How Poor Outbound Performance Management Will Affect Revenue in 2023
Jake Dunlap
I partner with forward thinking B2B CEOs/CROs/CMOs to transform their business with AI-driven revenue strategies | USA Today Bestselling Author of Innovative Seller
According to our data last year surveying over 500 sales teams, 3 in 4 people reported that they weren’t hitting their outbound targets in 2022.?We need to be prepared that 2023 is going to be even more challenging for outbound.?
It’s the year to get creative and deal with changes to outbound fundamentals?- like tracking activities as a leading indicator to success and optimizing our sequences faster than once every 6 months to take more of a performance management approach to the process.
To put things into perspective, let’s say your marketing team spends $100K a month on ads. They will use 15-20% of that budget to optimize performance. At the same time, we’ll spend $100K on SDRs and only $4,000 - $5,000 a month on optimizing outbound performance. Why is this the case when the goal is the same (to generate qualified opportunities)?
To generate new opps profitably in 2023, it’s imperative to have a performance engine behind outbound efforts, as well as a performance-based mindset.
Do you want to be a team that optimizes outbound once a quarter/year or a team that optimizes every week??
Think of it this way...
Would you rather increase performance and conversion by 2-3% every other week (which will compound throughout the year) or only adjust your sequences every three months for maybe a 5% uptick each quarter? Here is what that looks like in a chart….pretty eye opening.
This week, I examined what used to work in outbound and why. I’ll also talk about what has transformed the outbound process today and the lack of outbound performance management that we have to incorporate into our 2023 strategy, or we will continue to hover around 70+% missed targets.
Let’s dig in ??
Quick analogy for you. If Marketing spends $100K a month on ads, they will use 15-20% of that budget to optimize performance. At the same time, we’re spending $100K on SDRs and only spending $4,000 or $5,000 a month on optimizing outbound performance. Why?
I conducted a few polls throughout 2022 around outbound. 71% was the lowest result of respondents who answered that they weren’t hitting their numbers. In other months, it was in the high 70s or low 80s. That’s about 3 in 4 people reporting that they weren’t hitting outbound targets in 2022.
2023 is going to be a very difficult year for outbound in the way that we’ve known it. For sales in general, we haven’t seen a year like this in a long time.?
We’re going to have to get creative, and we’re going to have to deal with changes in the fundamentals of outbound that we should have dealt with years ago.
So that’s what this session is all about. Starting with what used to work in outbound and why, I’ll talk about what’s transformed the outbound process today and the lack of outbound performance management that we have to incorporate into our strategy, or we will continue to hover around 70+% missed targets in 2023.
Recap: How Poor Outbound Performance Management Will Affect Revenue in 2023
The important bits
OUTBOUND & ACTIVITY METRICS TODAY
Let’s talk a little bit about how outbound performance works today and why this is a problem.?
Aaron Ross created this concept a while ago, and he talked about it in his book?Predictable Revenue. He called seeds, nets, and spears. Seeds are things like organic LinkedIn traffic and PR; nets is marketing; and spears is outbound. The reason we like spears is that it feels good. We’re doing something. We’re not waiting for something to come into the net, and we’re not planting a seed and watching it grow.?
Because it feels more actionable and trackable, and we have the ability to just throw more spears, we’ve seen organizations look at outbound and doing more activities as a leading indicator of success. And this used to be true. You could say the number of spears I throw is the top-of-the-funnel metrics, and this is what converts because every email I sent and every call I made had a call to action. I was trying to generate a meeting from every single activity that I did.
But then in 2018/2019, this thing called LinkedIn came about, and we haven’t adapted outbound to include LinkedIn and “untrackable” activities such as liking, commenting, sharing posts, and messaging.?
The problem is that tracking activities used to make sense because reps were only doing activities that had a direct correlation to their results. Now, we’re still doing those activities, but we’re also doing all these other activities that we can’t track.
This is a big part of the issue. If we want to move to a performance mindset, we have to realize that there may be some parts we can’t track. I think that’s a really difficult concept to deal with for many leaders.?
What I would do is track activity metrics if people aren’t hitting their numbers. But if they are hitting their numbers, let them do whatever they want to do to get there. Let your sales team be creative. Let them go out and find cool new ways to break things and make it happen.
领英推荐
The elephant in the salesroom:?activity metrics were built for an old world, not 2023.
