The 6 Principles of Deliberate Marketing: Intention vs. Attention - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #181
Wednesday, December 17th, 2008Does your sales team ignore the majority of leads marketing passes on? Marketers must develop a more intimate understanding of their target customer and the market that customer serves to generate qualified buyers that Sales won’t ignore. Marketers must align their efforts with the Sales organization and streamline the Marketing and Sales funnel to accelerate the rate at which leads move through their funnel.
Deliberate Marketing is a proven strategy for putting more qualified buyers directly into the Marketing and Sales funnel to generate faster ROI. It is especially effective in the B2B Marketing space which is characterized by defined target markets, long sales cycles and complex buyer-seller relationships. Over the next few weeks, I will be covering The 6 Principles of Deliberate Marketing in hopes of helping B2B Marketers start off the new year with a new approach to drive more successes.
Principle #1: Intention vs. Attention
Do you know if your marketing programs are gathering intention or attention? Intention means you have hit the right audience with the right message and they have responded to your call to action. Attention means they looked at your message but they may not have been your buyer and there was no call to action. By focusing on intention vs. attention, you may have fewer leads to pass onto sales but those leads will be more qualified.
Deliberate Marketing involves researching your customers in order to build insight into their pain points and the medium through which they respond best to marketing messages. This research enables Marketers to deliver laser-focused messages and programs that convert buyer interest to buyer intent. It is not about spreading high level marketing messages to a broad audience via advertising or public relations hoping to garner attention for a product or company.
Rather, Deliberate Marketing is focused on converting a targeted segment of prospects into qualified buyers with an interest in purchasing a product or service. This involves knowing far more about your target audience than any list buy, database or telemarketing firm can ever provide.
Spend time with Sales and you’ll be a Better Marketer - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #179
Friday, December 12th, 2008This week The Funnelholic had a great tip for marketers getting ready to go into 2009, and we wanted to pass it on to The B2B Lead readers.
“Do ‘ride-alongs’ with sales as you consider your marketing plans.” So often we are busy putting programs and campaigns in place without even asking sales (our customer) if it’s what they need to move leads to opportunities and opportunities to customers. “If you really want to add value as a marketer, you have to identify the ‘have-to-have’s’ for your customers, the sales team. The best way to do it, is to see for yourself.”
He then goes on to list a couple of great ideas on saddling up with your sales team to help do your job better and drive more measurable results.
Check it out and thanks to The Funnelholic for the great tips.
The “Oh $#%@!” Day in Marketing is coming…
Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008Last year, we at ReachForce declared January 15th the “Oh $#%@!” Day in Marketing.
Here’s why:
Are you prepared to deliver sales-ready leads in January? December is typically a slower month for B2B Marketing teams, since most organizations slow down current marketing programs and instead spend their time preparing for the next year. Then, you leave for the holidays happy to have completed the painful process of planning and budgeting for the next year’s activities. But once the holiday haze clears, it’s January and everyone is ready to kick off the New Year with new customer wins. Your sales team wants to know, “Where are my leads? I’ve got a number to hit.”
The “Oh $#%@!” moment…
If you wait until you get back from the holidays to begin developing your marketing programs, when are you going to have leads to pass to sales? End of January? Beginning of February? Can your sales team land those deals by the end of Q1?
Instead, start developing your 2009 programs now and be ready to execute your first week back. Remember to go back and look at where you’ve been before getting started. With the economy on a roller coaster, we’re all being forced to do more with less. It’s more important than ever to analyze and target your lead generation initiatives at the right buyers in YOUR target market. I promise your sales team will thank you.
What is Your Web Lead Response Time? - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #177
Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008A prospect raises their hand and fills out a contact form for a salesperson to contact them. Woohoo, a marketer’s dream, but do you know how quickly your sales team responds or if they respond at all? Insidesales.com conducted a ResponseAudit to test every exhibiting company at Dreamforce, salesforce.com’s user group conference, to see how quickly they would respond to a web lead. The top three companies were winners in the ResponseAwards. I can happily say that ReachForce received 2nd place by responding in 3 minutes and 12 seconds.
