
Inbound Marketing Campaign Templates
Here are a few must-have templates to help you implement your inbound marketing campaign. You’ll find just about every template you need to get all your inbound marketing efforts sorted including:- A user persona worksheet to help you target the right people.
- A landing page writing and tracking template to help you write, test, and track your landing pages.
- An email newsletter template to help you plan all your email marketing.
- An Excel marketing calendar to stay on top of it all.
Table of Contents
- Lead Form Examples
- Call-to-action Examples
- Marketing Automation Examples
- Landing Page Examples
- Inbound Social Media Examples
What Exactly is Inbound Marketing?
You’re not silly for wondering what exactly inbound marketing is. There is often a bit of confusion around how inbound marketing is different from content marketing. Rightfully so. The two are similar. Here’s how they are different:

How to Plan a Successful Inbound Marketing Campaign
As with any marketing strategy, you need to put some time in on the front-end to set your initiatives up for success. Here are the necessary planning steps to lay a good foundation for your inbound activities.Set S.M.A.R.T. Inbound Marketing Goals
At the risk of sounding like a broken record, marketers need to make sure their goals are S.M.A.R.T. or… Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, Time-bound.





Identify Your Target Audience
Great content usually attracts an audience - which is one of the pillars of inbound marketing. Problem is, great content isn’t necessarily guaranteed to attract the right audience for your brand. You need to produce content that resonates with those who will buy your products or services. How can you do that if you don’t know who your audience is? Well... you can’t, really. Before you can attract them, you need to understand…- Who they are.
- What their challenges are.
- How you can solve their problems.
- What they value.
- What motivates them.

How to Use the User Persona Template
In the content download included in this post, you’ll find a user persona worksheet to help guide you through the process of finding your target audience. Step 1: Create a fictional name and job description – This helps you understand what your target audience does for a living… the first step in understanding their challenges. Step 2: Fill in the demographics – This paints a more contextual picture regarding who this individual is. Step 3: Fill in their hobbies and interests – This can help you target your audience on the right channels, work with the right influencers, etc. Step 4: Describe their challenges and goals – This can help you create valuable content to help solve their problems. Step 5: Flesh out their values and fears – This allows you to gain a deeper understanding about what drives their decisions. Step 6: Favorite blogs and news sources – This can help you in your retargeting efforts, guest blogging strategy and paid advertising efforts. Step 7: Customer quote – Find a customer that fits this description and add a quote from them. Here’s an example from CoSchedule’s target persona worksheet: “One of my biggest challenges as a Marketing Manager is my lack of visibility regarding my team’s daily priorities. I have a hard time knowing who is doing what and if we will hit our deadlines or not.”
Recommended Reading:
How To Find Your Target Audience And Create The Best Content That Connects
Keep All Your Inbound Initiatives in Sync with Daily Standups
Inbound marketing campaigns involve lots of ongoing projects with many moving parts. Coordinating these campaigns can be a nightmare for marketing managers because of the challenges associated with cross-functional collaboration. The daily standup is something borrowed from Agile project management can help solve issues you’ve encountered with coordinating a cross-functional team. Instead of wasting time trying to (unsuccessfully) track down status updates on various parts of your inbound initiatives, hold a recurring daily stand up. The beauty of these meetings is they’re short, to the point, and essential for effective teamwork. Everyone involved in your inbound activities gathers first thing in the morning, every morning and discusses:- What they worked on yesterday.
- What they will work on today.
- What potential roadblocks might prevent their success.

Recommended Reading:
How to Run Effective Daily Standup Meetings With Busy Marketers
Create a Central Hub to Keep Your Inbound Marketing in Order
A central hub allows you, as the marketing manager, to stay in-the-know about all of your inbound marketing efforts and helps your team members know what they should be working on every day. There are a couple of ways to accomplish this: The first is to use the Inbound Marketing Calendar Template download included in this blog post. It’s a pre-made Excel spreadsheet that can help you keep your inbound marketing ducks in order.





Parts of an Inbound Marketing Campaign
As mentioned above, inbound marketing campaigns have lots of moving parts... landing pages, forms, blog posts, white papers, eBooks, reports, social media campaigns, PPC ads, and emails... just to name a few. Each work together to help deliver value to your visitors and help your company fill its marketing funnel with potential customers.
Lead Capturing Forms
Your inbound marketing strategy rides and dies on the ability to track website visitors and incoming leads. Without a lead capturing system, your email list won’t grow and you will struggle to nurture potential customers and reach your goals. Enter the lead capturing form. This valuable little form sets out to do one thing… help companies capture leads. These forms ask website visitors for pieces of their information in exchange for something of value you’ve created – like an eBook or report. Forms can be long or short – and there are lots of different opinions about how to best format your lead capture form.- Keep it short - Short forms will likely increase your conversion rates but could result in lower quality leads.
- Opt for a longer form - longer forms are more difficult to fill out, so fewer people will do so. This will lower your conversion rates, but will likely result in higher quality leads.

Recommended Reading:
How To Create Opt-In Forms: 5 Ways To Convert Traffic Like Crazy
Examples of Lead Forms
No better way to learn than to see some real lead forms in action. Here are a few examples to draw inspiration from.Intercom
This lead form from Intercom appears when trying to access an item of gated content. The form is slightly longer than an average top-of-funnel lead form, but not so long that it would discourage people from filling it out.
Budget Blinds
This “Schedule a Consultation” lead from Budget Blinds is rather short of a bottom-of-funnel form but captures all the essential information needing to move the consultation forward.
Sunday
The lawn care company, Sunday, gets really creative with their lead capture form. So much so that it feels more like a personalized experience than filling out a lead form. First, you’re asked to create an account with an email and password. Next, you’re asked to enter your home address. Once done, the site gives you a summary for your lawn as well as a custom lawn care plan.
Examples of CTAs
A call-to-action (CTA) is a small but important part of any inbound marketing campaign. You’ve spent loads of time creating great content, now you’ve got to make sure people are compelled to download your content. A call to action might be at the beginning of a landing page, on a blog post, or shared on a social media image. Wherever it appears, a call to action means you are encouraging your reader to take some kind of actionable task, usually in the form of a button, link or clickable image.Spotify
Spotify prioritizes prime digital real estate for its call-to-action. This CTA leads the visitor to download Spotify for free. The company also has a secondary CTA below leading the visitor to a promo for Spotify premium. Basically, the entire spotify.com landing page is devoted to CTAs – which proves how important they are.
Purple
Mattress company, Purple, makes good use of CTA’s throughout its site. From signing up for its newsletter to watching the company’s professionally produced video content, each has a unique CTA to encourage the visitor to learn more about its products.

Campaign Monitor
Email marketing platform, Campaign Monitor, makes good use of CTAs on its site, particularly on its blog. At the bottom of this page, the company strategically places a CTA to participate in its email marketing course. This captures leads to be further nurtured by subsequent inbound marketing activities.
Recommended Reading:
How To Write A Call To Action In A Template With 6 Examples
Marketing Automation and Lead Nurturing
Lead nurturing is one of the more difficult parts of inbound marketing campaigns, marketers sometimes neglect to follow up on the leads they obtain from their inbound marketing campaigns. Failure to do this, in a lot of ways, defeats the purpose of content marketing. Emails, newsletters, and marketing automation are all excellent forms of lead-nurturing, that help grow relationships with potentials customers and inch them closer to making a purchase. In fact, nurtured leads are 50% more sales-ready than those who have not been through a lead nurturing process. In other words, nurturing your leads will improve your chances of converting them, and make it easier to meet your inbound marketing goals. Here are some examples of lead nurturing and marketing automation.West Elm
This email from West Elm aims to couple content promotion to its blog, with CTA to a spring discount promotion. This nurtures leads, as well as helps draw visitors back to the website with great content.

Little Spoon
Little Spoon’s newsletter promotes its content series, “Is This Normal”, which produces interviews with influential women about the challenges of parenthood. The newsletter does a good job of mixing discount promotions, CTA’s, content marketing efforts, and other elements of inbound marketing to help people move down their marketing funnel.
Landing Pages
Your website’s landing pages are an important element of inbound marketing, but an often overlooked one. In fact, getting landing pages built and tested is a top-five challenge for B2B marketers. The landing page sets out to present one offer, product, or service and aims to collect the visitor’s information in exchange for something of value. Common things to create a landing page for include:- Content marketing downloads. (Items like white papers, eBooks, and reports.)
- Webinar sign-ups.
- Demos and free trials.
- Product presentations.
Recommended Reading:
How To Write Landing Pages That Will Boost Your Conversions
Gartner
Gartner is a leading advisory and research organization that thousands of businesses turn to for assistance with their technology stacks and organizational priorities. The company leverages landing pages for its regular webinars that help C-suite executives stay in-the-know.
UpWork
Here’s a landing page example from Upwork where visitors can download an eBook created by the company in partnership with Hubspot. The company does a good job of keeping the content simple with only one offer and one CTA on display.
Dropbox
Dropbox’s landing page offers visitors a pre-recorded product demo that can only be watched after the visitor enters their contact information. Another option here would be to lead the individual to an area where they could schedule a live demo with a sales expert.
Sick Day Box
This product landing page from Sick Day Box highlights the product, what it includes, and a simple CTA to purchase the box. This example could be altered with a “learn more” CTA leading to a contact form if your company offers a service, rather than an e-commerce product.
Social Media
Social media channels are becoming increasingly “pay-to-play” marketing platforms, which could call into question its status as an element of an inbound marketing campaign. Be that as it may, it hasn’t been discluded as an inbound tactic… yet. Mostly because the purpose of inbound marketing remains about delivering the right content to the right person at the right time. Social media is still a good way to accomplish this. The trick to doing inbound social media right is to err on the side of caution. Inbound is about delivering something of value to your audience. Too often companies use their social media as a content delivery platform to push all their promotional items, not just the ones that their audience would find valuable. Here are a couple of examples of companies doing inbound social media right.The Citizenry
The Citizenry does a good job of keeping their social media channels valuable for followers. The company adds content like pop-up shop locations, stories about its producers, sales, and design inspiration.
Home Chef
Meal delivery service, Home Chef, leverages a great opportunity to build trust with its social media audience by giving away meal recipes for free. Its audience can try the recipes at home, which helps them realize that the company’s service is both delicious and can make their lives easier.
Inbound Marketing Done Right
Now, you’ve got the knowledge to plan one amazing inbound marketing campaign. From each individual inbound marketing element to the best way to get everything kicked off, you’re ready to harness the power of inbound and start seeing amazing results. If you’re still struggling with the planning aspect and can’t quite capture that amazing feeling when everything just works… check out CoSchedule. It’s the only Marketing Suite where you can plan everything in one place.
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