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Casual Articles - Strategic approach to all accounts
The Five Secrets of Marketing to Marketers ll more into an account. It goes without saying that the time and effort you invest learning about the account, needs to correlate to the true potential of the account, but we are continually surprised by the complete lack of knowledge of key things that impact an opportunity.If you market a product or service, how do you want to be approached by another marketer? In a recent study, conducted by Three Deep Marketing, with assistance from Marketing Sherpa, more than 70 percent of the marketers told the researchers that they did not want to be approached by a telephone call or a face-to-face meeting. Of the respondents, 70.9 percent said “no” to phone calls, 63 percent didn’t want group presentations; and 57 percent didn’t want a face-to-face meeting.Today, links to a web site and email presentations are favored by most marketers. Specifically, 87.4 percent liked web sites and also approved email solicitations (pitches). Even 74 percent liked a web-based demonstration from their computers. Each of these numbers is greater than those who preferred the “pre-Internet” way of communicating a sales pitch.Why is any of this important to you? It’s important to know what other marketers are up against these days. First and foremost, they are anxious to be able to demonstrate a positive return on their investment in marketing dollars. There is tremendous pressure from the top to clearly show that marketing is paying its way. This is one of the most difficult and elusive measurements possible. What acceptable metho For example, we recently did a strategic planning session for a client. One of their key accounts was currently spending $2 million across three of their six product lines. Based on work with the VP of sales, and research it was very realistic that their spend could more than double over the next three years, at the moment our client represented less than 10% of the account’s total spend in these areas. Throughout the session, the account rep did not know basic facts: where in the decision process was their primary contact, what the buying process was, who else the client was dealing with, and who other contacts were that could influence matters. He had a good relationship with someone at the lower end of middle management “who has and will look after” him. Last year they lost revenue due to a switch in one of the lines, while they were able to make up for the revenue, he was unable to say why they lost the business to someone else, who they lost it to, who made the decision, just knew that it was lost. It is easy to sit there and say that this is isolated, but in reality it is not. Just look at any ten account plans at random and you will see. Getting this information is not hard. Questions will get you answers, good questions will get you good answers, and planned questions will get you results. This brings us to pre-meeting planning. If the meeting is not planned, neither is the result. A few simpl Event Registration - The 6 Biggest Problems Event Planners Have and How to Overcome Them All A strategic approach is not limited to National or Major Accounts only. Unless your sales are 100% opportunistic, a strategy is still key to managing your team, and for each member of the team looking to succeed not only on an account level but their whole territory.Let's face it, setting up and operating the registration process for events and conferences is one of the least favorite things on most event planner's list of things to do. There is a lot of repetitive and mechanical stuff to do to make sure that everyone gets notified and signed up on time. The Biggest Problems with Manual Systems: Mail, Fax, Phone, Email1. Illegible handwriting on registration forms2. Mistakes in transferring information from registration forms to your database.3. Having enough time to register people by phone, process credit card charges and still organize a successful event.The Biggest Problems with Intranet Systems (In-house)& Internet Systems (web-based)4. Getting Your IT Department to get you what you need on time and make the changes you need when you need them.5. Figuring out which of the 45 online systems on the market will actually do what we need done at the best priceThe Biggest Problems with All of the Above Systems6. How to make the process easier for the registrant and how to get maximum attendance.How Can I Remedy These Problems?The best way to overcome all 6 of these problems is to u This may seem straight forward, but there are many sales people who either do not have a strategic approach at all, or apply only aspects of a strategy to their accounts and territory. A successful strategy involves four key elements · Time Management · Planning · Information/knowledge · Execution The absence of one will have an exponential detrimental effect on success, even when the other elements are applied. None of these is new to most sales people, but applying all four in a way that leads to desired results continues to be a challenge. Time Management is an issue for all business people. The reality of business today is that most of us are trying to pack 18 hours worth of work into a 12 hour day, which means some things are just not going to get done. There is a lot of truth to the statement that there is no such thing as time management. After all how can you manage time? There are 60 minutes to an hour, 24 hours to a day, 365 days in a year, and only 1760 “Active Selling Hours” in a given year. If you find a way to change that let me know, in workshops, I often hear that participants wished that there were 26 hours in a day. The answer really lies in prioritizing and owning your time. We have all seen sales reps who resemble a pin ball in play, they get a call from a client and they roll one way; a question from their manager