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MANAGING
MANAGING Against All Odds
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Contents
Introduction 3
Watch out when your competitor loses steam 3
Your competitor isn’t your main competitor 4
When your main competitor gets acquired 5
Why you should not listen to your customers 6
Kill the sales hero – praise the sales team instead 8
The origin of leads is worth knowing 9
Morphing from a project to a product company is a challenge 10
The management of an accidental one hit wonder company 11
Prepare your salesmen for the market shifts! 13
18 Reasons salesmen are quitting the company (how bad this is) 14
If the customer has more interest in you than in your products 15
Successful companies: innovation or good decisions? 16
Conversion rate is influenced by pricing on your B2B website 17
The biggest competitor for any CRM is the spreadsheet 19
How to get the real customer experience: buy your own product 21
The importance of the url branding value is evaporating 22
Saas chops up the B2B complex sale in smaller buying decisions 23
Increase your sales with fewer products in your offering 24
The 10 Commandments of Email Replying 25
Selling the Going Green: only with a benefit 28
The Curse of the Market Leader 29
Business is going fine! Says the CEO – Don’t believe it 30
The 14 reasons for not killing or acquiring your last competitor 31
Blogging is like cooking for your family – everyday 32
The most important job: Getting invoices paid 34
The Entrepreneur vs The Venture Capitalist Paid Job Man 34
Confusing your customers and leads by offering more services 35
Differentiate or Die? Not! 37
Who are the best: the big invoice or the engaged customers? 39
The next generation of CRM: data source instead of data entry 40
Will a booth on a conference generate enough quality leads? 41
Which of these 10 marketing challenges applies to you? 43
The 2 most important departments in any company 45
In der Beschraenkung zeigt sich erst der Meister – Less is more 46
The worst service pricing: “Unlimited use” 47
The Good, The Bad and The Ugly salesman 48
Against all odds: Benefit perception versus disadvantages 49
Concerning LEADSExplorer 51
Introduction:
This “MANAGING Against All Odds” represents the many challenges managers
encounter and is based on several experiences in company management over many
years in different markets.
If you are in management, marketing or sales you will recognize situations and learn
about certain tactics and strategies.
It was a neck to neck race or even a cut-throat competition turning in advance for them
in most cases.
However since a few months it seems you are winning easily deals that previously would
have been won by the competitor.
The main thing you need to find out is if the cause related to:
- Their internal affairs
- Management vision or focus changes
- Management anticipation for yet-to-come changes
- External causes: Market changes or Technology advancements
You nearest competitors aren’t always the other leading brands but often the
replacement products that are in place since ever.
The biggest challenge is to get people move from a certain solution or service to an
innovative or new solution. Once people are convinced of products or services then they
have taken the big step.
Now as these newly acquired customers have gotten used to these services, the
competition between brand competitors will start. They might shop around in case better
deals or more features are offered.
In any market it is always better to compete with several competitors instead being sole
in this market. In that case you need to ask yourself if there is a real market and a
market demand.
Together with your competitors you will send more marketing messages to the potential
buyers and you will create more interest than alone. The competition creates interest.
People like to compare between products or solutions.
Alone is alone – Two is a crowd.
Executives – Management
If a company gets acquired the main objective of all CxO’s, VP’s, directors and
managers of the company is not to increase or improve business, but to keep their job
and position. Some might even hope getting a better position or more power.
For every CxO, VP, director and manager in the company there is at least one person
having a similar function in the acquiring company. The battle of survival will start as
soon as the acquisition negotiations start.
Internal politics and shifts of power will make executives and managers spending their
time on internal matters.
Politics, perception, image and status become more important than achievements or
business.
After an acquisition the two companies need to unify in products and solutions.
Time and money will be wasted in meetings, forecasts, budgets and reports on products
or services, business plans and human resources.
Once the new visions and plans for the future have been agreed upon (if ever) and laid
out, then this vision or message needs to be shared and explained to the employees of
both companies.
Next the market with potential customers needs to be informed, educated or
‘brainwashed’ with marketing.
During all this wasting of time and money, the existing marketing spending of both
companies will keep on being executed not having a unified or complete fitting message.
The main change executed is the new logo or a mention of the acquiring company next
to the brand name of the company.
Thus instead of doing business, the newly emerged company will need to spend a lot of
time and money on:
- Their internal affairs
- Their execs, managers and employees will waste efforts on politics
- Defining a plan for the future
In most cases these matters and issues will take a few years.
Window of opportunity
In case your main competitor gets acquired, you have a window of opportunity of a few
years for expanding your market presence and market share, while your competitor is
fighting internal struggles instead of doing business.
After this window of opportunity time has elapsed, you need to be prepared for fierce
competition.
However in some cases the new competitor starts to focus on another market segment:
typically high-end as more operational or overhead costs need to be carried.
The best thing to happen is when the acquisition was a bridge to far: too complex, too
different culture, too different products, too big, too different business, … your window of
opportunity continues.
Before releasing a new product into production / operation or during the life cycle of a
product or solution it is common to ask your users / customers feedback in order to
improve the service or product.
Product management of companies ask for suggestions, defects, errors, improvements,
features and ideas in order to have a feel of the issues, adoption and the acceptance of
a product or solution in order to be prepared for the ever changing market demand.
The question is whether the feedback is relevant and representative for you population
of customers.
