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Your Position: Home - Sheet Metal Fabrication - 17 tactics for small metal fabricators to get more customers - EZIIL

17 tactics for small metal fabricators to get more customers - EZIIL

Author: Minnie

Jun. 30, 2025

17 tactics for small metal fabricators to get more customers - EZIIL

Winning projects in custom metal fabrication is less about quoting the lowest rate and more about creating a clear buying path that buyers can trust. 70% of buyers in the manufacturing industry start supplier research online before talking to a human and 82% of those head directly to supplier websites to seek further information about a service. Yet those digital impressions have to be backed by execution: on-time delivery and certified quality rank among the top score-card metrics buyers use to keep—or drop—suppliers. But of course, the real margin shows up when shops nurture retention via repeat work.

Goto ACE to know more.

The good news? You don’t need an enterprise-size budget to cover those bases.

Finding new business in custom fabrication boils down to (1) being findable where engineers and buyers look, (2) proving you can hit spec, cost, and schedule, and (3) nurturing long-term trust.

In this article, we’re breaking down the actionable acquisition tactics for small metal fabrication shops with limited budgets.

Why visibility matters

Digital self-service now dominates industrial buying; nearly half of buyers rely on vendor websites and trusted online resources to shortlist fabricators long before RFQs are issued. A solid SEO footprint, niche marketplaces, and a steady LinkedIn presence are how you get on that list.

Why execution matters

Once you’re on the shortlist, buyers look for proof you can hit spec, cost, and schedule. ISO and related QMS standards exist precisely to assure customers that your processes are disciplined and repeatable. Supplier-scorecard studies show that on-time, in-full (OTIF) delivery is the make-or-break KPI in continuing contracts. Missed deadlines or rework erode margin and reputation; poor-quality costs can silently bleed profit through scrap, labor, and make-good shipments.

Why follow-up wins the lifetime value

Speed and relevance of follow-up determine whether a one-off project turns into a long-term account. InsideSales research popularized the “five-minute rule,” showing a 900% boost in conversion for rapid callbacks.

Next up, we’ll translate these three pillars into concrete actions—everything from ranking for “architectural Corten stairs in Utah” on Google to instituting a formal referral program—so your shop can win more of the right work, at the right margin, year after year.

Nail the fundamentals of trust and capability

Before a buyer ever sends an RFQ, they’re scanning for evidence that you understand their world, can hit spec and schedule without drama, and will make their life easier on the next job, too. Four simple moves—sharp specialization, iron-clad certifications, vivid example case stories, and free design-for-manufacturability (DFM) guidance—signal those qualities faster than any price sheet.

1. Specialize and spell it out

When prospects land on your site (or booth), they should know within seconds that you build “nickel-mine access platforms” or “architectural Corten stairs”—not generic “steel fabrications.” The Fabricator urges shops to shift from “pitching” to educating narrow tribes of buyers; simple niche messaging boosted one fabricator’s inbound leads 3 times in a year. So bake those vertical keywords into page titles, LinkedIn headlines, even invoice footers—anywhere algorithms or humans look for fit.

2. Earn quality certifications

Nothing says “risk-free” like an auditor’s stamp. ISO is still the most requested credential on OEM supplier portals, and small shops that obtained it saw win-rates rise 20–30% within twelve months, according to ECI’s recent analysis. ISO also forces process discipline that typically cuts scrap 10% or more, while the structural-steel market often demands AWS D1.1 welding compliance to satisfy AISC and DOT specifications. So, even if certification costs US $10-15k, the payback in new-contract value and reduced rework will outstrip the fee.

3. Show—don’t just tell—with case studies and project galleries

Industrial buyers prefer real photos, BOM screenshots, and a “before/after” schedule chart over generic capability lists. The Fabricator reports that shops publishing quarterly case stories saw SEO traffic climb 40% and average deal size jump by mid-double digits.

☝️Tip: Tag every image with the niche keywords alt tag from Step 1 to win Google Image searches, too.

