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Give your contact data vigilant attention and care to help stay connected with the right buyers.
Of all business-to-business (B2B) master data, the integrity of contact data seems to decay the fastest. Compared to product, organization, and vendor master data, managing contact data can be more complicated due to human behavior and tightening policies. And while purchasing contact data in bulk may seem like a valid solution, its inherently short shelf life usually only serves to perpetuate the problem.
Contact data is datasets that contain information about people for business-related outreach. These datasets are predominantly linked or related to organizational/institutional data about individuals. Contact data is personally identifiable information governed by multiple global and regional policies that protect the privacy of the individuals of record.
The fundamental components of contact data are as follows:
In the data world, there’s a belief that contact data begins expiring the moment it comes on board. Collectively, it’s been believed that contact data’s accuracy erodes by 2.5% each month. That’s about 30% per year. There are many reasons for this, and the aggregated effects of some events also can contribute to contact data degradation. Here are a few:
A typical reactionary tactic in managing contact data is to immediately buy contact data when the current contact data assets are believed to be substandard. Sure, you can provide impact by throwing newly “transfused” data into the mix, but for how long? In a year, your contact database will be statistically decreased in usefulness by 30%, 70%, or more.
Also, keep in mind that you need to allow for a warming-up period for these contacts if you desire to have them actively engaging with you. Chances are they will need to begin at the starting point of your company’s prescribed buying journey. For instance, expecting individuals from a newly acquired contact dataset to commit to attending one of your events might be an overestimation of the dataset’s capabilities. To help improve your contact database, try the following six best practices.
1. Build your contacts organically.
When curating contact data, at least from a sales and marketing perspective, engagement is the objective. The contact’s interests are key. You may have the most accurate database, but what good is it if the people represented do not find your offerings relevant to their needs?
Build your database with contacts who have or will have interest in your digital environment and customer events. Create effective measures for them to identify themselves progressively as you continuously interact with them. Remember that contact data provided by salespeople can be as good as gold, so enrich it promptly. Most especially, ensure you have existing customers’ current data.
2. Enrich your current datasets.
As the saying goes, don’t throw out the baby with the bathwater. It is so easy to brand your current contact data assets as substandard with their poor performance or anecdotes from those who depend on the assets. Work with a proven and trusted outside or third-party data provider to supply up-to-date attributes on your existing contact data.
As noted earlier, we are facing data decay at the rate of 30% or more per year. You need to have an effective enrichment schedule paired with your organization’s threshold of data accuracy. Performing enrichment ad hoc may be a disservice to your users, as it may not scale. Provide an enrichment strategy and a schedule, and communicate with your stakeholders.
3. Use test emails.
Email outreach is one of the most cost-effective ways to engage individuals for your sales and marketing programs. Just like with enrichment, you need to proactively and periodically test the deliverability of your emails. This can be done through a “ping test” service, where the provider sends a signal to your email assets and shows deliverability. This can help weed out undeliverable emails to lower bounce-back rates. And for those messages that bounce back from either the ping tests or program outreach, or both, catalog them for further enrichment, and possibly, archiving activities.
4. Empower your sales force.
Your sales force and sales support teams are closest to your prospects and customers. Empower and encourage them to record interactions in the company’s customer relationship management (CRM) system. Perhaps make it part of their compensation strategy, since they have access to influencers and decision-makers that may not exist in third-party contact data sources. Ensure that the CRM system can manage this data with ease and efficiency.
5. Purchase contacts wisely.
Use the above best practices to guide your next purchasing strategy. Blindly purchasing contact data can be a very expensive gamble that will only fill your database with more records, which can include irrelevant data. Let your engagement strategy guide you.
Purchase contact data that only is relevant in geography, title, and deliverability. Ensure that you have a deduplication process to avoid unintentionally sending identical communications to the same individual.
Remember that newly purchased contact data may need an extended period of courtship before successfully engaging with it. This means you will need to time your purchases to the outreach and engagement schedule of the customer journey strategy. And importantly, make sure your contact data is legally sourced and compliant with all applicable laws.
6. Define what contact data means to your company.
For some organizations, a name, phone number, and email address are all that constitute contact data. In today’s digital world, that often isn’t enough. You need to understand the context of a contact with insights such as hierarchies, branches, and location information.
You may even need to further your understanding with deeper insights such as digital identifiers, intent data, and predictive analytics. Unique identifiers, such as a Dun & Bradstreet D-U-N-S® Number, help provide a more complete picture for sales teams when they need to go beyond the basics of cold calls and email blasts.
Managing B2B contact data is both an art and a science. Your data management strategy should be aligned continuously with your stakeholder schedule and business strategy. That means the process of doing so can be fluid and is highly likely to vary from company to company.
With current regulations such as the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation, Canada’s Anti-Spam Law, and more on the way, managing this type of data is becoming more complex. The best way to comply with these policies is to keep only relevant data in your system. It minimizes the risk and eases the data management workload. In this sense, less is more. Protect your contact data assets and understand that this responsibility lies with all teams within your company.
The information provided in articles are suggestions only and based on best practices. Dun & Bradstreet is not liable for the outcome or results of specific programs or tactics undertaken based on your use of the information. Please contact an attorney or financial/tax professional if you are in need of legal or financial/tax advice.