The sales rep who responded, Chase Nall, was with us at Dreamforce and received the award in person:

Here are some interesting stats from the ResponseAudit:
“39.5% of the Dreamforce Sponsors responded by phone with the average response time by phone of 44 hours, 31 minutes, and 8 seconds. Of companies that responded by phone the average phone attempts was 1.14 times. 53.2% of the Dreamforce Sponsors responded by email, with the average response time by email of 13 hours, 14 minutes, and 24 seconds. Of companies that responded email the average email attempts was 1.45.”
I found the most amazing statistic was that over 37% of companies never responded at all. I cannot imagine as a marketer how I would feel if I worked at one of those companies. We work so hard to get prospects to raise their hand, and for no one to follow-up when one is delivered on a silver platter would be seriously demoralizing.
For those that did respond, the average response time was still very slow. “Recent lead response management research from MIT shows the odds of making contact with a Web-based inquiry increases 100 times if attempted within five minutes.” We made the five minute cut, would your sales team? Maybe it is time for an audit of your own.
To learn more about Insidesales.com and the ResponseAudit check this out.
Economic Turmoil Creating the Perfect Storm for Trigger-based Sales and Marketing - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #160
Monday, October 20th, 2008Here’s another one of those bad news, good news posts about marketing in a bad economy. The bad news is about as cliché as it gets: it’s tougher than ever to get prospects’ attention and close deals today. The good news, however, is a bit of a surprise: clever B2B Marketers and Salespeople have a tremendous opportunity to beat the competition by capitalizing on trigger events that will undoubtedly be a side effect of our struggling economy.
Breaking it down: with all of the turmoil in the markets today, companies are going to be looking for new ways to become more efficient, save money and expand globally. Basically, we are about to see lots and lots of changes such as mergers and acquisitions, facilities consolidation, technology acquisitions, career moves, etc.—in other words–“trigger events.” This is where smart Marketers can fuel their Sales pipeline.
We all know great Marketing and Sales programs are about timing–being there when the prospect needs a product or service. But, how do you know when one of these events has happened or who to contact once the event is announced? How can you move beyond an ad-hoc program of reading about trigger events and chasing down the right buyer?
Enter the perfect storm: combine today’s economic turbulence with the growing popularity of social media tools, search functionality, and web analytics, and you have the perfect conditions for a powerful trigger-based marketing program.
Let me explain. There is now more information online than ever before. You have RSS feeds with immediate updates of corporate news such as mergers, funding, new hires, etc. You have professionals who go online (to Google and other forums) to search for purchasing data. You have automated intelligence tools such as CI Radar (which also includes a trigger-based Sales module) and other free search tools such as Google Alerts and Tweetscan. You can also combine all of these market intelligence tools into an automated feed of market intelligence to identify companies and buyers who are searching for products and services.
Most marketers also have an unbelievable wealth of information produced by web analytics tools such as Eloqua or Clicky. Yes, visits to your web-site can also be considered a trigger-event.
All of this market insight can be gathered and fed into a role-based contact gathering program to give your sales team fast access to actionable leads from companies in active purchasing mode. In many cases, through role-based qualifying, you can provide Sales with the actual buyers. For more information on that, check out ReachForce’s Funnelnomics.
With the right combination of automated either free or paid market intelligence tools, social media programs, conversation monitoring, and role-based data programs, you can weather today’s terrible economic conditions. Would like to hear more about how your company is fairing today.
A Salesperson’s Biggest Asset - Targeted Marketing - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #157
Tuesday, October 14th, 2008Written by Ryan Ohls, a Market Development Executive at ReachForce.
Before joining ReachForce I was a sales guy with no marketing department. Knowing how important and effective marketing strategy can be, I set out to try and do my own lead generation. I can remember investing days and days of work on this one project. As a sales guy, I had a particular interest in automated lead generation (that’s right, sales guys are typically lazy) and had been studying it for months. I finally grasped the concept of doing it right, I thought.
So, having never been blessed with the spiritual gifts of patience or discernment, I decided my next step was to find and buy a list of 1,200 names to send my message to. The plan was to do an email blast with an offer to download a new report.
The report looked great - guaranteed to attract plenty of hot prospects, turn them into customers, and make me look like the Dalai Lama. The email was perfectly crafted, engaging, and sure to catch the eye. I told my wife to get ready for the commissions to start pouring in.
