How many hours per week does your team spend sending follow-up emails, chasing unanswered quotes, qualifying inbound leads, or reminding prospects they left a form incomplete? For most SMBs, the answer is "too many." Marketing automation transforms these repetitive tasks into automatic workflows, freeing your team for what truly matters: client relationships and closing sales.
What Is Marketing Automation and Why Now?
Marketing automation refers to the use of software to automate repetitive marketing actions: sending emails, segmenting contacts, lead scoring, sales follow-ups, social media posting, etc. The trigger can be a user action (filling out a form, visiting a page), a date (anniversary, renewal date), or a behavior (opening an email, clicking a link).
Why now? Because the tools have become accessible. Ten years ago, deploying a marketing automation solution cost several thousand dollars per month. Today, tools like Brevo (formerly Sendinblue), ActiveCampaign, or Make allow an SMB to get started for $30 to $100 per month.
The 5 Workflows to Automate First
Do not try to automate everything at once. Start with the workflows that have the greatest impact on your conversions and on your wasted time.
1. The Welcome Sequence
Every new contact in your database deserves an onboarding sequence. As soon as a prospect fills out a form or downloads content, they automatically receive a series of emails over 7 to 15 days: company introduction, client testimonials, useful resources, invitation to connect. This single workflow can increase your conversion rate by 30%.
2. Unanswered Quote Follow-Up
You send a quote. You hear nothing back. You have other pressing matters. The quote falls through the cracks. Automate this process: 3 days after sending with no response, an automatic follow-up email is sent; 7 days later, a follow-up with added value (relevant article, new information); 14 days later, a phone call attempt is triggered in your CRM. This simple workflow recovers an average of 15-25% of "lost" quotes.
3. Automatic Lead Scoring
Not every contact is ready to buy. Lead scoring automatically assigns points to your prospects based on their behavior: opening emails (+5 points), visiting the pricing page (+20 points), downloading a case study (+15 points), repeat visits within 7 days (+25 points). When a prospect exceeds 60 points, your salesperson receives an alert to contact them at the right moment.
4. Inactive Contact Reactivation
Your contact database is an asset. Contacts who have not interacted for 90 days deserve an automatic reactivation campaign โ not aggressive sales follow-ups, but useful content that reminds them of your expertise and invites them back into your ecosystem.
5. Client Review Collection and Publishing
7 days after a project or delivery, automatically send an email requesting feedback. If the feedback is positive, redirect to Google My Business or Trustpilot. Simple, automatic, and incredibly effective for building your online reputation without even thinking about it.
Choosing Your Marketing Automation Tool: SMB Comparison
| Tool | Monthly price | Strengths | Ideal for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brevo (Sendinblue) | Free → $65 | GDPR native, SMS included | Beginner SMBs |
| ActiveCampaign | $29 → $149 | Advanced automation, built-in CRM | SMBs with complex funnels |
| Make (Integromat) | $9 → $29 | Connects all tools, total flexibility | Technical users |
| HubSpot | Free → $890 | Complete CRM, all-in-one | Fast-growing SMBs |
| Mailchimp | Free → $100 | Ease of use, templates | E-commerce, B2C |
For SMBs looking to go further with automation by adding an AI layer, solutions like Trustly AI enable dynamic personalization of communications based on each prospect's profile and behavior โ personalization at scale that is impossible to do manually.
CRM: The Backbone of Your Automation
A marketing automation tool without a CRM is like an engine without a dashboard. The CRM (Customer Relationship Management) centralizes all information about your contacts and their interaction history. It is what allows marketing automation to be contextual and personalized rather than generic.
For an SMB, a CRM does not need to be complex. The essential features are:
- Contact card with complete interaction history
- Visual sales pipeline (Kanban-style)
- Native integration with your email tool
- Alerts and reminders for sales actions
- Simple reporting on conversions and revenue
GDPR and Marketing Automation: Essential Rules
In Europe, GDPR strictly regulates the use of personal data in marketing automation. The fundamental rules:
- Explicit consent โ You must have obtained your contacts' agreement before including them in automated sequences. A pre-checked box is not sufficient
- Transparency โ Clearly state in your forms why you are collecting data and how you will use it
- Right to unsubscribe โ Every automated email must contain a functional unsubscribe link
- Limited retention โ Do not keep inactive contact data indefinitely. An annual purge is recommended
Measuring the ROI of Your Marketing Automation
The ROI of marketing automation is measured at several levels:
- Time saved โ Calculate the number of weekly hours you used to spend on now-automated tasks, multiplied by your team's hourly cost
- Conversion improvement โ Compare your conversion rates before and after automation
- Funnel progression speed โ Are leads progressing faster toward the purchase decision?
- Average order value โ Are automated upsells and cross-sells increasing the basket value?
Marketing automation integrates perfectly into an inbound marketing strategy and a client acquisition funnel. Together, these three elements form the foundation of sustainable digital growth for any SMB.