The Sales Café

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

Selling in a marketer's world

Posted by Peter Krammer on Tue, Aug 17, 2010
  | Share on Twitter Twitter | Submit to Digg digg it |  Submit to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon |  Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn 

While wrestling with your personal social media strategies, ponder this: over the past 18 months, your opportunity as a salesperson to influence the early stages of a buyer's shopping experience has changed radically. Most of your one-to-one prospecting tools (especially cold calling and event networking) are practically useless.

Let's think about recent history for a moment.

I am a salesperson of a certain age (meaning in my mid 50s). I began my B-to-B selling career in 1983, right at the tail end of the three-martinis-for-lunch era. Until about 1982, business buyers expected to be entertained, and a salesperson needed to possess charm, fortitude and an expense account just to get into the game in a serious way. Not being much of a drinker, I was lucky to miss all of that.

As the economy recovered from an awful recession and companies re-engineered for a new era, buyers found themselves doing two people's jobs and had little time for lunch, let alone blowing their minds out for the afternoon. Today that same buyer (be they VP of Sales, CIO, or Staffing Manager) does five people's jobs and barely has time to return a phone call!

In the early to mid-1980s, we entered a twenty-year period that witnessed the professionalization of salespeople. Until roughly 2007, to be a salesperson meant you needed to fill yourself with unbelievable amounts of information to prove to the busy buyer that you could improve their world. You needed to do this in five minutes or less before they would begin to tell you their problems. Charm barely or rarely got you in the door. You needed to arm yourself with product and technical knowledge, competitive and business acumen, team building and leadership skills. You also needed to be a strategist, a consultant, a PowerPoint expert, a great speaker, and a pithy inventor of high-impact value propositions and elevator speeches. Salespeople learned to become knowledge workers, technocrats, leaders, managers, field generals, and politicians. Charm and humor were still required.

Wow, what a change! Most of you readers weren't conscious of this change because you've spent most or all of your career practicing within that environment.

Today, our selling world is changing again. The proliferation of social media and the maturation of Web research tools has truly empowered the business shopper. By the time your prospect returns your phone call or email, they've checked you, your company, your competition, your competition's salespeople, and perhaps even your friends out. They've educated themselves about your product or service and the differences between you and everybody else. What does this mean?

Marketing is the art of communicating and influencing "one to many." The digital universe provides a multitude of channels that allow for easy consumption of product and personal information. Today, the buyer might not allow you in the door until they've completed their research. Does this mean that salespeople are now relieved of the need to know it all before the buyer will talk to us? Not really.

We either need to learn how to partner very closely with our marketing department or become our own marketing department. Our personal and product appeals need to be cleverly crafted and widely placed so that when the buyer is shopping, they can find us.

We are truly selling in a marketer's world.

0 Comments Click here to read/write comments

A Marketer in a Sales World

Posted by Mary Lee Shalvoy on Thu, Aug 05, 2010
  | Share on Twitter Twitter | Submit to Digg digg it |  Submit to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon |  Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn 
Lost!I am a marketer working in the world of sales. I am surrounded by sales experts, consultants who have earned their stripes selling and helping others sell successfully. For me, it's like living in a foreign country, with a different language and separate cultures. I talk about our mission and ideas, markets and branding, social media and Twitter. They talk about getting leads. Oh, and how long will it take to see revenue from all this marketing?

Since the dawn of commerce, there's always been a thin line between marketing (telling the story of your product) and sales (getting someone to exchange something for your product). At one point in time, it was a chicken for some seeds while meeting on a dirt road. "This chicken will lay a golden egg for you." "These seeds willl grow the finest beans." (You get the picture.) Today, it's money/credit for products and services online. But we all started by telling our story. And, depending on which side of the line you lean (marketing or sales), your story might have a slightly different purpose, with a unified goal of making the sale.