4. Offer DFM consults

Early engineering input locks you in as the solution partner and slashes change-order hassle. DfMA guidelines—from wall-thickness rules to weld-access clearances—can cut total project cost 20% and lead-time 30% when applied up-front. Even a 15-minute review prevents common tolerance mismatches that snowball on the shop floor. IndustryWeek’s supplier sourcing guide lists “shorter prototype lead-times” and “supplier engineering knowledge” among the top added-value criteria buyers reward with repeat work. Big digital manufacturers publicly advertise free DFM feedback as a differentiator—and SMB fabricators can mirror that playbook with a simple online form tied to your CAD team.

Make it easy for ideal customers to find you

Before you spend a dollar on marketing/sales tooling or trade-show carpet, make sure buyers can actually discover you. Nearly 68% of all online experiences begin with a search engine—and fewer than 1% of searchers click past page one—so visibility in Google is non-negotiable. Once prospects arrive, supplier directories, ads, and social content help guide them to a quote form; done well, these “digital breadcrumbs” cost a fraction of cold calling and run 24/7.

5. SEO built for industrial buyers

Your buyers will type specifics—“fabricated nickel-mine platforms,” “Corten stair stringers”—not generic terms. Know your buyer and your offerings, and create service pages and image alt-tags around those phrases, then add supporting blog posts that answer tolerance or finish questions. As mentioned earlier, the majority of online journeys start with search and Google owns 91% of those clicks, so ranking for long-tail keywords captures intent early.

☝️Tip: Including drawings or downloadable STP files further boosts dwell time, a positive ranking signals.

6. Utilize industrial marketplaces

Buyers still vet suppliers on Thomasnet and MFG.com during short-listing. Make sure to maintain keyword-rich profile on industrial marketplaces to appear in directory and Google results alike. On MFG, engineers post RFQs that receive multiple quotes, giving small shops global reach with subscription fees far lower than most trade-show booths.

☝️Tip: Complete every optional field—certifications, equipment lists, industries served—to rise in the platform’s internal search.

7. Targeted PPC and remarketing (if you have the budget)

Long-tail search ads such as “A36 plate laser-cut 1-inch” often cost pennies compared with broad “steel fabrication” bids; long-tail keywords can be 10 times cheaper while retaining strong commercial intent. Add remarketing so that visitors who download your drawing template or visit your value pages (pricing, galleries etc) see follow-up ads; repeated exposure can lift conversion rates steadily over time.

8. LinkedIn thought-leadership

Post short build videos, tolerance-stack tips, and weekly lead-time snapshots; then invite prospects to view full case studies on your site. Bonus: Use LinkedIn’s job-title and industry filters to only sponsor those posts to, for example, maintenance engineers and project managers at mining or architectural firms.

9. Account-based marketing (ABM)

In a nutshell, ABM is a marketing tactic that involves targeting high-value accounts with personalized marketing and sales efforts to deepen relationships and drive growth. So, instead of blasting thousands of contacts, ABM focuses spend on a hand-picked list—say, 20 Midwest OEM maintenance departments. The Smarketers agency reports that manufacturers using ABM shorten long sales cycles and “triple-boost” reputation, relationships, and revenue.

☝️Tip: Start simple. Send each target account a bespoke lead-time calculator or material-grade cheat-sheet, then retarget their domain’s website visitors with remarketing ads.

Meet buyers where they already gather

Your buyers probably already congregate in predictable physical and digital spaces. By showing up—in person at trade shows, inside supplier-diversity portals, or through joint webinars with the vendors they already trust—you shorten sales cycles and win “spec-in” status long before price becomes the conversation.

10. Exhibit—or at least walk—top trade shows

Face-to-face events remain a top ROI channel for industrial marketers! Although it might be a bit expensive to buy a booth at the big trade shows like Fabtech, even a two-day “shoes-only” visit can deliver market intelligence, competitive benchmarking, and dozens of aisle conversations that often lead to post-show RFQs.

11. Join supplier-diversity programs

Major resource companies and public agencies now reserve spend for certified local or minority-owned suppliers. Newmont’s Americas division explicitly invites regional fabrication shops to register for upcoming procurement packages, while OpenGov’s blueprint shows how U.S. municipalities route billions through vendor-diversity portals to stimulate local economies. Registering profiles, uploading ISO certificates, and attending quarterly “meet-the-buyer” webinars can secure you preferred-vendor status—and first crack at steel or maintenance packages tied to federal funding.