So, with palms sweating and my reputation at my company completely mortgaged (side note - companies don’t like spending money on things they don’t understand), the time had come for launch. Three…two…one…CLICK.
Within 15 minutes my mailbox was full! The response was unbelievable…from “System Administrator, Address Unknown.” The list of 1200 contacts turned out to be about 60% accurate, at best.
I believe whole-heartedly that a company’s biggest asset are customers and happy ones are even better. I’ll even take that a step further, though. A sales and marketing person’s biggest asset is a database of FUTURE customers (prospects).
** WARNING – Here comes the ReachForce promotion. Your prospect database should be 100% accurate, up-to-date, properly targeted, and relevant to your business. Each name you have listed should be the right person inside the right company. You’re thinking “in a perfect world…”
If you’re not a ReachForce customer and you’re reading this, here’s a few interesting data points to consider:
- Industry listed (rented) deliver less than a 3% response rate
- Sales people can spend up to 1/3 of their time hunting down the right buyers in a prospect company
- According to Gartner, 30 million people out of the 138 million employed in the US will switch jobs in the next 12 months.
- 2.5 million businesses will move, according to the U.S. Census Bureau
If you’re interested in cleaning up the data you already have, check out this post on Dirty Data. If you’re interested in hearing how ReachForce can help, please contact me.
Sales people out there – please jump in here, tell your marketing counterparts to help you out and make sure they are marketing to the right people in the right companies so you can spend your time selling, not hunting.
Implement Lasting Plans to Align Marketing and Sales Today - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #153
Wednesday, October 1st, 2008With economic times the way they are today, it is more important than ever that Marketing and Sales teams be aligned. Together you must decide and figure out what activities make the most impact to the top line of the business. Focus on all types of initiatives
1. To retain, cross-sell and up sell current customers
2. New customer acquisition programs
3. Channel partner marketing opportunities
We recently rolled out an ebook, 10 Tips for Marketing and Sales Alignment, with our partner Marketo. These 10 tips are just a few ideas on how Marketing and Sales can play on the same team to generate qualified leads and drive revenue.
Here’s a few more tips to think about as you are building out your Q4 Marketing and Sales plans.
1. Marketing and Sales teams should have shared goals
- Bookings and new customer wins are jointly owned by marketing and sales, and marketing bonuses are directly tied to the joint success.
- Revenue alignment and continued success programs for current customers ensure happier customers. And we all know it’s more expensive to find a new customer than it is to keep your current ones happy.
- Shared goals means shared success - when sales wins, marketing wins…and when marketing wins, sales wins … and overall the business WINS!
2. Do Reality Based Planning
- Use TRUE funnel conversion metrics to set marketing lead generation targets.
- Understand and plan based on sales team behavior - how many leads can they work at time, how many calls does it take each sales team member to identify a hot or qualified lead, etc.
3. Don’t forget those stuck in the funnel
- Deals get stuck in the middle stages of the funnel. Let marketing help by trying to engage with the prospect through best practice content offers, event invites, or new media outlets.
4. Don’t forget them when the deal is done
- Engage in current customer marketing programs. Use a newsletter, blog or customer community to stay front of mind for cross-selling, up-selling and renewal opportunities.
- Case studies and references are powerful sales tools, but marketing needs help with the set up and creation of these.
5. Communicate, Communicate, Communicate
- Share what’s working and what’s not – closed loop marketing is essential here
- Marketing should be involved in new sales rep training
- Celebrate WINS together
Organizations talk a lot about aligning their marketing and sales teams but many never put plans into action. By implementing the five steps above and adhering to the plan, Marketing and Sales teams can align for shared success.
I welcome your thoughts and feedback (successes and other tips you want to share).
The Integrated Revenue Cycle: A New Model for Sales and Marketing - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #149
Tuesday, September 16th, 2008Written by Jon Miller, author of the Modern B2B Marketing blog and VP of Marketing for marketing automation software company Marketo.
There’s always been a lot of drama around how marketing can best contribute to and improve the sales cycle. In fact, one common way to measure the effectiveness of a new marketing initiative is by looking for improvements in the sales cycle. Businesses have always focused on the sales cycle, so that’s the way to go, right? Wrong!
