Archive for July, 2010

Enable Your B2B Sales Force with Fresh Info Straight from the Source

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

The past doesn’t equal the future. Change is pervasive. There’s a major upheaval in how products and services are being bought. This upheaval is caused by:

  • changes in technology,
  • changes in economies,
  • changes in the perceptions of value,
  • a power shift from the seller to the buyer,
  • and a reversion back to the natural human interactions of commerce.

There needs to be a corresponding upheaval in how products and services are sold. Social media is contributing significantly. It enables a natural give and take between people. It’s a paradigm shift that is changing how business is conducted. The last 75 years or so (comprising the rise, reign and fall of the mass media selling model) were an aberration.

MultipleConversations Enable Your B2B Sales Force with Fresh Info Straight from the Source

Back to the Future – the Bizarre Bazaar

It may feel like today’s world of transparency, social media, digital relationships and reputation management is something exotic and new. It’s not. Mass media and push marketing (and to a lesser degree brand building) are no longer working because they were an anomaly, brought about by an artificial marketplace. The good news is we are reentering a more human way of conducting business. The bad news is most of us have to unlearn our sales and marketing habits.

So what are we supposed to do?

CONTENT. CONTEXT. CONVERSATION.

Value is communicated over time through a series of interactions between your company and your prospects. However, this value isn’t transferred from business to business. It’s achieved through conversations that individuals from your company have with specific people within an account. B2B sales are the result of many discrete conversations, and value is best communicated when those conversations focus on a common goal: solving the client’s problem.

Strong customer relationships are built over time, through a series of value-added interactions between various people from the buyer and seller organizations. Nevertheless, most B2B companies fail to use key conversations as input to formulate go-to-market strategy for subsequent sales efforts.

Digital versions of these conversations are happening daily, by the millions, in social media (AND THEY LEAVE AN AUDIT TRAIL)! The value of this information is astounding. Participate. Learn how to leverage these conversations. You can bet your business your brightest and toughest competitors are immersed in it.

Here’s what I’ve learned in working with my clients on social media. Common mistakes include:

  • Relegating social media to the most junior person on the Sales team.
  • Investing 10 or 20 hours in it, and declaring it a failure.
  • Treating it as a peripheral endeavor – something not core to the success of the business.

On the surface it makes sense to have a junior (i.e. young) person handle social media. After all, they understand this stuff, right? Yes… they understand the platforms and technologies. The danger is that they typically don’t have a deep understanding of your business, the industries it serves, and (HUGE) the nuances of interacting with clients and prospects. Social media are conversations. What is said, and how information is delivered, are extremely important. Sophisticated people skills are required.

Social media is relatively inexpensive. The price of admission is almost zero; but leveraging social media effectively takes a considerable investment of time. Social media reflects how we interact in the offline world. You must spend time listening and learning about the people you want to interact with; and then you must earn their trust. Plan on spending 10 to 20 person hours a week for a couple of months before you see a tangible payback. Too large an investment? It’s either that or compete on price. You choose.

Social media should be an intrinsic part of your business. It can drastically improve the effectiveness of everything from Customer Service to Marketing (including market research and PR) to Sales. Assign or hire a fairly senior person to manage your social media activities across your organization; and give that person a seat at the table along with the rest of your executives. This person will deliver significant value (more than you can imagine) if you give them the time, resources and respect that they deserve. Expect them to deliver documented, winning go-to-market strategies. Integrate them into the formulation and execution of your business development efforts.

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Sales 2.0 Merges Sales and Marketing

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

I’ve been watching this coming for a long time, and I believe it’s really here now… and it’s a massive opportunity for SMBs (or SMEs for my Euro and Asian friends). Sales 2.0 finally does away with the ineffective and inefficient sales tactics that so many SMBs continue to use (as if they’re on auto-pilot). Cold calling and ABC (Always Be Closing) have been dead for years, it’s high time we gave them a decent burial.SM Merge 150x150 Sales 2.0 Merges Sales and Marketing

In complex B2B sales, people still buy from people. I don’t want to give the impression that ‘Closing’ has gone away. It’s still extremely important, and the people who are ‘Closers’ are extremely valuable. More about this later.

Sales 2.0 merges Sales and Marketing to target prospects more effectively, using online technologies in innovative ways, to bring in more business at a significantly lower cost of sales. Information is available free (or close to it) today that you couldn’t buy for any amount of money five years ago.

Now we can find highly specific target prospects much more easily, AND we don’t have to interrupt them while they’re trying to do something else. Outbound sales messages, when they’re done via phone or even in person, are analogous to interruptive advertising. An Alterian poll determined that in 2009, 95% of advertising was ignored or disbelieved by its target audience. The old saw was that 50% of advertising didn’t work… you just didn’t know which 50%. Today, you can rest assured that 95% of advertising spend is wasted.

How do you build trust when your prospects won’t engage with you? Today’s B2B buyers want to engage in conversation where and when it’s convenient for them. That means social media. It’s not expensive, but it’s not free. It takes time and effort, knowledge and finesse. Increasingly, Sales and Marketing people are going to have to immerse themselves in social media (or hire a trusted resource) to do demand generation, lead nurturing and to build relationships… albeit digital relationships.

Now we get back to the ‘Closers’ I mentioned earlier. In B2B they’re essential, and they’re expensive. You don’t want them (and they wouldn’t do it anyway) spending time writing blogs, Tweeting, and trolling Discussion Groups on LinkedIn. The good news is they don’t have to. Once a digital relationship is established with a prospect, and the lead is qualified, whoever is handling social media for you should turn the realtionship/lead over to one of your closers. (You have at least one, or you wouldn’t be in business.) When the prospect is nearing a buy decision, they will want to speak with a sales person.

If the Sales 2.0/Marketing operation has done its job correctly, that face to face conversation won’t be focused exclusively on price. Your closer can spend their time and energy developing a personal relationship… and closing a profitable deal.

This is the first post in a series about B2B Sales 2.0. The next one will be titled ‘Sales 2.0 is Sales Enablement’.

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