May 13, 2003
To align sales and marketing, work backwards from the customer's
perspective (Or, How to fix the plane while it's flying)
by Scott Santucci, BluePrint
Marketing
Many companies will admit they have a problem with getting their
sales and marketing departments to function well together, but most
are not doing much to address the issue. Some CEOs have tried in
the past only to have lackluster results. Others are replacing their
sales and marketing leadership in hopes the new blood will fix the
problem. Regardless of the orientation, most CEOs agree on one thing
sales and marketing execution must improve.
Why have so many sales and marketing programs ones that
seemed like good ideas at the time failed to produce the
results we expected?
Without an eye for detail, the best-laid plans, from the smartest
people, fail to produce the expected results. When you attempt to
change the way your company operates, the opportunity for problems
dramatically increases. Improving your sales and marketing effectives
requires you to transform these disconnected departments into an
integrated machine that manufactures customers. Before introducing
you to the steps and projects required to achieve this, we need
to first focus on a few execution fundamentals.
Fundamental #1: Create governance. Given the various projects
to be performed, and the many different people that play a role
in driving results, you should develop a list of high-level guiding
points to help people calibrate their daily activity to the overall
initiative.
Key principals for sales effectiveness include:
- Traditional "stovepipes" between sales and marketing
must be systemically broken down and eliminated.
- Providing customers the information they need, in their context,
is the design point of all sales and marketing activity.
- Your brand and value proposition is primarily communicated through
individual sales people.
- Sales effectiveness is an ongoing process, not a one-time project.
Fundamental #2: Blend intellectual skill sets. To achieve
best practice sales effectiveness you need people who are:
- Strategic thinkers and problem-solvers that can help you uncover
challenges and develop ideas to address them. This is required
for true innovation.
- Capable of understanding all of the specific tasks required
to meet these goals, create plans, and get the organization to
act on them. We call this the assembly component.
- Who are specialists that can perform the required tasks. This
third skill set determines the ability to succeed at delivery.
Fundamental #3: Break down transformation into manageable pieces.
To successfully transform your organization, you need to understand
where you are going. You must create milestones along the way, and
break down all of the activities into manageable, independent, yet
interconnected projects.
The diagram below is a visual depiction of a structured transformation
program to help you integrate sales and marketing.

The ovals represent the intellectual skill sets required to successfully
achieve the objectives for each project, which are indicated as
boxes. Because you are changing your organization, sales effectiveness
should be viewed as a series of iterative phases each tackling a
defined set of tasks that will produce the quickest results.
Project #1: Program game plan
The goal of this project is to select the set of activities to that
will yield the greatest impact, in the shortest amount of time,
using the minimum amount of resources. To succeed, you have to have
a strong plan. Start by doing financial analysis: Figure out your
firm's close rate, sales cycle time, and average revenue per sales
transaction and then ask sales people what could be done to improve
each of these.
Also, speak with your customers. Ask them to recall for you all
of the steps they went through to buy your software. Find out when
the project got started and why, who were all of the people involved,
and what role they played. Finally, analyze the pipeline and see
if you can see any trends.
Based on this analysis, you should have a good idea where the "low-hanging
fruit" is. For example, in speaking with your clients, you
might find that each one of them spent a huge amount of time trying
to justify your project internally. You also found that the pipeline
stage for "funded project" is where most of the opportunities
are getting stuck. Therefore, a quick-win possibility would be to
provide your customers with the information that will help them
acquire funding for their projects.
Internal communication is extremely important for any type of transformational
activity, but is especially important for sales effectiveness. Sales
people are often reluctant to embrace marketing programs because
they see them as coming from an ivory tower; they're pre-judged
to be impractical and not based in the real world of sales experience.
Additionally, many other important stakeholders will be skeptical
about an initiative like this. It is critical that you develop a
well-composed business plan, create a clearly articulated game plan,
and communicate the program to all of the stakeholders involved
in the project.How well you internally sell your initiative will
have a direct bearing on the success of your first iteration of
the program.
Project #2: Impact analysis, audit, and alignment
This project is a more detailed analysis of the problem. Now that
you know the specific areas you wish to tackle, collect as much
information on the problem as possible.
- Understand your firm's sales pipeline and forecasting process
in detail
- Follow the lifecycle of a few opportunities from first lead
to close
- Quantify your value proposition, review it with a few sales
people, and see if they agree
- Model your customers' buying process and review it with a few
customers to see if it's accurate
- Profile all the stakeholders who are involved in your buying
process
- Map your customers' buying process to your sales process and
compare both to pipeline data
- Work with the finance or sales operations department to analyze
pipeline stage to stage conversion rates, the length sales cycle
time, and the financial value for improving these metrics
[Editor's note: To help you get started with sales
efficiency metrics, use the "Sales and Marketing Effectiveness
Model" that's in the SoftwareCEO's Downloads
Library; it's in the Sales and Distribution section.]
