seven sales and marketing best-practices IN LEAD MANAGMENT . Address these issues and contribute to the successful alignment of the SALES & MARKETING FUNCTION
Sales and marketing best practices are
universally desirable—but, too often, elusive. Why? And more important, what
sales and marketing processes are recognized as best-practices? First—so that
we share common ground in this discussion—I offer this definition of best-practices
…"The processes, practices, and systems identified in public and private
organizations that performed exceptionally well and are widely recognized as
improving an organization's performance and efficiency in specific areas."
We are all too familiar with the
inverse: Sales and marketing processes don't perform; they are inefficient, and
they waste resources and dollars. In most companies, such a lack of
productivity is rooted in the lack of alignment between Sales and Marketing.
Take lead definition, for example:
· Marketing "leads" are
high volumes of unqualified prospects that have raised their hands and
expressed interest by responding to marketing initiatives. But Sales requires
leads that meet specific criteria and deserve attention from highly compensated
reps in the field.
· Prospect databases are not
segmented and tested to ensure that marketing programs target only high-value
prospects most likely to close. Marketing doesn't have the resources or skill
sets to qualify and nurture hundreds and thousands of names in the prospect
database.
· Overwhelmed by the volume of
names, Marketing falls back on mostly reactive initiatives for
"nurturing" until prospects self-qualify as worthy of Sales'
attention. Sales reps do not have the incentive or time to contact prospects,
assess their value, and work them as qualified opportunities.
· When there is Sales contact, it
tends to be infrequent, brief, and haphazard, as sales reps move on if they
don't find short-term opportunities.
· And when it comes time to
measure success, Marketing points to hundreds and thousands of names delivered
at a low cost-per-lead, while sales reps shake their heads wondering why the
names they receive are called "leads."
The result: Most prospect names
end up languishing in what we
may call "lead purgatory," where they lie unattended—until they
magically reappear months later as a closed deal for a competitor.
Following are seven
sales and marketing best-practices that address these issues and contribute to
the successful alignment of the two groups.
1. Agree on the
definition of a lead
It sounds so simple, but Sales
and Marketing define leads differently based on their respective self-interest.
A consensus on what a lead is must spell out required components, such as
decision-maker title and role, business pains, buying process, and the sense of
urgency—expressed as a buying timeframe.
2. Segment and test your
market
Before spending on a
lead-generation program, you must test your market, offer, and media. Start by
enhancing test segments with data points such as SIC code, revenue, employee
size, and growth rate.
Such added data drives sample
calls that validate segments as high-value and most likely to buy. A full-court
press should then be deployed against segments with the highest lead rates.
Use less expensive media to
nurture lower-rate segments, and make periodic calls into low priority segments
to monitor activity.
3. Use outbound
initiatives in the right situations
Although there are benefits to
using inbound marketing to nurture prospects until they self-qualify as
sales-ready, make sure you include outbound calling to develop prospects in
situations where inbound is less likely to be effective:
· Executive work styles and late
adopters. Many C-level decision makers have not yet embraced—and may never
embrace—inbound's self-service model.
· Timely market coverage. Because
inbound works best over time, it's easy to miss opportunities that could
quickly turn up deep in the current pipeline.
· Complex internal buying
landscapes. Outbound calling and its emphasis on personal contact ensures
correct assessment of decision-maker roles and influence.
· High stakes with long-sales
cycle/high-investment offers. When offering long-sales-cycle, high-investment
solutions, you should base nurturing strategies on personal contact.
4. Use dedicated
resources for lead qualification and prospect development
Sales and marketing groups do their tasks well, but they are not the resources that should qualify and develop prospects. Marketing doesn't have the resources or skill sets to qualify and nurture. Sales teams don't have the time or incentive to deal with nonqualified leads.
Sales and marketing groups do their tasks well, but they are not the resources that should qualify and develop prospects. Marketing doesn't have the resources or skill sets to qualify and nurture. Sales teams don't have the time or incentive to deal with nonqualified leads.
Successful lead qualification
and lead nurturing requires dedicated resources with deep expertise in building
relationships and moving prospects to fully qualified status. These dedicated
resources can be either an inside sales team or an outsourced lead-generation
services provider. Both share a core approach: telephone use and proven
teleprospecting skills to perform the tasks that neither Sales nor Marketing
can or should take on, such as managing responses, qualifying leads, engaging prospects,
and nurturing opportunities.
Best-in-class sales
organizations that employ dedicated resources using a teleprospecting
methodology stand out. According to one well-known industry analyst, they
consistently achieve 90% of their sales team quota; they experience at least a
10% year-over-year increase in average revenue per sales rep; and they gain an
average 7% year-over-year improvement in their bid-to-win ratio.
5. Nurture leads in multiples: multi-touch, multi-media, and multi-cycle contact
5. Nurture leads in multiples: multi-touch, multi-media, and multi-cycle contact
Results multiply when
lead-nurturing strategies multiply. Successfully engaging prospects depends on
a mix of tactics to maintain positive awareness of your offering until it's
time to buy.
· Multi-touch: Frequency matters.
Our clients' prospects need an average of 12 contacts to engage, and nurturing
can take even more touch points.
· Multi-media: Use a smart mix of
multiple media. Integrate outbound calls with voicemail messages, personalized
email, direct mail, and landing pages.
· Multi-cycle: Most prospects buy
at more than six months out, so expand planned contact from over a few days to
over several weeks and across multiple sales cycles.
6. The sales-lead
paradox: Fewer leads are better
There is a counter-intuitive
relationship between lead volume and sales performance. Although it seems
logical that more leads generate more sales, the opposite is often true.
Standard lead generation's focus on quantity rather than quality floods the
pipeline with a high volume of low-value leads.
Sales reps actually need fewer
sales leads—or, more accurately, fewer raw, unfiltered, and unqualified
marketing leads. Conversely, they need carefully qualified leads that have been
correctly developed until they are ready to be delivered as high-value sales
opportunities. Sales reps can then focus their time more effectively on the
most likely buyers.
7. Measure your results,
but look beyond cost-per-lead metrics
It is essential to track and
measure the ROI of your marketing programs. Though a cost-per-lead metric may
work for high-volume prospect acquisition, cost-per-opportunity and
cost-per-deal indexes are better for measuring prospect-development
initiatives. This is particularly true where there is a complex buying
landscape, a long sales cycle, and a high-solution investment. Benchmarks here
should be opportunity quality, conversion ability, and revenue generated on
investment.
with best
compliments
Dr Wilfred
Monteiro


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