and they roll the other way; a request from a prospect, and they are rolling up table again. In fact, when it comes to prospecting, one of the most often heard rationalizations for not prospecting, is lack of time. Taking charge of your time is best achieved by managing you activities, once you have a handle on what activities are key to success and which activities are distractions and time eaters you can begin to prioritize and take control of your time. You may also find that you only have to pack 14 hours in to that 12 hour day, but you will know activities you have prioritized are getting done. This will quickly be validated by the results. One way to start this process is to sit down at the start of year, and sketch out what the real activities needed to succeed, what percentage of your “active selling” time should be allocated to each type of activity, and use that as part of you prioritization process. You may find that 30% should go to prospecting, 40% selling to qualified prospects, 20% to account management and up selling, etc. On a quarterly basis you should review your “ideal allocation” to make sure it is still realistic; if it is, then see how your time allocation is tracking vs. the ideal. One caution, don’t change the ideal to suit your reality, change the reality to achieve the ideal. There are a number of other tools we have introduced to our clients to help them address this issue. Of course to be able to deal with the Time Management issue, you need to have a handle on Planning. Planning is one of the most often ignored elements, and while we can’t reduce a two or three day workshop into a few lines, it is worth noting that it aligns around three key areas, territory, account and meetings. As with all the elements discussed in this article, they are all interconnected, and planning without proper information will not give you full benefit. At the territory level, it is important to remember that you should focus on your best opportunities, which are not necessarily your best accounts. Many reps confuse current value with potential value. As a result they spend their time and resources on accounts that are fully valued, primarily based on the fact that they are already spending large sums with you. The concept of best customer leads many reps astray. If your largest account spends $100,000 a year on your product/service, has done so for the last five years, but there is little prospect that they can or will increase their spend in the next two years, then they are really a low potential client, and should be viewed and treated as such. Reps often protest, saying that if they don’t respond to that client, consequences can be bad. As a result they spend a disproportionate amount of time and resources on these accounts. At the other extreme are those accounts that spend little with you year after year, say $10,000, when they are in fact spending over $100,000 in total with you and your competitors. There are two types of clients in this group, bad and good. The bad ones are the ones that will never spend more than $10,000, but keep you busy with requests for service; and meetings to discuss very little revenue related issues, etc. Studies have shown that these accounts, that make maybe 25% of your revenue, can consume upwards of 60% of your time and energy, with little or no potential to increased revenues. Interestingly, the same studies show that your $100,000 accounts are considerably less demanding than the low spend accounts. The good ones are those accounts where you could, with proper effort, increase revenues substantially over the course of the next two years. But you don’t have the time, because you’re responding to the calls from the low/no potential accounts, convincing yourself that it is important to service your accounts. You have to take the time to assess your territory, and make sure that you are indeed spending time with potential accounts. We have a number of tools and processes to help our clients with this change. To successfully achieve the above, you have plan at the account level, learning which do truly have potential and which don’t. What are they buying from you and what are they buying from the competition; where can you introduce related products/services to meet their needs and increase your revenues. You have to make the uncharted, charted, which takes us to Information/knowledge. Sure, everyone knows that you have to know your customers, be informed, but often we are not, at least well enough to win. Too many sales people rely on the customer/prospect for their knowledge of the accounts. Simple things such as organizational charts are not included in the account plan; sometimes there is not even an account plan. Lack of awareness of the client’s corporate objectives makes us prey to the objectives of the individual or individuals we are working with. These are just a couple of simple things that impact ones ability to sell more into an account. It goes without saying that the time and effort you invest learning about the account, needs to correlate to the true potential of the account, but we are continually surprised by the complete lack of knowledge of key things that impact an opportunity. For example, we recently did a strategic planning session for a client. One of their key accounts was currently spending $2 million across three of their six product lines. Based on work with the VP of sales, and research it was very realistic that their spend could more than double over the next three years, at the moment our client represented less than 10% of the account’s total spend in these areas. Throughout the session, the account rep did not know basic facts: where in the decision process was their primary contact, what the buying process was, who else the client was dealing with, and who other contacts were that could influence matters. He had a good relationship with someone at the lower end