Average cost per lead by industry: the final answer from 22 influential articles

Digital marketing has become big business. That’s not even a bold claim when you know digital ad spending has surpassed TV ad spending in 2016 already. The spend on digital ads was over 77 Billion (billion with a B) dollars.

That’s A LOT of money.
But how do you know if it’s well-spent or wasted?

This question brought me on a quest to search, find and analyze all available information on the average cost per lead. Since cost per lead (or CPL) is the most used metric to analyze the efficiency of a marketing campaign.

I started with looking for a solid definition of a lead. More specifically, an online lead. Then I combined all available, up-to-date data and put them into one graph.

Then I combined all available, up-to-date data I could find and tried to visualize that data for both industry and channel.

Interestingly, during my search, I found multiple authoritative cost per lead articles, that I didn’t want to keep from you. If there’s anything you would like to learn about cost per lead, you’ll find your answer there.

Ready? Set. Go!

How to calculate your cost per lead

It’s actually a very straightforward formula. Simply divide what you spend on a campaign or channel by the number of leads that came in from that channel.

For example: consider your company spent $3,000 on a pay-per-click (PPC) campaign and 50 users converted to leads: Cost per lead = $3,000/50 = $60 per lead.

The cost per lead will be different depending on your industry, channel or the quality of a lead. If you want quality, a higher cost per lead might mean a higher quality lead, and a lower overall customer acquisition cost. If you want quantity, you might want to lower cost per lead, even if the leads aren’t as qualified.

Average cost per lead by industry and online channel

Once you have your magic number, you can compare it to previous campaigns, your industry average, or among different channels. To acquire these numbers isn’t an easy task.

Trust me, I know.

I did some extensive desk research and analyzed over 100 articles on cost per lead and lead generation. I combined that with some data of my own to uncover the average cost of an online lead.

It became clear that what you pay per lead depends on the industry you’re in and on the channel you use. That’s why I split up the data into two graphs: the cost per lead by industry and online channel.

This is what I came up with:

The first chart focuses on online CPL between different industries.

Finance and technology have the highest cost per lead with respectively ($47 and $45), whereas telecom and media/marketing have the lowest with a CPL almost half of that. ($26 and $24).

A lower CPL can have multiple reasons. The industry could be less competitive, and less competition leads to lower cost per clicks and eventually a lower cost per lead. Or the value of a lead could be lower. After all, if it costs you more to acquire a lead than he is worth, your business isn’t sustainable.

When looking at the CPL per online channel you notice the high cost for display and CRM advertising at $71 per lead. Not a big surprise, since display advertising is used for retargeting and a way to keep leads warm rather than as a lead generator.

The channel with the second most expensive cost per lead is search engine advertising (SEA). This bigger brother of display advertising is a bit more effective, yet still expensive. Google can be partially blamed for the constant growth in cost per click, together with the increasing number of competitors. There are however big differences between the industries for SEA.

At the bottom of the chart, we see that Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and content marketing have the cheapest cost per lead at $14. Especially if this is done well and in-house, SEO can be a cheap lead generator. However, with the ever-growing amount of content being produced every day, the lead generating powers of SEO might diminish.

I limited the graph to only online sources with good reason. Firstly, as mentioned at the start, digital marketing is booming business, and secondly, offline CPLs range from $300 up to $500. Combining two sets of different data would give back an average cost per lead too high for online and too low for offline channels. And that wouldn’t benefit anybody.

22 influential articles on cost per lead and lead generation

When I was looking for useful cost per lead data, I stumbled upon dozens of articles on CPL and lead generation. While some of those lacked the insights and quantitative data you need for your analysis, I also came across a few gems that I definitely didn’t want to keep from you.

1. All the social media advertising stats you need to know (Evan LePage – hootsuite.com)

The success of social media advertising has been immense. And it shows! From 2014 to 2016, social advertising budgets have doubled worldwide over the past 2 years—going from $16 billion U.S. in 2014 to $31 billion in 2016. But despite this growing investment in social advertising, 46 percent of B2B marketers say they’re unsure whether their channels have generated any revenue.