12. Partner with engineering firms and general contractors

Early collaborative-engineering sessions lock your specs into the drawings and all but pre-select your shop for fabrication work. Smoother project management and lower manufacturing errors are listed among eight quantified benefits of collaborative design meetings. Additionally, breaking engineering silos can halve change-order counts on complex weldments.

☝️Tip: Offer to host joint lunch-and-learns for the GC’s field engineers; every dimension tweaked in CAD is a headache you’ll never weld.

13. Co-market with material and equipment vendors

Your steel mill, powder-coat finisher, or laser-OEM is hungry for content too—so split the cost. For example, HubSpot’s manufacturing webinar drew hundreds of registrants by pairing a SaaS platform with a machine-builder case study, generating MQLs for both firms. Alliance webinars and joint white papers routinely outperform solo efforts on social shares and opt-ins. Agree on a topic and let the vendor’s marketing team shoulder half the ad spend logistics efforts.

14. Local maker-community sponsorships

Plant tours and skills-events pull double duty: they feed your talent pipeline and impress potential customers who sit on workforce boards. A multi-facility “Tour de Workforce” programs expose students to ten plants a year and foster supplier introductions along the way. IndustryWeek highlights how open-house breakfasts and pancake days attract civic leaders and purchasing managers, not just students.

☝️Tip: Bring branded hard-hats and your camera — you’ll get great content out of it for Step 8.

Turn satisfied clients into a recurring flywheel

Getting the first sale is only half the game. Converting happy first-time buyers into lifetime patrons, who introduce you to their peers, is where your actual profits are hiding. PS, referred leads convert up to and churn less than self-sourced deals.

15. Build a referral and loyalty program

Decision-makers overwhelmingly trust peers: 82% of B2B sales leaders call referrals their highest-quality leads — people are generally 4 times more likely to buy when referred by a friend.

☝️Tip: Offer a nice token — $ service credit, rush-slot upgrade, or limited-edition hard-hat — for every qualified introduction that becomes an RFQ. Track referral source and spotlight the top three “shop champions” in a quarterly thank-you post in Step 8.

16. Data-driven follow-up cadence

Only 0.1% of industrial leads get a reply inside 5 minutes, yet, as mentioned earlier, responding in that window makes a conversion 8-9 times more likely. Now, of course, it doesn’t mean you have to anxiously refresh your inbox in anticipation of a new contractor to call up, just bear in mind, the faster your team can follow up, the better. If you have the resources to set it up and maintain, consider getting a simple CRM, like ActiveCampaign, to automate your emails. And keep in mind, that personal check-ins outperform generic newsletters.

☝️Tip: Build an automation that sends a personalized project-health recap 30 days post-delivery (include actual vs. quoted lead time).

☝️☝️Tip: Schedule quarterly “value emails” that share material-price trends, upcoming capacity, or a new case study—not generic newsletters.

17. Rinse and repeat: KPI review and iteration

Use simple free tools such as Databox to visualise KPIs such as:

  • RFQs received / won
  • Average deal size
  • Referral % of pipeline
  • Repeat-order ratio

Review the dashboard monthly; cut under-performing tactics and double down on those beating industry averages.

How To Meet The Needs Of B2B & Industrial Buyers [Updated ]

No matter your role — sales, marketing, operations, or leadership — you have a lot to accomplish.

And so do the buyers of your company's products or services. 

By understanding what your buyers have on their plates, you can more easily accomplish one of your most important tasks — generating more leads and contributing to your bottom line.

We have more than 120 years of expertise in connecting industrial buyers and suppliers, and we're happy to help share all we've learned from our data and relationships over the years. In this post we'll share what you should know to meet their needs and create more meaningful connections to win more business.

Understand The Industrial Buying Cycle 

From a supplier's perspective, the industrial buying cycle is a two-step process:

1. The buyer realizes a need.

2. The buyer finds a supplier to purchase the product or service.

But that's an oversimplification.