of middle management “who has and will look after” him. Last year they lost revenue due to a switch in one of the lines, while they were able to make up for the revenue, he was unable to say why they lost the business to someone else, who they lost it to, who made the decision, just knew that it was lost. It is easy to sit there and say that this is isolated, but in reality it is not. Just look at any ten account plans at random and you will see. Getting this information is not hard. Questions will get you answers, good questions will get you good answers, and planned questions will get you results. This brings us to pre-meeting planning. If the meeting is not planned, neither is the result. A few simple 10 Tips To Help Every Marketer Convert More Prospects And Keep Them Coming Back For More y, they get a call from a client and they roll one way; a question from their manager and they roll the other way; a request from a prospect, and they are rolling up table again. In fact, when it comes to prospecting, one of the most often heard rationalizations for not prospecting, is lack of time.1. Begin with the customer in mind. Remember, everything begins and ends with your customers. Try to imagine being them. Mentally take a stroll with them, talk to them and share their wants and frustrations. Try to feel what’s going on in their minds?2. Now, craft a solution in the form of benefits that will satisfy those wants. Now that you’ve entered your potential customers’ minds, can you see those wants? Can you feel how satisfying it would be if the perfect set of benefits were to be offered at the right price. Now write down those benefits.3. Create or offer existing products or services that match those benefits. Once you’ve found potential customers and determine their wants and how to satisfy them, it’s time to create a product or service or find an existing product or service that will satisfy those wants. I remember my first time out, years ago, when I created a product before doing any market analysis. It was a disaster. It was too expensive to reach the market and worse of all, the price the market was willing to pay would have reduced my profit margin to near zero. I cancelled the whole project after almost a year of working on it. The lesson learned is to always begin wit Taking charge of your time is best achieved by managing you activities, once you have a handle on what activities are key to success and which activities are distractions and time eaters you can begin to prioritize and take control of your time. You may also find that you only have to pack 14 hours in to that 12 hour day, but you will know activities you have prioritized are getting done. This will quickly be validated by the results. One way to start this process is to sit down at the start of year, and sketch out what the real activities needed to succeed, what percentage of your “active selling” time should be allocated to each type of activity, and use that as part of you prioritization process. You may find that 30% should go to prospecting, 40% selling to qualified prospects, 20% to account management and up selling, etc. On a quarterly basis you should review your “ideal allocation” to make sure it is still realistic; if it is, then see how your time allocation is tracking vs. the ideal. One caution, don’t change the ideal to suit your reality, change the reality to achieve the ideal. There are a number of other tools we have introduced to our clients to help them address this issue. Of course to be able to deal with the Time Management issue, you need to have a handle on Planning. Planning is one of the most often ignored elements, and while we can’t reduce a two or three day workshop into a few lines, it is worth noting that it aligns around three key areas, territory, account and meetings. As with all the elements discussed in this article, they are all interconnected, and planning without proper information will not give you full benefit. At the territory level, it is important to remember that you should focus on your best opportunities, which are not necessarily your best accounts. Many reps confuse current value with potential value. As a result they spend their time and resources on accounts that are fully valued, primarily based on the fact that they are already spending large sums with you. The concept of best customer leads many reps astray. If your largest account spends $100,000 a year on your product/service, has done so for the last five years, but there is little prospect that they can or will increase their spend in the next two years, then they are really a low potential client, and should be viewed and treated as such. Reps often protest, saying that if they don’t respond to that client, consequences can be bad. As a result they spend a disproportionate amount of time and resources on these accounts. At the other extreme are those accounts that spend little with you year after year, say $10,000, when they are in fact spending over $100,000 in total with you and your competitors. There are two types of clients in this group, bad and good. The bad ones are the ones that will never spend more than $10,000, but keep you busy with requests for service; and meetings to discuss very little revenue related issues, etc. Studies have shown that these accounts, that make maybe 25% of your revenue, can consume upwards of 60% of your time and energy, with little or no potential to increased revenues. Interestingly, the same studies show that your $100,000 accounts are considerably less demanding than the low spend accounts. The good ones are those accounts where you could, with proper effort, increase revenues substantially over the course of the next two years. But you don’t have the time, because you’re responding to the calls from the low/no potential accounts, convincing yourself that it is important to service your accounts. You have to take the time to assess