2. The Cost of Pay-Per-Click (PPC) advertising—trends and analysis (Jonathan Hochman – hochmanconsultants.com)

The cost for online marketing has increased a lot the last decade. Not a big surprise, with higher keyword competition and more competitors joining the party year after year. The average cost per lead of $33 (for 2016) is a good indication. If the trend from the last decade ($7,5 CPL just 10 years ago) continues, chances are that the cost will keep growing.

3. AdWords industry benchmark report deep dive: software and SaaS (Jordan Con – bizible.com)

In the Software/SaaS industry, AdWords drives, on average, 16% of all leads, 14% of all opportunities, and 11% of all revenue. The declining impact as we get further down the funnel shows that companies in this industry still tend to use AdWords as a top-of-the-funnel lead gen channel. According to the data, Software/SaaS companies spend on average $344 to generate a lead.

4. 5 KPIs every digital marketer needs to track (Alberto Garcia – redbamboomarketing.com)

By tracking the right KPIs for your business, you’ll be able to measure the most meaningful analytics and make more educated marketing decisions. While these KPIs are useful in tracking progress and proving the effectiveness of your digital campaigns, they are useless if you don’t use them to make educated decisions about your goals, strategies, and tactics. You must learn which factors will influence each of these metrics so that you can continue to optimize and improve your site.

5. Cost per lead vs cost per click (Grace Garland – mvfglobal.com)

Both of these strategies have been proven to increase sales, so which works out as better value for money? And why did I focus on cost per lead? Perhaps the most important difference is that with cost per click models, you are often paying for accidental clicks or people who were just curious and not looking for your business. With customer generation, you only pay for genuine business leads that match your predefined criteria. So you are more likely to secure a sale through cost per lead.

6. Google AdWords benchmarks for YOUR Industry [New Data] (Mark Irvine – wordstream.com)

This article gives you an overview of the cost per lead for each industry within the PPC space. Overall, they find an average CPA (cost per acquisition) in AdWords across all industries is $59.18 for search and $60.76 for display. (Almost) free love on the SERP! Dating and personal sites have, by far, the lowest average cost per action from search ($6.91 CPA). While Google may be a great place to find a boyfriend, it is an expensive place to find an employee, doctor, or lawyer – average search CPAs for employment services, medical services, and legal services are $105.79, $126.29, and $135.17, respectively. Of course, the lifetime value of a new client in these industries is very high, making it all worthwhile in the end.

7. The top digital channels for generating B2B leads (Ayaz Nanji – marketingprofs.com)

B2B marketers say email, organic search, whitepapers, webinars, and LinkedIn are the most effective digital channels for generating leads. Email ranks as the top channel for driving B2B leads (73% of respondents say it does so), followed by organic search (70%). Making SEO both on- and off-page very important for B2B marketers.

8. Health insurance highly competitive in paid search advertising (Jim Leichenko – adgooroo.com)

Healthcare and insurance have among the highest cost per lead, so when you’re in health insurance, the combination of those two, you’re bound to have a high CPL. And indeed, health insurance is among the most expensive industries to advertise in. The most interesting part of this article is the section about the top 20 health insurance keywords by spend, where we see that they average a CPC of $4.86, up to a maximum of $13.07 per click. PER CLICK! Given that the conversion rate for these keywords is going to be low, people only have one health insurance. What they pay per lead will be well above $100 per lead.

9. Cost per lead benchmarks by industry (hubspot.com)

This overview doesn’t show much difference between the industries, but it gives a nice indication of which industry is more expensive than others. For example, Media & publishing is with a CPL of $11 – $25 the cheapest one, while Information, tech and finances services, as well as marketing agencies, have the highest cost per lead ($51 – $100)

10. What is lead generation? (marketo.com)

Buyers might be anywhere from two-thirds to 90% of the way through their buying journey before they even reach the vendor. The main reason? Buyers have so much access to information that they can delay talking to sales until they are experts themselves. Creating a solid lead generation strategy will help you build trust. And it will capture the interest of your buyer before they are even ready to contact sales.