A lot of it depends on what type of materials, products, services, or company is needed, but at a high level, the complete industrial buying process actually involves six distinct phases:

  1. The buyer defines a need for a product or service.
  2. The buyer performs research to learn about possible solutions.
  3. If executing a new design, the buyer researches product data.
  4. The buyer evaluates potential suppliers.
  5. The buyer creates a shortlist of the best suppliers.
  6. The buyer makes a purchase from the winning supplier.

That's not it, though — through our research with Strategyn, we could go even further, identifying 15 distinct steps within the buying process.

While moving from phase to phase and from step to step, buyers must accomplish a series of more than 225 smaller tasks. Sounds exhausting? This is what buyers do every day.

Be Everywhere Your Industrial Buyers Are

How do you search for information when you already have a general idea of what you need?

Often, you go right to a niche source rather than conducting a web search. For example, if you need yesterday’s basketball scores, you might head right to ESPN.com.

Well, many industrial buyers get started the same way.

To make an impact on the second stage of the B2B buying cycle, the search phase, you need to know where savvy buyers prefer to source, and what kind of information they’re entering when they get there.

In general, at this early point, they have one broad question in mind: Can you do what they need you to do? They want to know that you’re qualified before they take any next steps.

Here’s how you can make sure you come up in their search results:

Online Business Directories

There's an opportunity to tap into local buyers in your area searching for you online, and a business listing in an online directory helps get your business found.

Search engines like Google will show your business on search results depending on how well your location content matches what someone is searching for, how far away their location is to you, and how strong your overall online presence is.

Some of the free business listing platforms we recommend include:

  • Google My Business
  • Apple Maps
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Yelp
  • Yellow Book

Online Sourcing Platforms

The online landscape is full of platforms for making specific connections — ticket exchanges like StubHub, freelance marketplaces, dating apps, etc. The same thing exists for industrial buyers and suppliers.

Listing your business on Thomasnet.com lets you share your capabilities and products with the serious prospects who often go directly there to start their very specific searches.

More than a million in-market buyers visit Thomasnet.com to source industrial products and services, and find their next supply chain partner.

Impact The Industrial Buying Process Before The Sales Funnel

Let’s start right at the top of the funnel — or even above it — with the broadest and potentially longest-lasting stage — education.

Depending on the specific industry you're in, your prospects might linger in this phase for a while. But just think about the benefits of establishing yourself as a valued and trusted source of content before they identify a purchasing need.

A hypothetical equivalent in the consumer space would be Ford or GM publishing a blog with car repair tips, objective industry updates and news, and reports on innovations coming down the pike. You probably only buy a new car every few years or so, but Ford's blog would be a resource you’d turn to again and again in between. And when it does come back to purchase time, well, who are you going to think of first? (Note to car manufacturers: You’re welcome).

That's what's called a cohesive content marketing strategy. You can give prospects a better look at your business through the content you create and share — without a hard sell. Whether it’s offering free eBooks or white papers, or connecting with prospects through social media, you’re able to prove your value differently — while improving your chances of moving to the shortlist.

Bookmark For Later: 

  • 10 Content Marketing Types That Engage Industrial Buyers
  • How To Create Quality Content For Industrial Companies 

Become A Thought Leader With Blog Content

Want to get potential buyers reading between buying stages?

Don’t try to pitch to them, but address the pain points they face in their day-to-day jobs, like troubleshooting, efficiency improvements, common problems, and so on.

If you are looking for more details, kindly visit Sheet Metal Design Services.

New trends and innovations are always popular topics, and the place of your industry in the larger economic landscape is also an ever-changing subject of interest.

If you already have a blog, check out 16 Ways To Improve Your Blog to make sure you're not missing out on an important lead generation component — like a call-to-action (CTA).

Document Your Offerings With White Papers

Much more in-depth than a blog, but also potentially more valuable to your prospects — and eventually to you are white papers. We suggest two key factors to consider in writing a white paper:

  1. Be unique. Ensure that you’re adding something to the conversation (or even better, starting a completely new one).
  2. Be an expert. Choose a topic that you know inside and out — you’ll have plenty of material to draw upon to educate readers and differentiate yourself.