your territory, and make sure that you are indeed spending time with potential accounts. We have a number of tools and processes to help our clients with this change. To successfully achieve the above, you have plan at the account level, learning which do truly have potential and which don’t. What are they buying from you and what are they buying from the competition; where can you introduce related products/services to meet their needs and increase your revenues. You have to make the uncharted, charted, which takes us to Information/knowledge. Sure, everyone knows that you have to know your customers, be informed, but often we are not, at least well enough to win. Too many sales people rely on the customer/prospect for their knowledge of the accounts. Simple things such as organizational charts are not included in the account plan; sometimes there is not even an account plan. Lack of awareness of the client’s corporate objectives makes us prey to the objectives of the individual or individuals we are working with. These are just a couple of simple things that impact ones ability to sell more into an account. It goes without saying that the time and effort you invest learning about the account, needs to correlate to the true potential of the account, but we are continually surprised by the complete lack of knowledge of key things that impact an opportunity. For example, we recently did a strategic planning session for a client. One of their key accounts was currently spending $2 million across three of their six product lines. Based on work with the VP of sales, and research it was very realistic that their spend could more than double over the next three years, at the moment our client represented less than 10% of the account’s total spend in these areas. Throughout the session, the account rep did not know basic facts: where in the decision process was their primary contact, what the buying process was, who else the client was dealing with, and who other contacts were that could influence matters. He had a good relationship with someone at the lower end of middle management “who has and will look after” him. Last year they lost revenue due to a switch in one of the lines, while they were able to make up for the revenue, he was unable to say why they lost the business to someone else, who they lost it to, who made the decision, just knew that it was lost. It is easy to sit there and say that this is isolated, but in reality it is not. Just look at any ten account plans at random and you will see. Getting this information is not hard. Questions will get you answers, good questions will get you good answers, and planned questions will get you results. This brings us to pre-meeting planning. If the meeting is not planned, neither is the result. A few simpl The Working Case Study elements, and while we can’t reduce a two or three day workshop into a few lines, it is worth noting that it aligns around three key areas, territory, account and meetings. As with all the elements discussed in this article, they are all interconnected, and planning without proper information will not give you full benefit.Next to white papers, case studies are the most popular tool in the technical marketer's toolkit.The ubiquitous case study can range from a 3- paragraph online snippet to a full-blown magazine article. The most popular case study in the marketing/PR arsenal is the 500-700 word success story. They're not as challenging to write as white papers, but you should structure them for maximum impact.Different companies use different structures for their case studies, but all should follow the same general pattern: 1. Company overview and challenge 2. Project details 3. Positive results (of course)Customer Overview and ChallengeStart with a 2-3 paragraph overview of the customer's company. This should be very positive - since you're going to detail a problem the customer was having, the last thing you want to do is make them sound like jerks. So compliment them. Feel free to adapt the overview from their own Website text, where they're already placing themselves in the best possible light.Then move on to the business challenge. Don't make the customer sound stupid or incompetent. The challenge should always be centered on something good that is happening to them - fast growth, industry prominence, strategic IT changes - At the territory level, it is important to remember that you should focus on your best opportunities, which are not necessarily your best accounts. Many reps confuse current value with potential value. As a result they spend their time and resources on accounts that are fully valued, primarily based on the fact that they are already spending large sums with you. The concept of best customer leads many reps astray. If your largest account spends $100,000 a year on your product/service, has done so for the last five years, but there is little prospect that they can or will increase their spend in the next two years, then they are really a low potential client, and should be viewed and treated as such. Reps often protest, saying that if they don’t respond to that client, consequences can be bad. As a result they spend a disproportionate amount of time and resources on these accounts. At the other extreme are those accounts that spend little with you year after year, say $10,000, when they are in fact spending over $100,000 in total with you and your competitors. There are two types of clients in this group, bad and good. The bad ones are the ones that will never spend more than $10,000, but keep you busy with requests for service; and meetings to discuss very little revenue related issues, etc. Studies have shown that these accounts, that make maybe 25% of your revenue, can consume upwards of 60% of your time and energy, with little or no potential to increased revenues. Interestingly, the same studies show that your $100,000 accounts are