I've always been sheltered from the sales side of my work. I worked on the "creative" side in publishing. The suits handled all the financial stuff, we creatives just made sure we offered the best content for them to sell. My only cold calling happened when I needed a quote for a story. It just didn't seem like sales to me. As my career evolved, I knew a lot of people who were already familiar with my work and my style. Through word of mouth, they hired me and, well, word gets around, so I get to write this column today.

You might say that I've been selling all along, that my quotas were calculated in word counts, white papers and blogrolls, that my leads have been honed meticulously throughout the years with every informant. My sales career is a work in progress.

Marketing and sales are intrinsically tied, but there is a definite space between the two. I experience it every day. Follow along as I tell the story of my journey to bridge the gap.

1 Comments Click here to read/write comments

Sales, Differentiation and Building Customer Value

Posted by Pete Krammer on Wed, Jul 08, 2009
  | Share on Twitter Twitter | Submit to Digg digg it |  Submit to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon |  Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn 

Unless you're very lucky, you probably have more competitors now than you've ever had. Yes, companies fold in recessions, and even more fold during recovery, but even more enter your market every day, often without your knowing. So how do you stay ahead of the game? Let's take another look at a tool that helps you differentiate with every customer while providing them with value they can't get anywhere else. 

Buyers travel through four phases in their relationship with a product or service, as described by Barbara Bund in Winning and Keeping Industrial Customers, and taught by Wilson Learning in Differentiating Business Solutions. The buyer determines their own behavior, either by following a plan or following their nose. These phases are called, simply enough, SHOP-BUY-USE-DISPOSE. Each phase means exactly what it says, and each has distinct characteristics and many, sometimes hundreds of steps.

Shop is all the steps a customer takes before selecting a vendor and making a buying decision. It starts with either a vague or concrete problem recognition and includes all shopping and evaluation steps.

Buy is all the steps between selecting a vendor and taking delivery. This includes procurement and payment.

Use is what most people think of as the life cycle of a product or service. This includes upgrading and servicing a product.

Dispose is what a customer does when they have either used up the product or service, or decided it no longer works for them.

All customers are in one of these phases at all times. When you are in-phase with the buyer, selling is easy; you know where they are and you know what to do. When you are out of phase, you have either missed your opportunity or the buyer’s momentum has rolled right past you. Then you leave it all to chance, what's left of your luck, or whatever charm you can muster. Of course, you can disrupt their momentum too, if you’re very clever.

The action for you is to document each individual step a buyer and/or customer takes in each of these phases. It doesn't take long to recognize where they spend their energy and time (it's different for everybody) and what you can do to help make the experience easier or more valuable for them - and different from your competitors.

For your sales organization, this is a vital part of Outside-In selling. For a salesperson, this is the heart of differentiation. 

0 Comments Click here to read/write comments

Sales Recovery just after midnight

Posted by Pete Krammer on Fri, May 29, 2009
  | Share on Twitter Twitter | Submit to Digg digg it |  Submit to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon |  Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn 

This past week I had a very enlightening conversation with a friend, Steve Diller, who is a well known market strategy expert and the author of Making Meaning, about go-to-market strategies companies need to employ in this stage of the economic cycle. I think, as many of you will agree, that we seem to have turned the corner toward recovery, and that some, or most companies are starting to see improving sales. His view was that it is fifteen seconds past midnight, or thereabouts, on the new day of the economy and it's time to get prepared for the expansion that is coming next. I think that is a perfect assessment of where we are right now.

The last time the economy was in this exact spot, at least in Silicon Valley, was perhaps June 2002. As I look back over the the past seven years of client work, I see a clear pattern. Companies that got their sales planning together early, and whose sales process, systems, and methodology were in tune, came out of the box early and benefitted the most from the last expansion cycle and have survived the downturn relatively well. Those that dithered, or who tried to squeeze the last ounce from their tired old strategies, are dying. Let's learn from them.

