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Posts Tagged ‘IT sales’

Manpreet Jassal The Language of Marketing

June 3rd, 2011 - Posted in General by Manpreet Jassal

“If you’re trying to persuade people to do something, or buy something, it seems to me you should use their language, the language they use every day, the language in which they think.” – David Ogilvy

I remember reading that quote in one of my marketing books a long time ago. Ogilvy’s statement still holds true today even though it was said in the 60’s. Our overall goal as marketers is to change a person’s worldview on something.  Nobody is spending their valuable resources and time to send something to someone and make them chuckle. We want them to get up and do something, maybe not at that moment, but do something really soon.

The main problem in a lot of today’s marketing is the language.  If you’re not talking in the language that I am thinking in, there is no chance at all for your message to get through to me. So how do you do that?

Once you know the demographic you are marketing to, you have to know what they are looking for. And let me tell you they are not looking for the features and benefits of what your product does. Your product might be the best thing since the microwave oven, but if I don’t think it’s anything special, you lost me.  So let’s say you are targeting IT decision makers and you are letting them know you can do backup 1,000,000 times faster, but everyone marketing to them is telling them the same thing. So how do you earn equity in their mind? To be continued…

Kelly McCloskey Commit, Then Remain Consistent

April 20th, 2011 - Posted in Strategy by Kelly McCloskey

When it comes to building a successful lead nurturing program, you must inspire trust. Along with most aspects of life, consistency is key here. But above all, it is the relevance of your message that will ultimately engage prospects in the way that is needed to cultivate an interest to sales.

Successful lead nurturing is a process. Establishing a meaningful dialog by providing valuable education and information to prospects up front is important. It’s not a sales person calling routinely to find out if a prospect is “ready to buy yet.” Rather, it is about delivering insight and solutions in a non-invasive way so that the prospect perceives your company to have a superior level of expertise in the industry.

Is your process showing prospects that you have an understanding of their specific issues? And that your company has the knowledge and expertise to solve them? When your nurture program has a single point of focus on developing trust, you will plant the seeds that will produce more honest conversations with prospects.

The Superfan

April 11th, 2011 - Posted in General by Kory Kendziora

It was back in 1991 when the famous Bill Swerski’s Superfans skit aired on Saturday Night Live. Good ole’ Chris Farley sporting Chicago Bears gear and a memorable accent expressing how delicious Chicago’s “Saasage” is. Marketing is a whole new ball game today than it was twenty years ago. We still connect with basic marketing methods such as direct mail, but can they actually be more effective now that social media has created continuous exposure of marketing advertisements? Social media is clearly an effective method of marketing, but if you could actually place a piece of direct mail in the hands of your target market, wouldn’t that be ideal? We make that happen. The first step is becoming a Superfan of our clients.

When you take on the role of “Superfan” there is a responsibility to uphold. As an IT marketing company, we commit to being a Superfan of each one of our clients. Putting ourselves in our clients’ shoes allows us to dig deeply into exactly what their customers are looking for and how we can generate individualized and focused campaigns to reach those customers. More specifically, we create effective questions to ask our clients’ customers using tailored, attention-getting strategies to reach net-new leads. We hit them with a 1-2 punch. First, we line up a marketing program that will have a large number of target customers holding in their hands a marketing piece with information that draws the customer to an online survey. The second punch comes after they answer a few questions – Do you have a problem with XYZ? Yes? BAM! Here’s a solution! Let’s set up a call to discuss.

Yes, it takes the dedication of a client Superfan to drive success. No, we have not attempted to obtain the Chicago Bears as a client…yet.

Oh, yeah…Da Bears!

Demand Generation Strategy – 3 Tips For Success

February 23rd, 2011 - Posted in Strategy by Jeff Warnock

I am sure that most people can relate to an interrupting phone or a persistent daily email solicitation. I actually received a telemarketing call during the Super Bowl for a newspaper subscription. That’s got to be a tough job. Speaking of the Super Bowl, was that a Chatter.com social networking TV add?

Being a director of business development for a leading B2B IT marketing agency, I work with leading manufacturers, distributors, and resellers in the IT space driving demand and sales opportunities. Many of these companies have limited marketing resources, technology infrastructure, and variance in their marketing approach and effectiveness. Our charter is to serve as a virtual marketing department and our focus is the scarcest resource in business today, net new customers. It’s a fast paced environment where the race to find sales leads and engagements never ends, budgets and funds are elusive, and success is measured in the short term.

In a presentation last week, I was asked by a regional reseller what I thought were the most important keys to successful demand generation marketing. It’s a great question and one that will yield a variety of answers. There is certainly a lot to consider given the volume of marketing messages prospects receive, the growing number of marketing channels available, and all the interactive media buzz. Read the rest of this entry »

Tim Freestone Perseverance is key. A gloves off suggestion at how to succeed at marketing in the IT industry.