Companies need to stop thinking only about the sales cycle and instead focus on what I call the “Revenue Cycle,” which starts from the day you first meet a prospect and continues through the sale and beyond to the customer relationship. The old model of a linear handoff from marketing to sales must give way to an intertwined model where both organizations jointly own prospect relationships and coordinate their activities. To use an analogy, imagine a fighter jet that first ran with just the left engine, then turned that engine off and lit up the right engine. That’s pretty inefficient compared to lighting both engines and going full speed!
Before defining the revenue cycle in more depth, it is worth examining why the traditional “sales cycle” is the wrong model for businesses to follow. The primary reason is that the sales cycle looks at only a portion of the complete revenue process, and this presents two main problems:
- Looking at sales alone as the predictor of revenue is misleading – with sales only, companies can’t manage and guide growth beyond the current or subsequent quarter. The Sales cycle can usually predict revenue in the short term, but because the sales forecast is based on what a specific account will do at a specific time, it becomes increasingly inaccurate for predicting future revenue. Asking the sales organization — which by definition is focused on revenue in the near term — to predict revenue in future quarters is typically highly misleading. For this, a company should look to the function that is inherently focused on the long term: the marketing organization.
- Inefficiencies are killing productivity and marketing budgets – without the right processes in place, sales is less effective and companies are wasting marketing budgets. The traditional model of a sales cycle that begins when sales accepts a marketing lead or contacts a prospect directly results in waste and inefficiency. It means as much as 50% of sales time is spent on unproductive prospecting, while reps simultaneously ignore 80% of marketing leads. We’ve estimated that the resulting lost sales productivity and wasted marketing budget costs companies at least $1 trillion a year. The sales cycle mentality also ignores the fact that throughout the customer lifecycle (before, during, and after sales interacts with a prospect or customer), marketing has been and will continue to touch the prospect with marketing messages via the website, campaigns, advertising, and PR.
So how do you start driving your business by managing the Revenue Cycle? The Revenue Cycle requires coordinating marketing and sales activities throughout the entire cycle to generate maximum impact. The key is to realize that marketing and sales bring different strengths to the process. Marketing brings a long-term view, sales brings an action-oriented view. Marketing is good at one-to-many communications, automated processes, and dealing with lots of data; sales is good at building personal relationships and leveraging the human touch.
The Revenue Cycle must start from the day a company first meets a prospect and continue through the sale and beyond to the customer relationship. As marketing and sales coordinate their activities as part of a unified Revenue Cycle, companies will get better at lead scoring and properly identifying and prioritizing opportunities. That creates better quality leads that result in easier and better quality sales cycles, with more wins and ultimately more revenue. While there will still be a time when primary ownership of a lead shifts, the Revenue Cycle eliminates the “handoff” from marketing to sales. Instead, both functions should be engaged in the right way throughout the entire Revenue Cycle: lead nurturing campaigns can come on behalf of the sales rep, marketing messages and the website can continue to support the sales process once sales does engage, and sales leads that go cold can be recycled back to marketing. With marketing and sales acting as equally important drivers of revenue, companies can gain a picture of the complete revenue process, ensuring that leads are properly nurtured and do not fall out of the cycle midway and get lost.
Of course, truly replacing the sales cycle with a coordinated Revenue Cycle is easier said than done, but the benefits are clear: increased sales productivity, greater return on marketing spending, and better visibility into the long-term performance and health of the business. What company doesn’t want to be able to better predict revenue and grow their business? The shift won’t happen overnight, but the first step is changing our thinking and embracing the new model: the Revenue Cycle.
For more tips like this one, download ReachForce’s eBook on 10 Tips for Marketing and Sales Alignment co-sponsored by Marketo.
Marketing Metrics that Drive Sales - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #147
Wednesday, September 10th, 2008B2B marketing is all about driving sales, right? The most effective teams know that alignment of marketing and sales is a requirement for productive lead generation and customer growth.
We’ve had sales pipeline metrics in place forever, I sometimes wonder why we as Marketers got to skate along all this time with no accountability…that’s a post for another day maybe…
With today’s sales force automation and marketing automation solutions, we as Marketers are now able to prove our worth with every campaign or program we launch.
