Why Interactive Content Matters: Mid & Lower Funnel

by / Jul 18, 2019

It’s a good thing when those enlightened folks in your upper funnel start progressing toward a purchase. If your interactive content did its job, they now know what their problem is and what kind of solution they need. If your interactive content is going to help you close the deal, it has a critical job to do in the mid- and lower-funnel stages, too.

Mid-funnel Interactive Content Tools: Help Buyers Decide

Just like you need a strong set of sales tools to personally interact with decision-makers, you need a strong set of interactive content tools to shape their decision process online. And remember, these people are done assessing themselves. At this stage, they’re assessing you. They want:

  • Services, features and benefits that align with their pain points
  • Proof that you can provide what you promise
  • Assurance that choosing your solution will deliver quantifiable financial benefits

Interactive Content Examples: Calculators

Let them crunch the numbers. Benefit calculators are excellent interactive content tools for your mid-funnel because they quantify the business benefits your customers can expect to experience. They have a reputation for being difficult to execute, but I can tell you they’re more doable than ever — and, according to the Content Marketing Institute, more than half of today’s marketers with interactive content programs use calculators. Customers have access to much more data, much more easily, so gathering the information they need to input isn’t a problem.

When you create an interactive calculator, make sure the information you’re asking for is likely available to your user, that the output (calculation) aligns with their specific pain points you’ve already helped them assess, and that the results are delivered in a way that’s easy for the user to share with his or her fellow decision-makers.

When they can press a button and calculate the potential benefit of working with you, you’ve helped them significantly in their decision process.

Lower-funnel Interactive Content Development: Help Prospective Customers Convert

Now you’ve got them right on the edge of making a commitment. They just need that final confidence boost — and how you deliver that is critical. You could let your sales team take it from here. But if you have prospective customers who prefer to navigate their own purchase journeys, why force facetime at the wrong moment?

Interactive Content Examples: e-Commerce

An interactive e-commerce solution can improve your conversion rate. Think about it: This is not the stage in the journey where buyers are willing to tolerate inconvenience. The smoother the road, the more likely they are to finish the journey. If your purchase process can be programmed, there’s no reason you can’t transition into e-commerce.

For e-commerce to be as effective as your best salesperson, it has to provide personalization and trust, so your prospect knows they’re getting something exactly suited for their unique needs, and that they won’t end up stuck with errors or misunderstandings.

Before I go on, let me be clear that interactive content doesn’t replace the role of Sales (answering customer questions, directing first-time or complex sales) in this crucial stage. But we’ve all accepted by now that we only succeed by delivering the experience our buyers expect. Having effective lower-funnel interactive content in addition to an effective sales force just arms you to address more prospective customers’ needs in more ways.

And while we’re at it, you can put interactive content to work after the sale, too. You can build community and provide ongoing product and service support … all of which help improve affinity and retention.

If you want to learn more and see real-life examples of benefit calculators and other interactive content programs that engage the mid and lower funnel, check out our new ebook, “Interactive Content Across the Funnel.”

Emily Kleist

Vice President, Executive Creative Director, The Mx Group

Emily has been with The Mx Group since 2008. As executive creative director, she oversees the Mx creative department and provides strategic direction for a diverse client base. Emily leverages 15 years of experience in creative conceptualization, writing, content marketing and social media to lead award-winning comprehensive campaigns for clients in a variety of industries. She holds a B.A. in philosophy and creative writing from Gettysburg College in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.