February 8th, 2011 - Posted in Strategy by Tim Freestone

Look – I realize I’m asking quite a lot of people. Perseverance is not a trait that pervades the IT industry. If there were a guild of actors of short-attention-span theater, this industry would certainly hold the annual convention. Also, I’m not making a directed statement – it’s a fairly universal trait across all players – sales, marketing, CEO’s, engineers – no favoritism here. I’m also not blaming anyone. I’m simply calling a spade a spade. We all function in a system where products mutate and migrate faster than Madonna’s wardrobe changes in an early nineties concert at Madison Square Garden. So it’s no wonder that the shadow (marketing and sales) of such an unruly beast be also A.D.D.

Again, I’m not bitter, simply painting a clear picture of reality before I lay out a sentiment for how to truly stand out as competent, dare I say exceptional, in a sea of deer-in-headlights mediocrity.
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Tim Freestone Measure marketing success appropriately and begin to benefit from focusing on that metric

January 26th, 2011 - Posted in General, Strategy by Tim Freestone

First, lets define “success.” Actually, let’s define the antithesis of success. Success is NOT pretty pictures or cool designs. Yes, sometimes marketers can smoke and mirror their way through life, but tricks are for kids (someone wise once said that). Success in demand generation marketing is NOT the number of leads. The definition of good vs. bad leads is too subjective and wildly unpredictable. Success is NOT the number of meetings. Unless you are charging the prospect a fee to attend the meeting, a meeting in and of itself is nothing more than two people talking. So what is success in demand generation? It’s simple. Success is the amount of revenue you enable a sales executive to identify from the targets in your programs. I’ll say it again. Success is the amount of revenue you enable a sales executive to identify from the targets in your programs.

The reason I define success in such a manner is because it’s at this point at which the marketer begins to lose direct control of the actual sales process. The marketer still has influence and indirect control (helping provide reps with data sheets, case studies, and other sales tools to aid them in their journey with the prospect) but it’s still the point in that process where the 80/20 rule of control flips. As long as you have at least 80% control, you have the ball. Its where that responsibility ends, where you “make the hand off” that you need to hold yourself accountable, and where the metric for success should be defined. Read the rest of this entry »

Tim Freestone The Best Leads May Need to Age

November 15th, 2010 - Posted in Solution Provider Services by Tim Freestone

Nothing is more exciting than getting a hot lead – a prospect who wants to make a fast decision. Your sales costs stay low, and you turn an opportunity into revenue as quickly as possible with little effort. If only they were all that easy, right?

Of course, it rarely works that way. Most sales opportunities take some time and planning on your part in order to become revenue. For larger sales, the cycle can take quite a while to come to a conclusion, and you may have to wait a few months before you can even get started in earnest. Since some of the best opportunities you have may not be ready right away, you need to develop a lead cultivation strategy in order to keep the opportunity warm until you can engage the decision-maker in the sales process.

It’s what you do before you get started that can turn a long-term lead into your next big opportunity. Invest your time in cultivating a lead, and you’ll be the first call when it’s time to start discussing a purchase. Also, you’ll make it harder for your competitors to swoop in and steal the opportunity from you.

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Tim Freestone How Continuous Marketing Widens Your Margins

November 3rd, 2010 - Posted in Solution Provider Services by Tim Freestone

Increasing your company’s revenue isn’t enough. Strong growth on the top line sometimes comes with heavy sales expenses, which erodes your profits, ultimately delivering little value for your efforts. Profitable growth on the other hand, is crucial to your ongoing success, and it can be quite difficult to attain. You can protect your margins (and even widen them) by streamlining your approach to marketing and generating revenue at a lower cost. By turning marketing into an ongoing activity, you can generate higher revenue and profits simultaneously.

Think about your last big client pursuit. Your sales team invested heavily in it. In addition to hard costs around travel, entertainment and demonstrations, the team spent a considerable amount of time on appointments, understanding pain points and developing a proposal. Your technology professionals, no doubt, contributed heavily to the effort, increasing your sales costs further. And, you had all those marketing costs up front just to get the lead. If you started from scratch, you probably invested a substantial amount in bringing that lead in the door.

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Tim Freestone How to Beat the Feast/Famine Cycle in Your Sales Pipeline

October 25th, 2010 - Posted in Solution Provider Services, Strategy by Tim Freestone

IT solution provider sales teams are often frustrated by their pipelines. They may scramble for a month or two, trying to keep up with high demand … and then it all goes quiet. For months, there seems like little to do except work through old leads and make a few seemingly futile cold calls. Even if the numbers look good at the end of the year, the process that gets you there can be pretty frustrating.

It’s possible to smooth out the pipeline a bit – and generate more sales at the same time. All it takes is a bit of marketing planning.

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Tim Freestone Marketing-to-Sales Handoff: What Are You Missing?

October 20th, 2010 - Posted in Strategy by Tim Freestone

How the handoff from marketing to sales occurs can make a difference in deal size … not to mention whether the sales force can close at all. Yet, the process doesn’t always work as seamlessly as it should. There are sales team needs that aren’t always communicated to the marketing department, and the marketing department often has access to information that it can’t effectively provide to the sales team. The result, of course, is a missed opportunity for revenue growth.

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