Marketing should be Sales’ BFF

In a recent article for Inc. MagazineGeoffrey James makes some (blunt) assertions about how marketers generally don’t help sales people in their mission of closing business. While this is almost a religious argument between ideological factions, it is interesting to note that the very same author previously made an almost diametrically inverse argument in an article for CBS News.

The reality, of course, is that marketers and sales people depend on each other to be successful. In some companies, we all know, they don’t work well together, just like a dysfunctional family. But when they do work together – the result is magic!  Keys to successful sales/marketing collaborative relationships include:

  • having the same goals (sales targets, customers, markets, etc.)
  • agreeing on basic operating guidelines (what constitutes a “lead”, who is responsible for which activities, etc.)
  • frequent and honest communication (what worked, what didn’t work, and why?)
  • shared credit for success and responsibility for failure (WE won that deal, WE haven’t achieved our market penetration targets, etc.)
  • respect for each other’s work, and valuing input from each other (please help me put this value proposition together based on what our customer’s use cases have been; we need a lead nurturing campaign for these specific companies – can you please develop that?)
  • adaptability (ability to change what isn’t working, even if it appears to be an industry standard, or something that provided previous success)

Every organization is stronger when we marshal the intellect and resources of our sales and marketing teams together. This does not have to be a fantasy – make it a reality today!

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Resilience.

“An idea can be as flawless as can be, but its execution will always be full of mistakes.” – Brent Scowcroft, former US National Security Advisor

“Life isn’t supposed to happen the way you plan. Life happens the way you execute.”
– Will.I.Am

Brent Scowcroft planned military strategy for several US Presidents; Will.I.Am is a pop star – worlds apart, yet they both value resilience.

Resilience in things means the ability to return to original form after being bent, compressed, or stretched. It is synonymous with elasticity and buoyancy. In people resilience is the ability to recover from illness or adversity. What does it mean for business, and marketers in particular?

A resilient marketing plan is both strong and flexible. Business challenges like market changes, new regulations, and competition can disrupt well-laid plans. Being able to change tactics and adapt in the face of adversity may be the difference between success and failure.

How to Build Marketing Resilience:

  • Make realistic plans and take steps to carry them out
  • Anticipate stumbling blocks
  • Move toward your goals
  • Take decisive actions
  • Foster a positive view of your business and have confidence in your strengths
  • Look for opportunities to learn from mistakes
  • Constantly look for new ways to improve techniques, strategies and tools
  • Clearly ‘show’ your product strengths and tell your story
  • Develop skills in communication and problem solving
  • Make connections – build strong inter-departmental, social media, community and vendor-client relationships
  • Evaluate multiple solutions to a problem– think outside the box
  • Develop consistent and concise messages for all direct and indirect channels
  • Create Materials that can be re-used and re-purposed cross/venue and cross channel
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Marketing Innovation

Many companies focus on technology innovation: New high-tech breakthroughs for delivering data to global networks; novel approaches to bioscience; original methods for diagnostics or analysis. This all leads to products and services that create more and more value.

Ironically, the quest for innovation seems to be limited primarily to a company’s products – relegating our selling and marketing approaches to those of yesteryear. Sure, we do a great deal online these days (ahem…this blog, for instance), but it strikes me that marketers may be underperforming because we haven’t thought about sales and marketing as domains for process innovation. Why don’t we spend as much time on developing and deploying new marketing and sales approaches as we do our products?

How much is spent on printing brochures? How much time spent on tweaking PowerPoint or Keynote presentations? How much money is spent shipping products to trade shows? How often is the marketing budget examined from the perspective of ROI? (Can we really justify drayage costs at $60/100 lbs? Where is the return on that expenditure?)

Marketing innovation is not just about new marketing technologies. It’s about adopting new technologies in new ways to achieve better results. We should all focus on finding ways to deliver superior results for our marketing and sales investment. Better qualified leads. Shorter sales cycles. Higher close rates. Don’t expect better marketing and sales results with the same old brochures and PowerPoint presentations.

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