- Once you've developed an integrated customer and sales process,
audit your marketing programs to see where they are targeted and
determine the sell-through rate of those investments
All of these activities will provide a clear view into your alignment
gaps; highlight key areas where improvements can be made, and what
the financial impact on making those improvements may be. A quick-win
possibility will be to identify ineffective marketing investments,
eliminate them, and communicate that to executive management.
Project #3: Content framework and process
Your sales and marketing problems can be distilled into this one
statement: Your company is not providing your customers the information
they need, in their context, at the right time.
Global 2000 organizations require different information from each
stage of the buying process. They will also involve many different
stakeholders who each have their own criteria to evaluate you against.
Because the majority of your marketing content is not mapped to
these specific challenges, sales people struggle to locate useful
collateral and will usually create their own.
In creating a content process, you must develop a structure that
aligns marketing content creation with sales and customer demands.
Start by developing a business development process map: Show what
happens at each step, beginning with an account not yet contacted
and terminating with an executed agreement.
Plot out all of the key milestones that will happen throughout
the sales process, and then superimpose your customers' buying cycle
on top on it. Combine your business development process with your
customers' buying process and solicit feedback from the entire executive
team.
It is extremely important to get the organization to agree on this
integrated business development and customer buying process framework;
it will serve as the foundation for all future sales effectiveness
projects.
Project #4: Content creation
After creating the organizing framework, the second biggest challenge
to tackle is the messaging problem. Each of your products has many
features designed to provide value to your customers. Every stakeholder
will have different interpretations of the value those features
provide, and each person will try to relate your capabilities to
their own perspective and business problems.
Throughout their decision-making process, the questions buyers
will ask will also be different. Your sales people are ultimately
responsible for managing all of these multiple messages, while also
driving a sales process. Therefore, at any given time, each sales
person is required to be conversant on many different topics at
a tremendous level of depth.
To help your sales people be more persuasive, you need to help
them develop and manage the myriad messages that are communicated
during a sales process. Each claim, or argument, should be broken
down into the following elements and specifically tailored for each
stakeholder involved in the buying process:
- Customer-focused value statement
- A list of specific business problems the customer has related
to that argument
- The organizational impact those business problems will have
on an account
- Credible proof on the existence of the problems and potential
impact
- Questions designed for sales people to uncover the problems
related to this specific argument
- Questions designed to help determine the organizational implications
of the problem
- A list of specific actions that a client needs to take to address
the problem
- A list of features and/or functions that specifically relate
to this argument
- A list of personal (non-economic) advantages the stakeholder
will gain by addressing these problems
- An ability to prove your capabilities will address that problem
- Examples of how your capabilities can be used to address these
specific problems
- Examples of how they are currently performing with the problem
and how they could be once it was addressed
- An ability to financially justify the argument
Additionally, you should create a sales team to help you develop
and test this content. When creating the team, you should select
a minimum of one superstar, two average reps, and one sub-par performer.
Also, make sure you select an outspoken critic of the marketing
organization to participate. This selection process will help you
develop useful content, but also provide you with a working group
to help you begin to establish credibility with the field sales
force.
When you put this team into play, make sure you have documents
for them to react to. This will focus the conversations and will
help maintain project momentum by not wasting people's time.
Project #5: Content distribution
Another key problem sales people face is accessing the right information
they need at a given time. For example, most marketing departments
will organize collateral by type or product. However, sales people
look for resources to help them assist a prospect with a particular
question or problem.
Based on the stage of the buying process, customers will have different
questions and needs. Therefore, information will be more accessible
to sales people if it is organized by their sales stages, and not
by product.
Also, most of the marketing materials produced are distributed
in PDF format, which prevents sales people from cutting and pasting
content elements that they can use to rapidly assemble a proposal
or letter. Ultimately, this results in sales people creating their
own marketing collateral from scratch.
To help uncover these problems in your organization, create a sales
content distribution team with a similar configuration as the sales
content team. This different group of sales people will help you
identify various ways to deliver the right information to them.
For example, most sales people receive far too much product-specific
training and not enough on the business problems your company is
trying to solve.
Also, these sessions last a long time and the retention rate is
very low. You might be able to create self-service, pre-recorded
training vignettes that will allow sales people to learn at their
own pace, and give them more background information they can use
when they are preparing for a big sales call.
Project #6: Sales enablement
This project will produce the first deliverables that will be rolled
out to the sales force, and will serve as the foundation for all
future sales programs. The objective here is to provide your internal
sales organization with the information they need to engage in meaningful
conversations with your clients.