Sales Executives! Your companies are entrusting the successful road through the sales recovery to you. Many things you thought you knew are now in question. And we all know the world has changed in many subtle and not-so-subtle ways since late 2007. Most certainly, the sales methodologies of the big expansion will not work in the recovery phases of the cycle, or not work as well. B2B and B2C buying relationships are greatly altered today. Who would have thought that your credibility may rest in Linked-In or Facebook?

A solid vision, structured sales planning, and a healthy dose of Outside-In sales methodology is critical, perhaps more than anything else right now. If you want to take full advantage of the recovery, make sure you have these pieces in place, or get help from those who can help you most. Most of us prosper on the way up, so throw the covers off your head; it's very early in the morning but it's time to do something.

0 Comments Click here to read/write comments

Developing Trust: First Step in the Sales Process

Posted by Dave Blackburn on Fri, Apr 17, 2009
  | Share on Twitter Twitter | Submit to Digg digg it |  Submit to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon |  Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn 
 

Creating a trusting customer relationship is at the core of every B2B or B2C salesperson's role. Sales is a company's face to the customer. Whether talking on the telephone or in person, the salesperson's goal is to make a connection with the customer. Through that interaction, the prospect and/or customer develops the trust that results in a buy decision. 

Salespeople are generally expected to generate their own leads in addition to those generated by marketing. Their ability to do so is the difference between success and dashed expectations. A salesperson who has confidence that their lead generation approach creates trust will be motivated to repeat the approach. 

What is the best way for salespeople to generate new leads while fostering a trusting customer/sales relationship? 

Please click on the link below to participate in ELA's six question Business Development Survey: Generating Leads and Building Trust. Share what you think is the role of a salesperson in arranging the initial customer meeting. Offer your ideas for approaches that lay the foundation for a trusting relationship. By sharing, you will receive a summary report of the results including a list of ideas to improve lead generation performance in your sales organization or territory.

 

Please click here to take the short (only 6 questions!) ELA Consulting Group Lead Generation Survey!

0 Comments Click here to read/write comments

Business-to-Business Relationships: Service Matters

Posted by Debbie Dickinson on Tue, Mar 03, 2009
  | Share on Twitter Twitter | Submit to Digg digg it |  Submit to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon |  Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn 
Everyone knows what a difference great customer service makes. In B(usiness) to C(onsumer), great service has direct, daily impact on revenue.  Consumers rate service with their feet.  Poor service means customers walk away never to return. Great services encourage customers to come back, again and again, and bring friends.  People want to do business where they are respected and treated well.

Is the same true in business-to-business relationships?  In the B-to-B market, connections take place behind the scenes, with little or no end user contact.  How can standards of service apply here?  Let’s consider the case of six meat packaging plants and a national supplier of lunchmeat to retail grocery stores. Imagine you work as a purchasing agent for the national supplier.  It is your job to review the plants and make a choice as to which of the six best choices will get your business.  Here is how you rate them:
  • One plant has great product.
  • Another plant has great product and is always reliable.
  • Plant number three has great product, is reliable, and competitively priced.
  • The fourth plant has great product, is reliable, competitively priced and helps your business succeed through service that makes you more competitive.
  • Our final plant option has great product, is reliable, competitively priced, helps your business succeed through service that makes you more competitive AND doing business with them is easy and fun.
The final choice, put in these terms of comparison makes the decision easy, right? Thinking with the mindset of a purchasing agent, how much does your decision making in business differ from how you make personal buying decisions? Many B-to-B suppliers operate with the assumption that they have little in common with service icons from the B-to-C world.  Look again. Here’s a challenge for those of you in the B-to-B market:  List three places you personally frequent.  Beyond convenience, what are the top two reasons you do business with these establishments?  Now turn it around:  What is one compelling reason to do business with you that you can repackage and offer your customers?    

4 Comments Click here to read/write comments

All Posts

Subscribe by Email

Your email:

Follow us on Twitter!

Browse by Tag