11. The cost of a webinar lead: Getting the most out of your webinar investment (Bo Bandy)

Webinars are on the rise: about 62% of all B2B marketers are now using them as part of their promotional strategy. Still, the cost of producing a single webinar can be rather expensive. But is it really so much about the total cost of the webinar, or is it more about the total cost of a lead? This article does the math.

12. 5 Powerful reasons you need a referral program (Andrew Gale – socialmediatoday.com)

54% of marketers say referral marketing has a lower cost per lead according to the research. Referral marketing is one of the lowest cost per lead growth channels available to you today. When respected websites or blogs talk about you, this will immediately raise your credibility. It’s also perfect for reaching new target audiences. It’s all about finding the right influencers for your industry.

13. How does Google make its money: The 20 most expensive keywords in Google AdWords (wordstream.com)

97% of Google’s income comes from pay-per-click advertising, that’s about 32,2 out of 33,3 billion dollars. Which made the people over at Wordstream wonder which keywords would be the highest-grossing ones. This article lists the 20 most expensive keywords, with some of them going as high as $50 per click.

14. 5 Facts on the ROI of inbound social media (Aseem Badshah – socedo.com)

Social media can be used for inbound marketing as well as outbound marketing. Which means you can provide great content and wait for people to reach you. Or you can approach them with all sorts of social media ads. Either way, it tends to be very effective. The ROI, however, can look pretty different for both strategies. These are the main findings: Social media has a click-through rate of about 30%. Making businesses that have a landing page built to capture leads have a cost per lead in the $20’s or lower. On average, inbound channels, including social media, SEO, and content, have a CPL around $27.

15. B2B demand gen channels ranked by cost per lead (marketingcharts.com)

According to this MarketingCharts article, the channels with the lowest costs per lead, are email marketing (house list), with 66% of marketers rating this channel as having a very (30.4%) or somewhat (35.6%) low cost. Followed by social media (62% citing low cost)

16. Lead generation statistics (Travis Piepho – prospectrmarketing.com)

There are stunning discrepancies between how well some sources are used for certain industries. For example, did you know that B2B companies are getting 14% of their leads from SEO but only allocating 12% of their budget to that source? Or that the three worst lead sources for B2B companies are traditional advertising (3%), PPC (6%), and direct mail (6%).

17. Boost conversions and revenue with effective lead generation [Infographic] (Tom Koletas – business2community.com)

This infographic shows us that healthcare has the highest B2B CPL with $60, followed by Business Finance ($43), Human Resources ($38), Marketing ($32) and Technology ($31). And spending will continue to grow since 50% of B2B marketers indicated that their lead gen budgets will increase.

18. B2B demand generation benchmark (Craig Borowski – softwareadvice.com)

Marketers found trade shows, referral marketing, and in-house email marketing to be the best channels for generating large numbers of high-quality leads. When it came to content, videos were not only the most-used type of content (used by 92 percent); they were most commonly cited as producing a very high volume of leads.

19. Why you need your marketing team to calculate cost per lead (Hendrik-Jan Francke – brightorangethread.com)

Learn how to calculate the cost per lead step by step and why it’s so important to know yours. The best part about this article is the way it goes beyond the numbers. What does it mean to have a high or low cost per lead? What’s the link between Cost per lead (CPL) and Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) and what it says about your marketing strategy?

20. 2016 State of lead generation (ascend2.com)

The most important lead generation goals are improving the quality of leads (77%), followed by acquiring new customers (50%) and increasing the number of leads (41%). If you combine these insights with the bright orange thread article you can expect the cost per lead will continue to go up.

21. Content marketing infographic (demandmetric.com)

Content marketing costs 62% less than traditional marketing and generates about 3 times as many leads. Sharing content on relevant third-party sites can help gain recognition as ‘thought leaders’ in the industry.

22. Lead generation marketing campaign [Infographic] (João Aguiar – mobidea.com)

This article gives you a clear overview of how online lead generation works. And more importantly: how to set up your online lead generation funnel and turn it into a selling machine.

