Summer Reading: Marketing Strategy Lifts Sales

marketing strategy lifts salesOK, this may not be the kind of post that you print off and bring on vacation, but summer isn’t just about the light reading we stuff into our beach bags.  It’s also a good time to take a deep breath and ponder some heavy stuff.  With that in mind, what follows is some summer reading on how a good marketing strategy can directly improve a high tech company’s sales effort. 

While many professionals view marketing strategy as the groundwork for outbound communications activities such as public relations, advertising and web programs, it also has a tremendous impact on increasing sales productivity. High tech companies often allocate the majority of their budgets to product and technology development, leaving sales and the other departments to fight for what’s left. With a limited budget and a relatively small headcount, the sales force must be extremely efficient in identifying, cultivating and converting leads – focusing on the markets and customers with the highest probabilities of success, presenting their products in a way that solves real business problems and promoting their strengths and managing their weaknesses in the face of competition.

Segmentation

Given the luxury of an infinite sales force and a limitless sales budget, most entrepreneurs would love to sell their products to every customer in every market. Faced with the reality of limited sales resources, however, the wise entrepreneur knows that the key to achieving the company’s sales goal is focus. Conducting a thorough market segmentation exercise helps focus the sales effort on the markets, customers and applications that present the highest probability of success in the shortest amount of time. While pursuing fewer prospects may seem counter-intuitive to achieving an aggressive sales goal, going after the right prospects will decrease time spent in futile meetings and allow more time for closing quality deals.

Positioning

Closing quality deals means having quality conversations. In the high tech world, sales meetings often revolve around deep technology discussions with technology evaluators rather than business conversations with the real decision makers. While it is important to tell a compelling technology story to the people that will eventually be implementing your product, achieving an aggressive sales goal requires an understanding of where the business problems reside, who is responsible for solving them and how your solution can improve your customer’s business. Doing so means analyzing the buying cycle that your prospects go through as they uncover a problem, research solutions, evaluate products and plan for implementation; then identifying the stakeholders that play a role in each phase and understanding their specific business concerns. By positioning your product in the context of the customer’s business concerns, you can increase your odds of being selected by ensuring that your messages and value proposition resonate not only with technical audiences, but with the business decision makers that are actually empowered to buy your products.

Differentiation

Even with a well positioned solution, your prospects will undoubtedly seek out both direct competitors and alternative solutions to your product. Achieving your aggressive sales goal demands the ability to consistently win business at the expense of the competition, and doing so means being able to differentiate your product. Differentiation provides a foundation to promote the strengths and manage the weaknesses of your product against the competition, outfitting your sales force with the information they need to proactively frame discussions with prospects in the most advantageous ways, and overcome objections that might otherwise cost your company a sale.

This summer, when you think about how to improve your sales effort, think about this: how can a solid marketing strategy help your sales team?  I’d suggest that segmentation improves focus, positioning produces a compelling value proposition, and differentiation helps overcome competitive forces. Let me know if you disagree or if I’ve left anything out.


You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

5 Responses to “Summer Reading: Marketing Strategy Lifts Sales”

  1. Hi Todd,

    Thanks for jamming my head with all kinds of thoughts!

    I really like how you’ve laid this out. If I could add something, I think it would be dialog (ultimately, engagement). I think this is implied in what you’ve said, but it’s also a specific that can make or break the outcomes of segmentation, positioning and differentiation.

    Since both of us work a lot in technology, we know a complex sale takes a number of dialog exchanges, or interactions, to progress buyers toward the deal. It’s the ability to build and maintain engagement through a high-value dialog that gets that deal to happen. The segmentation, positioning and differentiation help you focus the dialog.

    At least, that’s my take.
    Ardath

  2. Good point, Ardath. All the segmentation, positioning and differentiation in the world won’t help if the sales force doesn’t engage (or as you said- engage in a high-value dialog).

    I think the engagement piece might be meaty enough for a post of its own…or even a series of posts. What do you think?

  3. Thanks a LOT, Todd – now EVERYBODY knows it! You provide a nice, tight summary of the B2B marketing “how to” manual. From a competitive standpoint, better you had suggested their summer reading include a nice trashy romance novel!

    Again, well said, especially your third point. Marketing is all just theory until the sales force understands, believes, and helps deliver it.

  4. Thanks Mike,

    Ardath’s comment points it out too – theory is good, but applied theory is better. To that end, today’s new post begins a series I’m calling “Strategy in Action,” which focuses on how different facets of marketing strategy can be applied to make our tactics better. There’s a lot to choose from, so let me know if you’d like me to hit any particular topics. Thanks again for commenting!

    -Todd

  5. Thank you for your nice comments about my website. I抦 very much a non-techie and am new to this. To my surprise, I like doing ?primarily the reading, research, and writing. I hope you do continue to check in.

Leave a Reply