Sales people require a lot of information and resources to effectively
communicate the various messages involved in a sales process. Some
examples include:
- Refresher background information
- Business driver "cheat sheets"
- Cold-calling scripts and conversation prompters
- Qualification checklists
- Pre-written letter templates that can easily be tailored
- List of value propositions (or sales arguments)
Work with your sales content team to create and test a suite of
these resources that are specific to your pipeline stages and customer
buying process. You can leverage the work you did creating the sales
arguments to rapidly assemble these tools.
From an organizing perspective, you should create icons or some
other way to visually relate the content with a stakeholder or sales
stage to make them easier to access. You must also create a way
to deliver this suite of tools in a standardized, useful, but simple-to-understand
way (a tab-separated binder, for example, or via your intranet).
When training the sales force on the format, make sure you make
it interactive and provide real-world scenarios that will allow
them to get comfortable using these tools in a controlled manner.
Project #7: Sales empowerment
This project is focused on developing customer-facing tools that
sales people can give prospects to help them achieve a specific
buying-process milestone. After your sales team leaves, it is up
to your internal champion to communicate on your behalf. You can
help improve your chances by providing your internal champion resources
to deliver your message.
Prospects do not read corporate brochures they want answers
to very specific questions. Develop an inventory of content that
maps to various customer goals within the buying process.
The funded project scenario we used in the Program Game Plan section
can be a good example here. Regardless of the nature of the prospect
company, an internal business case to tackle the business problems
your software solves will have a lot of the same elements.
Invest the time to create a simple-to-use template that champions
can easily tailor to make their own. You should make sure it is
accurate and not an obvious plug for your company. This will help
achieve two things:
First, if you create the document correctly you will help the client
justify their project more quickly and thus create a sales opportunity.
Secondly, you will have the inside track on the business because
the requirements outlined in the business case will map to your
capabilities. All sales enablement projects should be completely
focused on helping a customer address a very specific problem.
Project #8: Sales portal
When you break down all of your content to the point at which it
is specific for each stakeholder, aligned to each stage of the buying
process, and designed for both internal and external consumption,
you will have dramatically increased the amount of content available
for a sales person.
This presents a few problems:
- If sales people cannot find the right information, they will
not use it
- Providing a basic structure for sales people to digest and act
on all of this information is critical
- Maintaining and version control of the content
- Physically distributing the content to sales people can limit
scalability
Many software companies have sales portals, but for portals to
be effective, you need to structure them so that sales people can
easily navigate the site to find the information they are looking
for.
To do this, you should organize your sales intranet by pipeline
stage, solution, stakeholder, and vertical industry. You should
also develop content review and maintenance processes to make sure
the information remains fresh and relevant.
Project #9: Sales programs
Most marketing executives believe their job is done once a lead
has been passed to sales. We don't. We believe marketing should
help drive revenue, and therefore focus on moving opportunities
from one stage of the pipeline to the next.
Having mapped your customers' business processes and understanding
their milestones, you can develop very specific and highly-targeted
events to help them reach their goals.
The impact of focusing your efforts on specific topics will be
dramatic. It is not uncommon for people to experience ROIs in excess
of 700% for programs such as these.
For example, you can build upon the issue of helping your client
justify an internal project by creating a targeted and repeatable
event on the subject. Use your leading expert on the topic to create
a hosted or online event that only talks about best practices a
client must go through to get a funded project around your solution.
Then, to help them achieve the results they are looking for, offer
them the template you've already developed.
For projects like this, do not talk about your products or services,
because your objective is to help them achieve a buying-stage milestone
and facilitate the sales process, not ask them for business
let your sales people do that.
Project #10: Measurement and reporting
What does measurement mean, and what should you track? While you
need to develop success metrics for each project, such as sales
satisfaction surveys, you must develop a macro-level tracing system.
Ideally, you should create a business development pipeline
specific for each solution or vertical market that tracks
the advancement of opportunities from targeted account to contract.
You should track, at an aggregate level, your close rate, average
deal size, and sales cycle time.
At a more granular level you should track: conversion rates from
stage to stage, the average length of time spent in each stage,
and average deal sizes by sales channel. This will provide you with
the required information to monitor the effectiveness of existing
campaigns, but also help you determine other areas where improvements
can be made. Thus, you can then go back to Project #1 the
Program Game Plan with a new set of challenges to address.
Finally, reports should be created and distributed to all sales,
sales management, and the executive leadership to objectively communicate
the effectiveness of your sales and marketing customer-manufacturing
machine.
Summary
Achieving sales effectiveness is not easy, and to be successful,
you need to develop an overall program that has many related projects.
Using your customer as a design point, architect all of the information
they require to make a buying decision from you and map that to
your company's sales process.
Create a framework you can use to deliver this information to your
sales people in a way they can understand. Marketing must establish
credibility with the sales force and should focus on the suite of
resources that will have the maximum impact.
Finally, to make sales effectiveness a discipline in your organization,
you must develop a measurement and reporting structure to monitor
activity and consistently seek new areas for improvement.
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