Bonus: Lead qualification: The simple step by step process to qualify a lead from start to finish (Sam Oh – Moneyjournal.com)

We’ve been talking a lot about lead generation. So as a send-off, let’s indulge in the next step. Because lead generation is only the start. Once a lead is generated, it’s time to qualify it. This thorough article explains how lead qualification should be done to maximize your sales.

So there you have ’em, the most influential articles on cost per lead and lead generation. Apart from the one you just read, of course!

Did I miss anything? Or do you want to share your insights? Feel free to leave your comments below.

P.S: In my search to lower my own cost per lead, I discovered you can lower your cost per lead up to 90% with a quiz. Embed the quiz on your site and engage visitors with a few simple questions. Put an email form at the end and turn your page into a lead generation machine.

Digital marketing has become big business. That’s not even a bold claim when you know digital ad spending has surpassed TV ad spending in 2016 already. The spend on digital ads was over 77 Billion (billion with a B) dollars.

That’s A LOT of money.
But how do you know if it’s well-spent or wasted?

This question brought me on a quest to search, find and analyze all available information on the average cost per lead. Since cost per lead (or CPL) is the most used metric to analyze the efficiency of a marketing campaign.

I started with looking for a solid definition of a lead. More specifically, an online lead. Then I combined all available, up-to-date data and put them into one graph.

Then I combined all available, up-to-date data I could find and tried to visualize that data for both industry and channel.

Interestingly, during my search, I found multiple authoritative cost per lead articles, that I didn’t want to keep from you. If there’s anything you would like to learn about cost per lead, you’ll find your answer there.

Ready? Set. Go!

How to calculate your cost per lead

It’s actually a very straightforward formula. Simply divide what you spend on a campaign or channel by the number of leads that came in from that channel.

For example: consider your company spent $3,000 on a pay-per-click (PPC) campaign and 50 users converted to leads: Cost per lead = $3,000/50 = $60 per lead.

The cost per lead will be different depending on your industry, channel or the quality of a lead. If you want quality, a higher cost per lead might mean a higher quality lead, and a lower overall customer acquisition cost. If you want quantity, you might want to lower cost per lead, even if the leads aren’t as qualified.

Average cost per lead by industry and online channel

Once you have your magic number, you can compare it to previous campaigns, your industry average, or among different channels. To acquire these numbers isn’t an easy task.

Trust me, I know.

I did some extensive desk research and analyzed over 100 articles on cost per lead and lead generation. I combined that with some data of my own to uncover the average cost of an online lead.

It became clear that what you pay per lead depends on the industry you’re in and on the channel you use. That’s why I split up the data into two graphs: the cost per lead by industry and online channel.

This is what I came up with:

The first chart focuses on online CPL between different industries.

Finance and technology have the highest cost per lead with respectively ($47 and $45), whereas telecom and media/marketing have the lowest with a CPL almost half of that. ($26 and $24).

A lower CPL can have multiple reasons. The industry could be less competitive, and less competition leads to lower cost per clicks and eventually a lower cost per lead. Or the value of a lead could be lower. After all, if it costs you more to acquire a lead than he is worth, your business isn’t sustainable.

When looking at the CPL per online channel you notice the high cost for display and CRM advertising at $71 per lead. Not a big surprise, since display advertising is used for retargeting and a way to keep leads warm rather than as a lead generator.

The channel with the second most expensive cost per lead is search engine advertising (SEA). This bigger brother of display advertising is a bit more effective, yet still expensive. Google can be partially blamed for the constant growth in cost per click, together with the increasing number of competitors. There are however big differences between the industries for SEA.

At the bottom of the chart, we see that Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and content marketing have the cheapest cost per lead at $14. Especially if this is done well and in-house, SEO can be a cheap lead generator. However, with the ever-growing amount of content being produced every day, the lead generating powers of SEO might diminish.

I limited the graph to only online sources with good reason. Firstly, as mentioned at the start, digital marketing is booming business, and secondly, offline CPLs range from $300 up to $500. Combining two sets of different data would give back an average cost per lead too high for online and too low for offline channels. And that wouldn’t benefit anybody.

22 influential articles on cost per lead and lead generation

When I was looking for useful cost per lead data, I stumbled upon dozens of articles on CPL and lead generation. While some of those lacked the insights and quantitative data you need for your analysis, I also came across a few gems that I definitely didn’t want to keep from you.