Here’s a few metrics we here at ReachForce track to ensure we are driving valuable sales activity and customer growth.
- # of net new companies from our target market sweet spots are added to the marketing mix each week
- # of net new contacts (right role, not just anyone) from our target market sweet spots are added to the marketing mix each week
- # of contacts being touched with a marketing message each week; net new contacts vs. those in nurture programs (and of course, we track opens and click throughs)
- # of inbound requests
- # of people hitting a landing page, then jumping to corporate site for product/service info. (we do newsletter and search engine advertising driving people to best practice content accessible via a landing page)
- # of people originating at The B2B Lead (ReachForce blog) and jumping to the ReachForce corporate site (product pages, solution pages)
- # of new sales meetings set from marketing lead generation programs
- # of marketing leads moved to the qualification stage of our sales pipeline
- # of marketing leads moving to a proposal, and of course closing
Once a new customer is onboard I then go back and identify what activities were involved in moving this lead to being a new customer so I can be sure to do more of it.
Now of course there is a list of metrics similar to this for each initiative you take on. It’s always important to outline goals and expectations of each program so that you are sure to spend your time and resources on the best producing programs.
Do you measure anything not on this list? If so, please share.
Practical Strategies to Building Sales-Marketing Alignment - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #146
Tuesday, September 9th, 2008Written by Jon Miller, author of the Modern B2B Marketing blog and VP of Marketing for lead management software company Marketo.
I recently wrote about why sales and marketing can’t get along. Here are some practical tips to start bridging the gap!
1. Model the entire revenue cycle. As opposed to a standalone sales cycle, focus on an integrated revenue cycle that starts from the day you first meet a prospect and continues through the sale and beyond to the customer relationship. This helps each team understand what the other is doing, and how their actions help facilitate revenue.
2. Develop a common vocabulary. Part of an integrated revenue cycle is common definitions for each stage. When marketing sits down with sales and says, “what is the definition of a good sales lead, and how can we help?” the dynamic between the two departments changes. With the definition of sales-ready in hand, marketing can begin rebuilding trust by delivering leads that meet that definition. This common language and metrics is essential for communication between the functions.
3. Look for operational disconnects. Too often, sales energy and promotions are focused in a different direction than marketing’s most recent campaigns. In some cases, they can even be in conflict! In one example, the sales team had an incentive to sell a product that marketing was planning to discontinue in the next month. Make sure that initiatives and promotions are aligned by developing plans jointly and meeting monthly or at least quarterly.
4. Create a closed-loop reporting process. Marketing needs to have a way to follow-up with sales to see how well leads are performing. This can be a field in the CRM system, a regular call, or even an automated survey. Just make sure it’s easy for the rep to respond. It can be as basic as sending the rep an email two weeks after receiving a lead with the subject “Was lead ABC good?” This way, they can simply reply “Yes” or “No”, which they can easily do on their Blackberry or in a hotel room. Closing the loop like this can help tune lead generation efforts, and is an important way to take qualified prospects that are not yet sales ready and recycle them back into marketing for lead nurturing.
5. Share accountability between the teams. Marketing is a very measurable process, but the results are head to measure; it’s easy to measure Sales outcomes but Sales activity is hard to measure. As a result, compensation and rewards tend to be very different, which creates further problems. So be sure to review how each team is compensated and rewarded to ensure alignment. (One typical disconnect: marketing focuses on the number of new deals while sales is focused on the amount and size of the total pipeline.) The better your ability to measure marketing ROI, the easier it is to bridge this gap.
6. Foster respect and trust. Perhaps most importantly, in particular, building alignment between marketing and sales organizations starts with a common set of values and shared beliefs. If the two functions don’t fundamentally believe the other has the same set of goals in mind, it will be much more difficult to drive alignment. This is rooted in good and regular communication, but it can be challenging to repair years of miscommunication all at once. Start by focusing on small wins (for example, look for a particular rep who closed a big deal because of a marketing lead) and promote the result aggressively. By having a “victory parade” for small wins, you will begin the process of better communication and trust.












