an authoritative report or guide – to persuade customers while promoting either a product or in the case of nonprofits or advocacy groups, a stance on an issue.

Word of mouth advertising. While word of mouth has changed significantly over the years (what once meant a neighbor referring another to a local hardware store or product), the idea hasn’t. Today, influencers help boost word-of-mouth marketing by talking about a product or service with the potential to reach a wide, even viral, audience.

Workflow. In addition to being the definition of general work processes related to Content or Email Marketing, and Lead Gen, workflow is specific to nourishing leads down a buyer’s journey through email marketing. In marketing automation platforms, workflows represent a series of emails correlated to certain actions taken on a website. This enables the marketer to customize the email of a list signup, or download, for example, to the lead’s interest level, and follow up with nurturing emails to encourage purchase.

If you made it to the bottom of this post, you are either really interested in reading about marketing terms (you get a pat on the back!) or just mindlessly scrolling to see how many there really were–did you learn anything? Did we miss something? Let us know by commenting below.

The post B2B Marketing Terms You Need to Know in 2016 appeared first on True Influence.

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