1. All the social media advertising stats you need to know (Evan LePage – hootsuite.com)

The success of social media advertising has been immense. And it shows! From 2014 to 2016, social advertising budgets have doubled worldwide over the past 2 years—going from $16 billion U.S. in 2014 to $31 billion in 2016. But despite this growing investment in social advertising, 46 percent of B2B marketers say they’re unsure whether their channels have generated any revenue.

2. The Cost of Pay-Per-Click (PPC) advertising—trends and analysis (Jonathan Hochman – hochmanconsultants.com)

The cost for online marketing has increased a lot the last decade. Not a big surprise, with higher keyword competition and more competitors joining the party year after year. The average cost per lead of $33 (for 2016) is a good indication. If the trend from the last decade ($7,5 CPL just 10 years ago) continues, chances are that the cost will keep growing.

3. AdWords industry benchmark report deep dive: software and SaaS (Jordan Con – bizible.com)

In the Software/SaaS industry, AdWords drives, on average, 16% of all leads, 14% of all opportunities, and 11% of all revenue. The declining impact as we get further down the funnel shows that companies in this industry still tend to use AdWords as a top-of-the-funnel lead gen channel. According to the data, Software/SaaS companies spend on average $344 to generate a lead.

4. 5 KPIs every digital marketer needs to track (Alberto Garcia – redbamboomarketing.com)

By tracking the right KPIs for your business, you’ll be able to measure the most meaningful analytics and make more educated marketing decisions. While these KPIs are useful in tracking progress and proving the effectiveness of your digital campaigns, they are useless if you don’t use them to make educated decisions about your goals, strategies, and tactics. You must learn which factors will influence each of these metrics so that you can continue to optimize and improve your site.

5. Cost per lead vs cost per click (Grace Garland – mvfglobal.com)

Both of these strategies have been proven to increase sales, so which works out as better value for money? And why did I focus on cost per lead? Perhaps the most important difference is that with cost per click models, you are often paying for accidental clicks or people who were just curious and not looking for your business. With customer generation, you only pay for genuine business leads that match your predefined criteria. So you are more likely to secure a sale through cost per lead.

6. Google AdWords benchmarks for YOUR Industry [New Data] (Mark Irvine – wordstream.com)

This article gives you an overview of the cost per lead for each industry within the PPC space. Overall, they find an average CPA (cost per acquisition) in AdWords across all industries is $59.18 for search and $60.76 for display. (Almost) free love on the SERP! Dating and personal sites have, by far, the lowest average cost per action from search ($6.91 CPA). While Google may be a great place to find a boyfriend, it is an expensive place to find an employee, doctor, or lawyer – average search CPAs for employment services, medical services, and legal services are $105.79, $126.29, and $135.17, respectively. Of course, the lifetime value of a new client in these industries is very high, making it all worthwhile in the end.

7. The top digital channels for generating B2B leads (Ayaz Nanji – marketingprofs.com)

B2B marketers say email, organic search, whitepapers, webinars, and LinkedIn are the most effective digital channels for generating leads. Email ranks as the top channel for driving B2B leads (73% of respondents say it does so), followed by organic search (70%). Making SEO both on- and off-page very important for B2B marketers.

8. Health insurance highly competitive in paid search advertising (Jim Leichenko – adgooroo.com)

Healthcare and insurance have among the highest cost per lead, so when you’re in health insurance, the combination of those two, you’re bound to have a high CPL. And indeed, health insurance is among the most expensive industries to advertise in. The most interesting part of this article is the section about the top 20 health insurance keywords by spend, where we see that they average a CPC of $4.86, up to a maximum of $13.07 per click. PER CLICK! Given that the conversion rate for these keywords is going to be low, people only have one health insurance. What they pay per lead will be well above $100 per lead.

