Many companies want to workoutside-in orcustomer-centric in their commercial process. Yet they often fail to do so sufficiently. Why? Most companies make outside-inthinkinga means, rather than an end. So personas andcontent are createdandsocial selling is done, but professionals in marketing, sales and service are driveninside-out onleads, revenue and handling time. In this article, I'll take you through some of these common frictions and offer suggestions on how to solve them.
Most companies that use HubSpot in their sales process are not taking full advantage of the powerful reporting feature in HubSpot. The limitations and obstacles they face often have nothing to do with HubSpot itself, but with their own processes, people and data. In this article, I'll tell you all about the pitfalls in HubSpot Reporting and how to get actionable insights from HubSpot the right way.
Ask yourself the following questions to get the right actionable insights in HubSpot:
As the technology landscape in companies expands, it becomes increasingly difficult for management to determine which teams are using which system. How do they get their management information? The market currently has over 8,000 MarTech tools. That's only going to increase. Processes and data are therefore managed anytime, anywhere.
Over time, this leads to a completely cluttered tech stack. Managing it takes so much time and energy that little is left for customers. Unnecessarily complex tech stack. also make it increasingly difficult for customer-facing teams to obtain reliable data. As a result, it is becoming virtually impossible to provide customers with the contextual experience they expect.
This is one of the main obstacles we face as HubSpot consultants when setting up Reporting for customers. Companies like to use HubSpot to gain more insight. To best use the reporting feature, it is crucial to understand the purpose for which your organization has implemented the HubSpot platform.
Why is this an obstacle?
First, let's look at what role HubSpot plays in your business processes, but more importantly, what role it does not play. The platform's CRM data is central to HubSpot. Which customer data is available in HubSpot, and which is not, depends on which systems are used for which business processes.
Depending on the HubSpot components your company uses, these processes may involve the following topics:
What does this mean?
Data in your other business processes (such as project management, order management and processing, production planning, finance and billing) is not available in HubSpot without data integrations. And that's fine - use technology for its intended purpose, rather than trying to fit a system into your business environment with a lot of pushing and pulling. That only adds friction to your processes.
Misconceptions about reporting across business processes in HubSpot
Here are a few real-life examples of C-level management reporting as HubSpot users expect:
Conclusion: Make sure you can determine from your company's scorecard or KPI report what data is coming from which system. Where might you need integration of data between systems to measure KPIs and get the right insights?
Data is effortlessly available across systems today. However, there can be misconceptions about how to leverage this data. There can also be information overload, especially if companies are keen on incorporating all this data into their reports.
Let's take a closer look at these two issues:
Too many metrics
The average HubSpot portal currently has more than 300 metrics with data you can use to create reports. In practice, most teams that have reports set up in HubSpot do not use every single report to manage day-to-day operations. This leads to the aforementioned information overload and makes reporting in HubSpot unnecessarily complicated.
Ask yourself the following two questions:
If you look critically at your KPIs and still have too many metrics, consider dividing responsibility for KPIs across different organizational levels (layering your scorecard). That way you keep control of what actually impacts the business. HubSpot offers a lot of flexibility in setting up dashboards with reports specifically tailored to teams, processes or even individual employees/representatives.
Conclusion: Start small, keep it simple. What is an overarching Key performance indicator (focusing on Key) for how your company is performing? You can always look at a more detailed level if needed. The strength of HubSpot Reporting is that you can zoom in on the data that makes up the KPI in the report.
Excluding HubSpot data when setting KPIs
Not every HubSpot user in your company knows exactly what data is available in HubSpot. As a result, there are often wish lists of reporting KPIs that are completely separate from HubSpot data (the data is not available 1-to-1 in HubSpot).
Particularly if your team is just getting started with HubSpot, you can approach KPI reporting in the following order:
Example: ROI of marketing campaigns
A good example of a report that most businesses eventually want to see is the ROI of their marketing campaigns. HubSpot doesn't give you insight into how investments from your marketing budget translate into new customers. However, you can trace paying customers back to their original (marketing) source or determine which campaigns helped generate those customers.
Once you know that, you can fairly easily determine whether it was a good idea to invest your marketing budget in a specific campaign.
Conclusion: There are often standard metrics already available in HubSpot that you can use to gain insight into how your team is performing.
What follows is a list of the most common KPIs that you can measure more or less by default in HubSpot:
The main advantage of HubSpot Reporting is that you can create reports based on all the data in your system. The real challenge is having the right data at all.
The metrics for most reports are available by default. Yet we see in many customers' HubSpot portals that data is not actually being used or captured by the teams working in HubSpot CRM.
Often this is because teams are not aware of the importance of this data for reporting because:
So now we know what the common pitfalls are when reporting in HubSpot. But what exactly does the ultimate overview of KPIs in HubSpot look like?
Of course, the ultimate overview varies greatly from company to company. However, there are some KPIs that are common among companies working with HubSpot.
First, let's see what the basics of HubSpot reporting for your company might look like. You can then flesh those out into your own ultimate KPI summary.
The most common key performance indicators in HubSpot
We first need to determine what in HubSpot are the key areas that C-level looks at when measuring performance:
Sales
Marketing
Service
Sales - what does success look like?
I once heard a CEO say, "Meeting our sales targets is more luck than wisdom. We close deals with companies we didn't have on our radar at all and lose the deals we should have closed." With Sales Reporting, this company was finally able to get a handle on their forecast by determining how to do sales business, how to capture the necessary data in HubSpot and how to report on this process.
When used properly, the deal pipeline functionality in HubSpot CRM is enormously powerful. It gives you more than enough information for more reliable forecasting and about how your sales team closes deals.
The 4 reports that sales teams use the most in HubSpot are:
Deal Stage Reporting.
Forecasting (forecasting).
Recurring Revenue Reporting (HubSpot Sales Enterprise)
Time in half phase/deal speed.
How to make these reports actionable:
Marketing & Sales - What does success look like?
Companies often underestimate what it takes for Marketing and Sales to work well together: setting goals and responsibilities between the teams. Marketing and Sales working together on the same business and sales targets need to report on two crucial KPIs. One is to determine how many leads Marketing forwards to Sales and the quality of those leads.
You only need to use one report for this in HubSpot, which adds a lot of value:
Lifecycle Stage Funnel Conversion.
How to make these reports actionable:
Marketing - what does success look like?
We have already identified the key KPI often defined in the marketing process: generated MQLs. But there are other KPIs that are part of the marketing process that are important for C-level:
Marketing Performance
If you know this, you'll find out soon enough which marketing channels are performing best - better yet, whether it's "paid" or "owned" media. That's how you'll know if your ROI improves over time.
How to make these reports actionable:
Sales - What does success look like?
Keeping a grip on customer satisfaction becomes more difficult as your business scales. After all, it's easier to keep insight into how you're helping customers when fewer people are interacting with the same customers.
You can scale the process in HubSpot with a few KPIs that customer service teams often use for reporting during C-level meetings. They can have a significant impact on customer retention:
Ticket Pipeline Reporting.
Customer Effort Score Reporting (reporting on customer effort score).
Net Promoter Score Reporting.
As we saw earlier in this article, you can always view data in HubSpot in more detail. For example, to see which customer gave you which score in a survey. This way, you can actually identify and solve recurring problems in your business processes.
How to make these reports actionable:
Summary
Successful marketing, sales and service teams working with HubSpot and creating reports have the following in place: