Education

How Northern Seminary migrated to HubSpot and automated lead nurturing

Northern Seminary - Case Study Thumbnail
Company overview

Northern Seminary delivers an international, interracial, and intercultural theological education.

Industry

Education

Headquartered

Lisle, Illinois

Context

Northern Seminary isn't a typical higher education institution. Its mission — to cultivate theological learning across cultures and communities — demands that every touchpoint with prospective students feel deliberate and personal. But the tools running behind that mission weren't keeping pace. The seminary had been relying on Salesforce for CRM and Pardot for marketing, a combination that worked until it didn't. When they made the decision to move to HubSpot — including a Marketing Hub with a business unit add-on to serve distinct audiences separately — the complexity of doing it right became clear. RevX stepped in to make the migration stick and build the infrastructure Northern Seminary needed to market with precision.

The challenge

Moving from one marketing automation platform to another is never just a technical task. For Northern Seminary, the migration to HubSpot arrived with a set of layered requirements: multiple business units, a live Salesforce integration, and a marketing team that needed everything — from email to ad tracking — set up and running on the other side.
glass-Chart-icon
A migration with no margin for error.

Northern Seminary had been running its marketing on Pardot for a reason. Switching to HubSpot meant recreating that operational foundation from scratch, while ensuring nothing critical fell through the cracks. The stakes were real: prospective students at various stages of consideration were already in the system, and any disruption to communication workflows could mean lost opportunities.

glass-Chart-icon
Multiple business units, each with their own needs

The decision to purchase HubSpot's business unit add-on was the right one — but it introduced a structural challenge. Each unit needed its own brand identity, email marketing setup, lead segments, and ad account connections. Without careful configuration, the units risked bleeding into each other, creating a muddled experience for prospects and a reporting nightmare for the team.

glass-Chart-icon
A Salesforce sync that couldn't be broken

Salesforce wasn't going anywhere. It remained the system of record for all sales activity, which meant the HubSpot integration had to be airtight. Any mismatch in how data moved between the two platforms would create inconsistencies that compounded over time — wrong lead statuses, missed follow-ups, and a sales team working from unreliable information.

Our solution

RevX approached the engagement as a full-stack implementation — not just plugging in HubSpot, but building out every layer the seminary needed to actually operate within it. The work covered brand setup, email infrastructure, lead automation, ad connectivity, and integration repair.

glass-Chart-icon
Brand kits and email infrastructure, built per unit

For each business unit, RevX configured dedicated brand kits within HubSpot and handled the full email setup: domain settings, tracking codes, preference pages, email footers, and sales email tracking. The goal was to ensure each unit could communicate with its own audience independently, with consistent branding and proper attribution in place from day one.

glass-Chart-icon
Lead segmentation automation that reflects real behavior

RevX built out lead segmentation automation tied to lead status — so contacts would be routed and nurtured based on where they actually were in the journey, not just how they'd been manually tagged. This gave the seminary's marketing team the ability to run targeted nurture flows without ongoing manual intervention, and gave the sales team cleaner handoffs.

glass-Chart-icon
Resolving the HubSpot-Salesforce sync

Integration issues between HubSpot and Salesforce are common, but leaving them unresolved undermines everything built on top. RevX diagnosed and fixed the sync problems directly, ensuring data flowed cleanly between the two platforms. Ad accounts were also connected with proper lead tracking per business unit, closing the loop between paid campaigns and the CRM.

The impact

What Northern Seminary ended up with wasn't just a new marketing platform — it was a fully operational system, properly structured for how they actually work. The migration that had felt like a daunting lift became a foundation for more purposeful, scalable marketing.


glass-Chart-icon
A successful migration that delivered on its promise

HubSpot is now Northern Seminary's marketing automation engine, doing what Pardot was supposed to do — only better structured and built for how the seminary operates. The transition was complete, the data intact, and the team equipped to move forward without relearning from scratch.

glass-Chart-icon
Email marketing running with full visibility

Campaigns are now live across business units, with tracking, domain settings, and attribution all properly configured. The seminary's marketing team can execute email campaigns independently, with confidence that the right people are receiving the right messages and that every interaction is being recorded accurately.

glass-Chart-icon
Automated lead nurturing, finally in place

With lead segmentation tied to status and behavior, Northern Seminary can now run nurture sequences and sales follow-ups through HubSpot automatically. That shift — from manual coordination to structured automation — means fewer leads falling silent and a more consistent experience for every prospective student, regardless of which business unit they entered through.



Mockup

Northern seminary-1

Also read

laptop-mockup3
Media & Entertainment technology

Amagi

 Amagi is a global leader in cloud-based SaaS tech for broadcast & connected TV. 
laptop-mockup3
Media & Entertainment technology

Amagi

 Amagi is a global leader in cloud-based SaaS tech for broadcast & connected TV. 

Curious to know the latest
RevOPS trends?

Subscribe to our newsletter.