9. Cost per lead benchmarks by industry (hubspot.com)

This overview doesn’t show much difference between the industries, but it gives a nice indication of which industry is more expensive than others. For example, Media & publishing is with a CPL of $11 – $25 the cheapest one, while Information, tech and finances services, as well as marketing agencies, have the highest cost per lead ($51 – $100)

10. What is lead generation? (marketo.com)

Buyers might be anywhere from two-thirds to 90% of the way through their buying journey before they even reach the vendor. The main reason? Buyers have so much access to information that they can delay talking to sales until they are experts themselves. Creating a solid lead generation strategy will help you build trust. And it will capture the interest of your buyer before they are even ready to contact sales.

11. The cost of a webinar lead: Getting the most out of your webinar investment (Bo Bandy)

Webinars are on the rise: about 62% of all B2B marketers are now using them as part of their promotional strategy. Still, the cost of producing a single webinar can be rather expensive. But is it really so much about the total cost of the webinar, or is it more about the total cost of a lead? This article does the math.

12. 5 Powerful reasons you need a referral program (Andrew Gale – socialmediatoday.com)

54% of marketers say referral marketing has a lower cost per lead according to the research. Referral marketing is one of the lowest cost per lead growth channels available to you today. When respected websites or blogs talk about you, this will immediately raise your credibility. It’s also perfect for reaching new target audiences. It’s all about finding the right influencers for your industry.

13. How does Google make its money: The 20 most expensive keywords in Google AdWords (wordstream.com)

97% of Google’s income comes from pay-per-click advertising, that’s about 32,2 out of 33,3 billion dollars. Which made the people over at Wordstream wonder which keywords would be the highest-grossing ones. This article lists the 20 most expensive keywords, with some of them going as high as $50 per click.

14. 5 Facts on the ROI of inbound social media (Aseem Badshah – socedo.com)

Social media can be used for inbound marketing as well as outbound marketing. Which means you can provide great content and wait for people to reach you. Or you can approach them with all sorts of social media ads. Either way, it tends to be very effective. The ROI, however, can look pretty different for both strategies. These are the main findings: Social media has a click-through rate of about 30%. Making businesses that have a landing page built to capture leads have a cost per lead in the $20’s or lower. On average, inbound channels, including social media, SEO, and content, have a CPL around $27.

15. B2B demand gen channels ranked by cost per lead (marketingcharts.com)

According to this MarketingCharts article, the channels with the lowest costs per lead, are email marketing (house list), with 66% of marketers rating this channel as having a very (30.4%) or somewhat (35.6%) low cost. Followed by social media (62% citing low cost)

16. Lead generation statistics (Travis Piepho – prospectrmarketing.com)

There are stunning discrepancies between how well some sources are used for certain industries. For example, did you know that B2B companies are getting 14% of their leads from SEO but only allocating 12% of their budget to that source? Or that the three worst lead sources for B2B companies are traditional advertising (3%), PPC (6%), and direct mail (6%).

17. Boost conversions and revenue with effective lead generation [Infographic] (Tom Koletas – business2community.com)

This infographic shows us that healthcare has the highest B2B CPL with $60, followed by Business Finance ($43), Human Resources ($38), Marketing ($32) and Technology ($31). And spending will continue to grow since 50% of B2B marketers indicated that their lead gen budgets will increase.

18. B2B demand generation benchmark (Craig Borowski – softwareadvice.com)

Marketers found trade shows, referral marketing, and in-house email marketing to be the best channels for generating large numbers of high-quality leads. When it came to content, videos were not only the most-used type of content (used by 92 percent); they were most commonly cited as producing a very high volume of leads.

19. Why you need your marketing team to calculate cost per lead (Hendrik-Jan Francke – brightorangethread.com)

Learn how to calculate the cost per lead step by step and why it’s so important to know yours. The best part about this article is the way it goes beyond the numbers. What does it mean to have a high or low cost per lead? What’s the link between Cost per lead (CPL) and Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) and what it says about your marketing strategy?

20. 2016 State of lead generation (ascend2.com)

The most important lead generation goals are improving the quality of leads (77%), followed by acquiring new customers (50%) and increasing the number of leads (41%). If you combine these insights with the bright orange thread article you can expect the cost per lead will continue to go up.