Put effort into creating a fantastic title that grabs the user's attention — just make sure it isn't misleading.

For example, “Beginner’s Guide to Sheet Metal” and “7 Tips For Choosing the Right Sheet Metal Supplier” are clear titles and signal to the prospect your expertise in the metals industry.

Gating your offers on a landing page with a form ensures you capture the visitor's information. No one wants to submit their information for something that isn't valuable so there should be a lot of planning, creativity, and strategy behind your content creation.

Note how Swift Glass has unique eBook covers for each of its content offers below, as well as topics that are both educational and showcase their industry expertise.


List Out Your Comprehensive Capabilities

Buyers want to know your specific capabilities before they contact you.

That means part dimensions, tolerances, machinery used, materials worked, finishing services, diversity information, and quality certifications.

Quality is among the most critical factors that buyers consider when evaluating new suppliers. Therefore, if you aren’t highlighting your quality certifications prominently online, you’re likely to get crossed off the shortlist.

Offering an index of ISO numbers is a good start, but you should go beyond that to offer the greatest peace of mind and give you the best chance of moving on in the evaluation process. Allow potential buyers to view the actual certification documents or, better yet, download them for future reference.

Lastly, always make sure your certifications online are current and up-to-date to eliminate any doubts and uncertainty — and don't forget to update them on all the business directories you're listed on too, like Thomasnet.com, Google, Yelp, etc. (as we mentioned above).

Validate Your Previous Successes With Case Studies

Would you bring your Dell desktop to get repaired at an Apple store or vice versa? Probably not. That’s because you want to be certain that the people working on your product have specific experience with it.

The same holds true for industrial buyers.

They feel more confident when they see you have experience with customers in their industry, whether it be automotive, food and beverage, medical, aerospace, etc.

Thus, you should make your vertical experience readily apparent and cite case studies or testimonials whenever possible. If you don’t have specific experience within an industry, but your capabilities and quality standards are transferrable, make that clear as well.

For products or services, using case studies to illustrate past work you’ve done can give buyers a better idea of just how you work — and what you’re like to work with. Let your ingenuity and expertise shine for you here.

Start simple.

You could place quotes from customers and their logos (with their permission!) on your website and work your way to writing a narrative as the next step. Client testimonials show value in your reliability, competence, and solutions.

Check out how ESI, a metal stamping company, organized their case studies in the screenshot below.

Publish News Releases To Keep Your Buyers Up-To-Date

Regularly communicating your product news and company updates to your buyers helps you stay top-of-mind at purchase time.

Keep them in the loop with newsletters — whether it's a weekly recap or a monthly roundup, newsletters help nurture existing customers and engage new ones.

Whether you’re in Indiana or the middle of New York or you’re an MRO professional or a CNC machining business owner, savvy buyers always need to be aware of what’s going on in their industry.

Build Your B2B Industrial Network With Social Media 

Whether for news or a little bit of downtime, more and more buyers regularly use social media. As a younger crop of workforce joins the industry, they expect a digital experience throughout their day-to-day — in fact, more than 70% of today's B2B buyers are millennials.

To keep up with the digital transformation of sales and marketing and reach a new market of buyers, more B2B marketers are learning how to use social media to promote their manufacturing brand to new networks.

But social media is not the place for sales pitches — it’s the place to forge an association and a future relationship by establishing your value as an information source. Work your social strategy into your full marketing plan to drive your company's growth. All your online efforts should be aligned.

Learn What Industrial Buyers Are Really Looking For

During the third stage of the industrial B2B buying cycle, evaluation, buyers have identified a need after a high-level, general search. You've got a possibility to reach their shortlist — but you’re still not locked into a sale. Buyers need to see that it’s worth their time to keep considering you. How? It’s all in the details.

Think about the last time you went out to a movie. You identified a need and laid out general parameters — 1) I want to see a movie, and 2) I’d like to watch, for example, an action film tonight.

From there, you really evaluate just how to spend your evening: maybe you want a movie under two hours long, you’d like to see a favorite actor, and you don’t like any sci-fi mixed up in your action movies. With the wealth of information that’s typically available, now you can narrow down your options.

