Aligning Sales & Marketing
?? David Asarnow ??
Transforming Businesses with Innovative AI & Marketing Solutions | CEO at Sababa.global | Visionary Leader in Revenue Acceleration I CEO at Business Nitrogen
Do you ever feel like your sales and marketing teams?are on opposing sides??
It’s been a constant battle for decades for many business owners. These two “sides” always seem to be chirping at?each other…?
“These leads aren’t good.”??
“You don’t use our content properly to sell.”
Tell me something…Is this representative of your sales and marketing teams??
However, the real question is…?
Does it actually matter if your sales and marketing?teams are aligned??
Will that really help you SCALE your business?
I can simplify those answers for you in a few bullet points:
Sure, you’re selling. Revenue is there. But it’s just OK.?
Just OK is NOT how you are going to scale your business.?
At this point you might say, “Well look, if I’m selling, I’m?selling. Marketing does their thing, sales does theirs.”?
And I’d agree, that works to a certain point. Say, up to?about? $2M/year. Beyond that??
No.?
Why does the alignment matter? Because sales people need the right assets to start and then continue conversations to build relationships…
Cohesion is needed on all fronts: branding, messaging,?and especially offers. Remember, when a prospective?client senses any type of inconsistency, trust is BROKEN.?
A great example is a pretty big insurance company a?few years back. The sales team were ignoring everything the marketing team was creating–in fact, they were creating?their own assets. Nothing was brand aligned, nothing was?on-message with what the company’s marketing conveyed.?
Basically, everyone was selling from a different playbook.?
It worked for a while, but it crashed and burned. Buyers?talked. People were getting different info, angles, and?deals from different salespeople.?
Nothing was consistent. What eventually happened??
People ended contracts. Eventually the brand was sold?for pennies on the dollar to an apex player.?
The lack of cohesion killed them.?
What else can you do to better align your sales and?marketing?
Two things.?
Incentives & Culture.?
Incentives are often overlooked by business owners. As a company scales, the folks at the top are generally?the first to be taken care of – so they don’t always remember?to create an incentive structure for the rest of the team that are in “the trenches”.?
It’s important that this incentive is one that motivates?everyone to work together to reach both the short and?long term goals of the company.??
Truthfully, sales and marketing have different incentive?structures by nature. Sales is much more trackable.?You sold A and B, or you didn’t. You sold them within this?quarter, or you didn’t. Your pipeline is XYZ, or it’s not.?
Marketing is much harder to track. We have more?marketing analytics than ever before in human history,?but we don’t use them as well as we could. (A topic for?another newsletter.) We’re not always sure whether?A-piece of content or B-video or C-infographic or D-banner?at the trade show drove those prospects into the funnel.?
We think we know, and we claim to know, but it’s not?always as obvious as we want to believe.
Business loves “what’s measured is what matters.” So?we focus more on sales, especially when there’s pressure?from investors or the market.?
When we focus too much on sales metrics (and ignore marketing), and a strong company culture doesn't exist, it results in a few negative off-shoots.?
A lot of times in a company where revenue generation is?seemingly the one and only metric goal, all the other?important aspects of a business – customer satisfaction,?employee connection to the mission (and eventual employee?turnover) – fall by the wayside.?
Entrepreneurs can become overly-focused on immediate?success instead of what long-term success would look?like, and as a result, they might not even be a company in?8-10 years.?
Specifically at the sales and marketing levels, we see?some flare-ups too:
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It’s a race to the bottom.
I’ve seen Entrepreneurs do pretty creative stuff?around incentives…
?Extra days off, beer gardens, taco trucks, KPI-tied?bonus structures. Those all work. But always remember, we can always go a step further…?
All of us want to belong to something. It’s a core?principle in the hierarchy of needs.?
Oftentimes, the simplest incentive is respect and?recognition and acknowledgement of a job superbly?done.?
A few years ago we integrated something called “snaps”?(and I can’t take credit for this idea, it all goes to?Chris Tuff, author of The Millennial Whisperer).?
He says rewards and recognition are essential in?any organization.?They don’t have to be financial either. Chris calls out?his team members in meetings, and gives them “snaps” for the good things they are doing in the company.
We took it a step further…
We encouraged each team member to give “snaps”?to other team members when they do something worthy?of recognition.?
We then added a quarterly award for the team member?who got the most “snaps”.?
9 plus years of doing this, I can see the enormous impact?that positive accountability has created within our team?around our culture.?
Going above and beyond had become “THE” standard?amongst the team. Performance soared. The team was?happier than they’d ever been.?
Everything was just BETTER.?
It’s all about Culture.?
Companies miss on culture because it’s a poorly-defined?word, almost amorphous in many organizations, and?Entrepreneurs are often product people or idea people –?they don’t always know how to corral the fluid energy?associated with culture.?
When you are missing culture, chances are you also?have high turn-over, which makes it nearly impossible to align sales and marketing.?
Here are some things to think about regarding both pieces of this puzzle…
Consider these questions on the incentives piece:
Consider these questions on the culture side:
These are big questions and they take time, and they look?different at different growth stages. A company with five?employees and $2M has a different culture and incentive structure than a company with 200 employees and $3B.?
You may prattle on about “the DNA” of your culture, but?the jump from $2M to $3B changes virtually everything,?and it’s best to lean into that reality as you go.
So where do we come in? Well, the good news for you?is, we’ve been doing all this stuff for decades now, collectively.?We maximize sales and marketing output all the time, and?work with teams on culture (and even now hiring) daily.?
We put much of this under the umbrella of strategy, but?we can also help with the nitty-gritty around Leads on Demand?and more.
If you want to build an Infinite Business that people?enjoy growing with and yet still make money hand over?fist for your own family’s legacy to prosper, you need the?right people, incentives, and culture. That’s what we do,?so let us know if you want our help to get you there.?
Simply reply to this article and we’ll set up a time to chat.?
To your success,?
David?
P.S.?Recruitment and Hiring is the?#1 Entrepreneurial?Blind Spot?which is why most avoid it like the plague…?
Let’s face it, the entire process can be utterly frustrating?& time consuming,?AND?often results in attracting and?hiring the WRONG talent for your team and/or business.?
But what if ALL the?heavy-lifting?was done for you,?and you were only handed?the?highest qualified?candidates that checked every box you were looking for??
Head to?this link?to see if Nitrogen?Hiring Network? could be your?talent recruitment solution.?
P.P.S.?Not sure how to?find and attract?more of your ideal?clients??If you have a proven high ticket offer, we know?EXACTLY?how to fill your pipeline with a constant stream of qualified and highly-motivated leads through our exclusive Leads on Demand? program.
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