considerably less demanding than the low spend accounts. The good ones are those accounts where you could, with proper effort, increase revenues substantially over the course of the next two years. But you don’t have the time, because you’re responding to the calls from the low/no potential accounts, convincing yourself that it is important to service your accounts. You have to take the time to assess your territory, and make sure that you are indeed spending time with potential accounts. We have a number of tools and processes to help our clients with this change. To successfully achieve the above, you have plan at the account level, learning which do truly have potential and which don’t. What are they buying from you and what are they buying from the competition; where can you introduce related products/services to meet their needs and increase your revenues. You have to make the uncharted, charted, which takes us to Information/knowledge. Sure, everyone knows that you have to know your customers, be informed, but often we are not, at least well enough to win. Too many sales people rely on the customer/prospect for their knowledge of the accounts. Simple things such as organizational charts are not included in the account plan; sometimes there is not even an account plan. Lack of awareness of the client’s corporate objectives makes us prey to the objectives of the individual or individuals we are working with. These are just a couple of simple things that impact ones ability to sell more into an account. It goes without saying that the time and effort you invest learning about the account, needs to correlate to the true potential of the account, but we are continually surprised by the complete lack of knowledge of key things that impact an opportunity. For example, we recently did a strategic planning session for a client. One of their key accounts was currently spending $2 million across three of their six product lines. Based on work with the VP of sales, and research it was very realistic that their spend could more than double over the next three years, at the moment our client represented less than 10% of the account’s total spend in these areas. Throughout the session, the account rep did not know basic facts: where in the decision process was their primary contact, what the buying process was, who else the client was dealing with, and who other contacts were that could influence matters. He had a good relationship with someone at the lower end of middle management “who has and will look after” him. Last year they lost revenue due to a switch in one of the lines, while they were able to make up for the revenue, he was unable to say why they lost the business to someone else, who they lost it to, who made the decision, just knew that it was lost. It is easy to sit there and say that this is isolated, but in reality it is not. Just look at any ten account plans at random and you will see. Getting this information is not hard. Questions will get you answers, good questions will get you good answers, and planned questions will get you results. This brings us to pre-meeting planning. If the meeting is not planned, neither is the result. A few simpl Decision Support Systems, Part 1 - Detailed Business Performance Capture
A simple analysis of the functionality of a decision support system, is presented. In an effort to analyze the performance of a Business, and develop strategy for the future positioning in a competitive environment, the dimension of time is crucial (this is why all data warehouse systems have a time dimension and maintain historical data). In this article series, we describe three functionality categories of decision support systems:part 1. Detailed capture of performancepart 2. Performance analysis part 3. Modeling and prediction Categories are presented in an increasing complexity and business value sequence. They do not necessarily represent maturity levels, since each category is developed and matured as it is enriched with new capabilities and adopted to the dynamically changing informational and analytical Business needs. DSS systems may be developed for other purposes, apart from performance management. A very common example is the development of a customer intelligence system, in which the aim is to build customer insight in order to adopt products and services accordingly.1. Detailed capture of business performance A basic management principle is the following: ‘ The good ones are those accounts where you could, with proper effort, increase revenues substantially over the course of the next two years. But you don’t have the time, because you’re responding to the calls from the low/no potential accounts, convincing yourself that it is important to service your accounts. You have to take the time to assess your territory, and make sure that you are indeed spending time with potential accounts. We have a number of tools and processes to help our clients with this change. To successfully achieve the above, you have plan at the account level, learning which do truly have potential and which don’t. What are they buying from you and what are they buying from the competition; where can you introduce related products/services to meet their needs and increase your revenues. You have to make the uncharted, charted, which takes us to Information/knowledge. Sure, everyone knows that you have to know your customers, be informed, but often we are not, at least well enough to win. Too many sales people rely on the customer/prospect for their knowledge of the accounts. Simple things such as organizational charts are not included in the account plan; sometimes there is not even an account plan. Lack of awareness of the client’s corporate objectives makes us prey to the objectives of the individual or individuals we are working with. These are just a couple of simple things that impact ones ability to sell more into an account. It goes