But imagine if some descriptions had all that additional information you were looking for — running time, cast, subgenre, reviews — but others gave you nothing more than the movie title. Would you bother calling up the movie theater just to find out more about those “empty listings?”

Probably not. And as a supplier, the same theory applies: if you’re not giving buyers the detailed information they seek, that doesn’t mean you’re piquing their curiosity or conveying that you can “do everything” — it means you may be taking yourself out of the running before you even have a chance.

The most important takeaway is that your website is an important foundation of all your growth efforts. In fact, 40% of B2B buyers surveyed said a supplier's website matters a lot. One procurement professional said, "Having more online information like specifications, pricing, lead time, and stock levels online are important when I'm vetting new suppliers. The ability to order products directly onsite with an online catalog also makes my job easier." 

For example, buyers in the defense industry are concerned with counterfeit parts, inaccurate data, and incomplete quotes. Alleviate their concerns with industry-relevant website pages that detail your product data, sizing dimensions, performance curves, etc. Engineers want to see how your components and parts can fit into their final project, but projects in the defense industry are super complicated. Help engineers get their jobs done (and simultaneously become a lead for you) with infographics, videos, and final product photos.

Stand Out On Industrial Buyers' Shortlist

Put yourself in the buyer’s shoes. What’s most important to them when sourcing? Early on, speed and efficiency are key — researching their terms, without worrying about an or a callback. That doesn’t change once they reach the shortlist stage — they’re still not ready to spend time on queries. In fact, you likely won’t even know you’re on the shortlist until the first time they contact you.

How does the shortlist work, and how can you improve your chances of getting on the shortlist — and getting selected?

No matter how large or small a company is, and what size supplier they’re looking for, they all use a shortlist to make purchasing decisions. It’s the most efficient way of narrowing down a sea of choices, and it no longer just means scribbling the names of contenders down on a piece of paper. Powerful applications like the Shortlist tool on our platform let serious buyers move seamlessly through the buying cycle — and keep them moving toward selecting you.

Keep in mind that price is only one factor that buyers consider when making a shortlist — and it’s not even the most important. Here are some other considerations that buyers say they value above cost:

  • Relationship and dialogue with a supplier
  • Industry expertise
  • Responsibility and reputation
  • Innovation and potential for long-term partnership

Buyers aren’t searching just for a “vendor” or a “supplier” — they want a partner. In the industrial space, more than anywhere else, the success of each partner in a supply chain relies on that of the others. The lowest immediate price or quote doesn’t always mean the best results.

What can you do to communicate your value and potential as a true partner, and get buyers to take that last step of contacting you?

Illustrate Your Value Beyond Price

Post your company history, past successes with other partners, industry expertise, and informative content on your Thomasnet.com company profile, your website, and social media. Don’t wait for the opportunity to prove the intangibles — it’s never too early to build your brand as a trustworthy and reliable partner.

Buyers often want to know about more than just the product or service you offer; they want to know about the people behind the scenes who will be supporting their orders and their businesses.

List the key contacts across your departments, such as engineering, sales, operations, and other areas, online. Even better, create detailed profiles with contact information so that buyers can reach out to you and your team members directly if they have any questions.

Use Videos To Showcase Your Facilities And Shop Floor

Your facilities say a lot about you, and buyers want to hear all about it. For example:

  • Are your production facilities modern and well maintained?
  • Is your plant layout optimal for workflow?
  • Do you have CAD, CAM, or flexible manufacturing systems in place?

While buyers interested in long-term partnerships will typically review your facilities during an onsite visit later on, showing them facility photos and videos while they’re anonymously evaluating you online is a plus that can help you stand out. 

And with trade shows no longer the same attendance and value as they were pre-COVID-19, more manufacturers these days are using videos to connect with customers — and they've been proven to close more sales, especially when it comes to touring the factory floor during regional travel restrictions. 

(Reminder: Thomas can create a free video for you with an advertising program just like the one below!)