21. Content marketing infographic (demandmetric.com)

Content marketing costs 62% less than traditional marketing and generates about 3 times as many leads. Sharing content on relevant third-party sites can help gain recognition as ‘thought leaders’ in the industry.

22. Lead generation marketing campaign [Infographic] (João Aguiar – mobidea.com)

This article gives you a clear overview of how online lead generation works. And more importantly: how to set up your online lead generation funnel and turn it into a selling machine.

Bonus: Lead qualification: The simple step by step process to qualify a lead from start to finish (Sam Oh – Moneyjournal.com)

We’ve been talking a lot about lead generation. So as a send-off, let’s indulge in the next step. Because lead generation is only the start. Once a lead is generated, it’s time to qualify it. This thorough article explains how lead qualification should be done to maximize your sales.

So there you have ’em, the most influential articles on cost per lead and lead generation. Apart from the one you just read, of course!

Did I miss anything? Or do you want to share your insights? Feel free to leave your comments below.

P.S: In my search to lower my own cost per lead, I discovered you can lower your cost per lead up to 90% with a quiz. Embed the quiz on your site and engage visitors with a few simple questions. Put an email form at the end and turn your page into a lead generation machine.

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About the author:
Nigel Lindemann

Nigel Lindemann

Nigel is responsible for all things marketing & communication-related. He has a soft spot for original marketing campaigns as well as great food. On weekends, he likes to ride his bike for hours on end for no specific reason.

10 Responses

  1. Nigel, thanks for the great post. Clients have a lot of difficult understanding what leads might cost in the real marketplace and further what value each is worth. For your next post, might I recommend how to cull out the poor quality leads. How would you do it?

    1. Hi Gord,

      Glad you liked my post! It’s an interesting question you pose there. It can definitely be a bit hard sometimes to separate a good from a bad lead. And it’s different for every industry.

      But here’s how we do it: we have an automated checklist, that will check for every lead which actions he/she has taken. Once the lead fulfills enough criteria, he will be labeled as qualified.

      We based this checklist on data we captured from our existing clients. What did they do, why, when,…

      Still, it’s important to evaluate this checklist regularly to prevent both missing out on qualified leads and labeling poor quality leads as qualified.

      Hope this helps,
      Nigel

  2. Great post! Looks like I’m doing pretty well with a CPL of 28€ for a travel agency with only SEO and SEA 🙂

  3. I want to know the exact amount we can expect to run the CPL for clients I mean the market monetary structure like what is market size 5cr or 6cr how much

  4. Great Article! I work in marketing and social media management for an Insurance specialized Roofing company and i was wondering if you have any information on finding average CAC or CPV or CPL for construction??

  5. Hey Nigel, Very insightful article. Thanks for sharing this. I have a genuine concern. Don’t you think CPL varies by target geographies aswell?

    1. That’s a fair concern, Raghu. Indeed these values may differ depending on your target geography. My data comes from Western sources, so if your target audience does not live here, your CPL may vary.

  6. Thanks for posting about this. It’s a topic that’s super important.

    Wanted to add my $0.02:

    There are a number of components that affect your company’s final cpa. Some of which you can’t control, but most of which can be positively influenced with the right strategy.

    For example, take Product Lifecycle.

    It’s difficult for any ecommerce company to prosper if they sell a single purchase experience. Give customers the opportunity to purchase from you again and again. For your target cpa, start thinking about sustainable profitability. Up sell with a complimentary item. Think about creating a commitment to turn a single purchase decision into a repeat purchase behavior. Subscription commerce is a smart benchmark for product lifecycle. They turn a single purchase into twelve. Or more.

    Anyway we blogged about this on our blog if you wanted to read our exhaustive list: https://bit.ly/2N72idH

    Hope that adds to the conversation!

    1. Hi Scott,

      Thank you for your input! It’s much appreciated.
      When compiling this article, I noticed how difficult it is to find an accurate definition of cost per lead or cost per acquisition. As it is often measured differently across all these industries.

      Whether or not you include elements such as Product Lifecycle or any of the other factors mentioned in your article when calculating your CPA, you will, indeed, be able to inflate or deflate the number.

      Kind regards,
      Nigel

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