without saying that the time and effort you invest learning about the account, needs to correlate to the true potential of the account, but we are continually surprised by the complete lack of knowledge of key things that impact an opportunity. For example, we recently did a strategic planning session for a client. One of their key accounts was currently spending $2 million across three of their six product lines. Based on work with the VP of sales, and research it was very realistic that their spend could more than double over the next three years, at the moment our client represented less than 10% of the account’s total spend in these areas. Throughout the session, the account rep did not know basic facts: where in the decision process was their primary contact, what the buying process was, who else the client was dealing with, and who other contacts were that could influence matters. He had a good relationship with someone at the lower end of middle management “who has and will look after” him. Last year they lost revenue due to a switch in one of the lines, while they were able to make up for the revenue, he was unable to say why they lost the business to someone else, who they lost it to, who made the decision, just knew that it was lost. It is easy to sit there and say that this is isolated, but in reality it is not. Just look at any ten account plans at random and you will see. Getting this information is not hard. Questions will get you answers, good questions will get you good answers, and planned questions will get you results. This brings us to pre-meeting planning. If the meeting is not planned, neither is the result. A few simpl Don't Fail to Pay What It Takes to Attract Top Talent ll more into an account. It goes without saying that the time and effort you invest learning about the account, needs to correlate to the true potential of the account, but we are continually surprised by the complete lack of knowledge of key things that impact an opportunity.There’s an old saying in business that you can’t get a $70,000 employee by hiring two employees earning $35,000 each. While this is true, many managers make the decision every day to refuse to pay what it takes to attract top talent to their business team. When it comes to people, you get what you pay for.Just like in pricing, water seeks its own level. The market establishes how much you have to pay for personnel with a given set of talents. Managers who violate this rule will forever be playing catch-up as they attempt to compete against higher-quality business teams.In the early stages of a business, perhaps the founder possesses enough talent to get the business off the ground, but as the business grows, the founder quickly realizes that he or she must build a management team. The quality of that management team will ultimately equal the quality of the company.Several years ago, I had a client who operated in rural towns. His retail business was dependent on the relationships his branch managers were able to establish with local contractors. He was the third generation to manage the business. After more than 70 years of dominating their market area, the larger communities surrounding them began to spill over into these ru For example, we recently did a strategic planning session for a client. One of their key accounts was currently spending $2 million across three of their six product lines. Based on work with the VP of sales, and research it was very realistic that their spend could more than double over the next three years, at the moment our client represented less than 10% of the account’s total spend in these areas. Throughout the session, the account rep did not know basic facts: where in the decision process was their primary contact, what the buying process was, who else the client was dealing with, and who other contacts were that could influence matters. He had a good relationship with someone at the lower end of middle management “who has and will look after” him. Last year they lost revenue due to a switch in one of the lines, while they were able to make up for the revenue, he was unable to say why they lost the business to someone else, who they lost it to, who made the decision, just knew that it was lost. It is easy to sit there and say that this is isolated, but in reality it is not. Just look at any ten account plans at random and you will see. Getting this information is not hard. Questions will get you answers, good questions will get you good answers, and planned questions will get you results. This brings us to pre-meeting planning. If the meeting is not planned, neither is the result. A few simple things go a long way. Key objectives for the meeting (not the whole account), ask a lot of sales people what their objective for a meeting is, and you get to close business. If you plan your objectives, you can plan your next step, and you can plan the questions needed to get you there. One area of planning that we did not touch on above is the action plan. Again, many of you have sat with your sales teams, discussed accounts and territories at length and still concluded the meeting without a clear cut action plan. Without a specific action plan, Execution is less likely, it does happen, but with greater effort and over a longer period than with an action plan. Once you have created a plan, based on complete information, you have to create specific steps to implement the plan. You will do specifically WHAT, as clearly quantified as possible; by WHEN, day, time, and what happens if not by then; WITH WHOM and what is the desired OUTCOME. As long as selling continues to be part science and part art, you can’t ignore the strategic process needed to succeed. To learn more about how to balance strategy with tactical execution in growing your revenue, visit Renbor Sales Solutions Inc.'s web site at www.sellbetter.ca.
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