WHAT IS OUTBOUND PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT?
Now, let’s talk about this concept of Performance Management for Outbound.?
(Not People Performance Management. I’m not talking about?How do I get my reps to learn a new skill??That’s not what Outbound Performance Management is.)
The easiest way to think about it is like this:
If Marketing spends $100,000 a month on Google Ads or other paid advertising, they will spend at least 10-20% of that budget to optimize performance.
They’ll have an agency whose sole job is to optimize ad copy performance, ad format, targeting, audiences, campaign segments, graphics, etc.??
If they’re spending $100,000 on ad costs, they know they’ll need to spend $15-20K in optimizations, or they’ll just be throwing away money.
Now, let’s look at outbound. Say you’re spending $100,000 a month on SDRs. Organizations will then typically look to the SDR manager to optimize.
Well, that SDR manager is managing the team. They’re listening to calls and coaching. Then we expect them to look at the data, look at analytics, and look at the sequence-by-sequence performance. And then we look to Sales Ops, most of which haven’t been in sales, so they also don’t know how to look at copy and consider?Why is this email great and why does this one suck?
This means we’re spending $100,000 a month on SDRs, and pulling in a little bit of this person and a little bit of that person only to spend $4-5K a month to optimize outbound performance.
Marketing is spending $15-20K a month, and Sales is spending $4-5K a month. That’s one-third of the cost to optimize outbound performance.?
Why? The goal is the same. It’s to generate qualified opportunities, right???
The cost is the same, and we’re pumping hundreds of thousands of data points through outbound, the same as we do for paid advertising, which means we need an ongoing optimization process. We need outbound performance management.
OUTBOUND PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT DREAM TEAM
So, who do we need to optimize outbound regularly?
#1 You need a data insights person.?Someone who can look at the data and quickly say,?Hey, that sequence is popping. This one’s not working. Let’s double down on the first one.?Or,?Hey, I see step three in this sequence is getting a much higher reply rate. How do we move that up?
Most teams do not have this person. Most teams treat optimizing outbound sequences like a campaign. Something that they’re going to update every six months.?
If we are pumping hundreds of thousands of data points through a system, why wouldn’t you optimize it weekly? That’s outbound. Your team is doing hundreds of thousands of activities, which means you should be optimizing every week. Not every six months.?
#2 The next person you need is a copywriter.?Maybe even two.?
The data and insights person is saying?Here’s what I’m seeing from the data this week. This sequence has been performing, and here’s how it’s been trending over the last four weeks. These sequences are underperforming, but I feel like they could be winners.?Great. That’s where the copywriter comes in.?
#3 Lastly, you need a strategy person.?This person is taking a holistic view and looking for things like?Why is this sequence doing so well? Oh, it has these two pieces of content. What if I took this piece of content that’s performing well in this sequence and this piece of content and then splice those together to create this sequence?”
You cannot find just one person who can do this job. The same idea when you hire a performance advertising company, and you get a copywriter, a data person, and an account strategist. Outbound is absolutely no different.?
Outbound in 2023
If your team does not invest and think about outbound as performance management and an ongoing optimization activity, it will not be successful in 2023.
Think about the team that optimizes outbound once a quarter versus a team that optimizes every week. Would you rather increase performance and conversion by 2-3% every other week (which will compound throughout the year) or only adjust your sequences every three months for maybe a 5% uptick each quarter?
That’s what organizations are missing out on by not having a performance management mindset in 2023.
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2 年Jake Dunlap Hi , I am an expert in Data Mining, Contact List Building, Data Collection, Lead Generation, web research. https://www.upwork.com/freelancers/~014151df83ea8b9e90?viewMode=1 This is my Freelance Profile Please Loot at it and give me Chance member of your Team. Best Regards,,
I help CEOs and Heads of Revenue hire sales producers | Host of Get Me Someone Who Can Sell ???
2 年Super interesting read. This quote really made me think: "Think about the team that optimizes outbound once a quarter versus a team that optimizes every week." What do you recommend as 1-2 tactics for a smaller sales team to be effective at optimizing outbound weekly?
Chief Revenue Officer | Food-as-a-Service | B2B Fresh Food Platform | Driving Growth & Innovation in Fresh Food
2 年Great article on a subject so relevant to today!
Great Article Jake! Agree completely, are you going to be making a webinar about this topic anytime soon?
Dragan Pavlov