Be As Detailed As Possible

Through all the steps in the buying process, if a buyer is left with any questions remaining about you, they may not inquire further — they may cross you off the list. Ensure that your company’s online information includes all the detailed information about product dimensions, tolerances, capabilities, and other specifications that buyers seek out.

If you have secondary capabilities to offer, make sure buyers know it. Do you provide engineering services? Design assistance? Installation? Repair services? Inventory management? Private labeling? Packaging? Kitting? These value-added services can set you apart from the pack and set you up to make the shortlist.

Our guide, How To Get On The Industrial Buyer's Shortlist, details the 26 critical aspects to include in your online presence to make the best first impression on potential buyers. Your new efforts may help you expand into new markets.

How To Close The Deal With Industrial Buyers

Although the RFI process represents the end of the B2B buying cycle, it's actually another beginning in many ways. Often, it’s the first time a prospect will contact you. It’s the start of the “face-to-face” process of closing a sale. And ideally, it commences a long and productive partnership between you and the buyer.

Just like each step leading up to it, however, it’s important to treat the RFI as an important component of the overall process, not merely a formality on the way to a sale.

How can you give buyers the tools they need to feel confident in taking this last step?

Think of the RFI as the keystone of the buying cycle: each of the other steps leads toward it as an end goal, and if it’s not handled properly, the entire process falls apart. The RFI is more than just a form to fill out— it’s the common goal that both you and a prospective buyer are working toward.

Ask yourself these questions:

Is Your Contact Information Highly Visible?

Don’t make it a chore for prospects to figure out how to get in touch with you. Each page on your website should include several ways to contact you — number, address, and link to your RFI form.

Make sure your free company profile on Thomasnet.com is complete with all of your qualifications and information as well. Different people prefer different modes of communication.

Are Your Calls-To-Action (CTAs) Clear?

One of the keys to successful lead generation is a clear call-to-action (a text link, button, or image that encourages visitors to complete an action). If you're offering a quote, does your CTA say "Request My Quote" or "Submit."

"Request My Quote" is more specific to the action and increases the chances of the prospect actually doing it.

You want your CTA to convert so make sure your message is clear throughout all the components of your lead generation strategy.

Are You Giving Your Leads The Attention They Deserve?

Research shows that the difference between calling a buyer right away and waiting even as long as one minute after an information request can affect the chances of qualifying them by as much as 150%.

Make sure your website is up-to-date with lead monitoring, tracking, and notification tools (like HubSpot and Thomas WebTrax) that will provide you with data about the prospect and help you close a sale.

The right industry-leading tools let you capture and track the activity of your buyers as they engage with your various digital marketing efforts and online content. Qualifying manufacturers can use WebTrax for free — learn more here.

Engage More Buyers With Digital Marketing

The industrial buying process can be complex, but each step is an opportunity to position yourself as the best partner.

However they arrive at your website — whether from Thomasnet.com or an organic web search — buyers don’t want to have to hunt around for the information they’re seeking. Ensure your website is updated, well-organized, and content-rich to proactively answer the preliminary questions that a buyer might have. A good rule of thumb? Try to mimic your in-person sales process with your website.

According to a McKinsey study, leaders are going where their customers are — and that's increasingly online. In the same study, 68% of outperformers combine traditional and digital channels in the customer journey. And a Thomas Industrial Survey, found that 84% of manufacturers are using their website more to connect with customers after COVID-19 started.

Your entire growth strategy should be designed in a buyer-centric, digitally-focused way: taking their concerns, needs, and user experience into account and helping them intuitively get the information they need about your products or services before they proceed to contacting you.

Chances are, you will compete with lots of other suppliers for the same job, and many of these shops will offer the same product or service as you. As a supplier, your expertise can deliver value by helping buyers accomplish their most important tasks while reducing their headaches and challenges throughout the buying process. Determining your perfect buyer and understanding what is on their plates, helps you more easily create the content they're looking for — it's key to making the connections and keeping your business top of mind. 

Then, additional marketing factors like your branding and messaging can come into play (especially if you’ve established yourself as a useful source and connection during the Education phase) — if a prospect sees you as good partner material, and you can meet their sourcing needs, you’re in good shape to move forward as they fine-tune their search.

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