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From the Road

Confessions of a “Glocalizer”

Traffic

By Rob Hamshar

One of the many hats I wore while posted in CEB’s Asia hub in New Delhi was that of “glocalizer”—contributing to the organization-wide effort to translate insights for the region.  It was exciting to see such efforts come to fruition. 

One of the more visible projects I was involved with is CEB’s joint initiative with the Indian business publication Mint Magazine (a partnership of HT Media—inaugurated by The Mahatma himself—and The Wall Street Journal).  With Mint, we publish a monthly series, entitled the Six Myths, based on the thought leadership from the global memberships at CEB and the regional expertise of the folks at Mint. 

Recently, our Six Myths installment focused on six common misconceptions about the world of Sales that are especially relevant to heads of Sales and Marketing in central and east Asia.  Though most of the myths align to the broader challenges faced anywhere in the world, some were especially resonant in India.  Read More »

MarketPulse

Sales and Marketing: Moving Beyond “Managed Dissatisfaction”

By Erin Lynch-Klarup

The Sales and Marketing relationship at many B2B companies can be characterized by the term “managed dissatisfaction”.  Competing goals and time horizons prevent the functions from seeing eye-to-eye, resulting in Marketing and Sales doing just enough to placate each other while pursuing separate agendas.

Marketing and Sales have traditionally seemed resigned to this, content to work around each other if they couldn’t work together.  That’s changing.  We’ve seen a dramatic rise in the attention marketers are paying to alignment with their sales counterparts.  Three factors are driving this interest in improved coordination across the commercial organization: Read More »

Cutting Edge

How to Amplify Your Advocates’ Voice

Posted on  30 March 10  by  Anna Bird

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Man speaks in megaphoneAlthough we all know peer recommendations are the most trusted source of brand information, we don’t always know who our advocates are or how to get them to share recommendations.

Qwest Communications really struggled with this.  In certain markets, up to 50% of Qwest’s prospects request a customer reference before agreeing to purchase.  With no systematic approach to sourcing references, sales reps would spend an average of 4 hours (across 2 or 3 weeks) to find each reference.  Not only did this slow down the sales cycle, but reps would also burn out happy customers by over-contacting them or turn to less satisfied customers and get poor references.  Then Qwest found a creative new approach to references. Read More »

Cutting Edge

What the Best B2B Campaigns Get Right

dart_target_bulls eyeLooking across the 50+ campaigns on MLC’s B2B Marcomm Showcase, it’s clear that the very best get 3 things right: 1) they engage the sales force; 2) they maximize cross-channel synergies; and 3) they capitalize on a customer insight. 

As all 3 are easier said than done, we’ve surfaced tips and tactics from the marketers behind some of last year’s best campaigns – Alcatel-Lucent, National Instruments, and Qwest Communications. Read More »

Cornerstones

Improve Message Consistency In Just 3 Steps

By Whitney Satin

00007143800Early results from our commercial integration diagnostic have been telling: fewer than 30% of sales and marketing leaders believe their company’s messages to customers are consistent and reinforce one another.

If that doesn’t startle you, it should.  As the number of different information outlets continues to explode, B2B companies must treat every interaction as a critical opportunity to convince customers of their unique value.  Everything—from the sales pitch to marketing collateral to corporate communications—is a chance to hammer home what differentiates you from the next guy.  And the more consistent you can be across channels, the more likely customers are to internalize this differentiated mantra.  But we’re clearly not getting the job done. Read More »

Cornerstones

Are Mixed Messages from Sales and Marketing Leaving Your Customers Confused?

By Whitney Satin

Customer ConfusionHistory is ripe with famous feuds: the Capulets and Montagues, Alexander Hamilton and Andrew Burr, or, as I glibly noted in a previous post, Peggy and Al Bundy.  Enter Sales and Marketing to the fray: often at odds, though truly dependent on one another for the successful operation of any given company.  If early results from our sales and marketing alignment diagnostic are any indication, the two groups have managed to find at least some common ground: commercial messaging is crucial … and it’s something we’re not very good at it. Read More »

Cutting Edge

Unpacking the Winning Sales Rep

Following up on The Five Profiles of Sales Reps, I promised to discuss the ramifications of these findings for B2B marketers.  But first, let me offer some clarity around that work as there seems to be a fair amount of interest from across the membership…

The work previously summarized is specifically designed to help senior sales executives prioritize investments in skill development broadly across the sales force assuming a finite amount of training dollars. In other words, what skill set improvement investments will give us the biggest bang for our buck?

Our guidance is to think about the five profiles like potential college majors – yes, everyone takes the core curriculum (science, math, etc), but everyone specializes as well. These profiles represent the different sales rep “majors” that exist. Read More »

Cornerstones

The Five Profiles of Sales Reps: Who Wins? Who Doesn’t?

Business manFor those of us in the B2B marketing world, understanding what drives sales rep effectiveness can help define the role we play in supporting our sales team.  In a recent quantitative effort by the Sales Executive Council (SEC), rep characteristics—having to do with Attitudes, Skills/Behaviors, Activities and Knowledge—were studied.  They found that certain attributes tended to clump together into a few profiles.  More specifically, five distinct groups of sales reps were found, each containing a very different combination of attributes.  See if you can guess the clear winner and the clear loser as I summarize them here: Read More »

Cutting Edge

The Digital High-Performer

By Rob Hamshar

If your web site was one of your sales reps—out there on the road, entering prospects’ offices, and making his best pitch—would he be a high-performer: informed, thought-provoking, and persuasive?  Or would he behave more like the typical low-performer: talking at length about your company’s history; describing products and services in an indiscriminate, “dump truck” fashion; asking unnecessary, tedious questions; making bold claims that outstrip anything your company can actually deliver on? 

Read More »

MarketPulse

Sales and Marketing: You Can’t Have One without the Other

By Whitney Satin

Sales & Marketing business signpostFrank Sinatra famously crooned that love and marriage go together like a horse and carriage.  Little did he know that, in an ironic bit of pop culture repurposing, the song would come to signify the often hostile—though ultimately committed—relationship between Peggy and Al Bundy in the TV sitcom Married … With Children.

Dysfunctional?  Yes.   Mutually dependent?  Absolutely.

The same can be said of Sales and Marketing.  The two functions often butt heads behind closed doors, but their cooperation and interconnectedness is necessary to achieve key business objectives.  Of course, getting the two groups on the same page is often easier said than done.  We typically see breakdowns in the following areas: Read More »