Those people that provide feedback are probably those who are the most negative, the
most difficult, the most positive or the best outspoken of your customers.
The people at the extremities of your user population will give you feedback.
The average user, who might currently be happy with your solution, finds the balance
between functions / features and the complexity to use just adequate or ideal
Those who don’t give any feedback just stay quiet and some might even quietly change
vendor without letting you know.
There will be always customers challenging you with their negative feedback in order to
get lower pricing, recognizable by their threatening to change vendor.
Others will write a feedback because they have a very specific need, not applicable for
the rest of your user community.
Any feedback can be very biased for various reasons as they all have another agenda
than you.
You should find out or know the real motivators of the people giving feedback.
If you pay or reward people for their feedback, then your information can be completely
fake.
In order to obtain feedback the behavior of your users with the application or appliance
should be investigated and observed.
The goal is to find out what users actually do with the product or solution and what they
don’t do or identify the feature they don’t use.
Just asking for feedback and suggestions will project a very biased image of your
product or solution.
Feedback can be and is in most cases biased.
In the behavior the real and true feedback is embedded.
Hence you should observe your customers and not listen to your customers in order
to avoid biased feedback that can or will lead to biased conclusions bringing the wrong
products or solutions to the market.
In reality in most cases sales deals are team work, especially with larger deals.
Not only the salesman has worked to obtain the win, but the sales secretary, the sales
engineer, the pre-sales engineer, the marketing team.
All have brought their contribution to the deal.
Even a seemingly unimportant telephone call or statement from one of the team
members can have induced the shift towards the decision in favor of the company.
As an example: the receptionist picking up the telephone faster and dispatching the
incoming telephone efficiently to the appropriate person, can be one of the decisive
reasons if the competitor isn’t picking up the phone.
Probably it is hard to pinpoint exactly what has made the decision makers to change
their mind or to elect the solution. In most cases it is the total of all efforts of the entire
team that has made it possible to close the sale.
Still in many companies the best salesman of the month, quarter or year gets his picture
in the entrance hall after getting his award during a company event.
It is the cult of the person and personality.
Maybe the community just needs heroes and wants to worship heroes. This need for
stardom is achieved by defining the sales hero.
However all the other employees involved might just get frustrated and lacking
motivating by not getting the attention, reward and status. Even if the sales hero during
his speech thanks his collaborators or sales team, as it is he who walks away with the
bonus and the status.
In reality there is no sales hero as he works in a team and needs the team.
Instead the sales team should be praised and cheered.
You should ask your salesmen, sales team and marketing how leads have really found
your company or products.
Asking leads and customers directly would even be better.
The ration of the amount of money spent on a marketing channel, events or efforts over
the number of leads generated or customers acquired will show the best lead generation
method for your company.
Eventually the software becomes more fully fledged, mature and having almost all
possible functions and features for a certain target market.
The step from a project company to a product company seems evident and simple, but
that isn’t.
Less is more
The first hurdle is to decide what functions and features from the large set of available
subroutines and applications to include. What does the market really want and what has
been developed on demand for a certain customer. The more functions and features that
are included into the product(s), the more maintenance and support costs.
The morphing from a project company to a product company requires many changes:
- Marketing needs to promote products instead of services, which is a change of mind
- The website needs to market and explain the products instead of a vague capability
description
- Marketing and sales team needs to generate much more leads
- Sales cycles will be shorter
- Sales will need to adapt to the fact customer changes are no longer possible
- Sales will need to close more deals as prices are lower
- Development needs to maintain the product over many years
- Product architects need to design for growing the product and keep it maintainable
- Product management is new and needs to develop the product plan
- Product marketing is required too for specific promotion of the product
- Accounting needs to change their revenue recognition too: less complicated
- Maintenance revenue is lower and fixed
- No or little revenue from system engineers on site
This and many more problems emerge while morphing from a project to a product
company.
How well did your project company deal with the change into a product company?
The same can happen to companies: they have one product that sells relatively well in a
market niche or they even have become market leader.
It is like a sitting duck that due to events beyond their control their products have
become in demand and popular.
The almost overnight as success took management by surprise, however due to this
success management starts believing they are great and invincible.
Management has this high self-esteem although the great success of the company is
just a one trick pony due to the accidental commercial achievement.
As all products or solutions have a limited span of time during which they solution is in
demand, slowly the success fades away – just like a music hit in a few months. In case
of a product it will take several years to the end of the product lifespan.
As management has no vision or no experience in market research chances are the new
product will be a FAIL.
In case the success product brought the company to become a market leader, the
management believes they can achieve the success again and keep their market
leadership. They have no doubt in their own capabilities although they hardly exist.
Especially in case the first one was an accidental commercial success there is no reason
for them to be able to create another wonder.
However creating a new success product is hard to do and depends on many events
and economic factors beyond the control of any company.
The problem for sales and marketing is when the new product, that has been developed,
needs to be marketed and sold.
This will become very challenging due to missing experience and the high believe of
capabilities of management based on their previous achievements that were beyond
their control or just good luck.
The original product or solution had probably an unprecedented market opportunity that
made it an instant success once the market was demanding it.
Moreover due to the high demand, no big budgets have been spent previously on
launching and branding the original commercial success product.
Thus instead of having well crafted marketing strategy with a significant budget and a
well represented and trained sales force the original success was more due to the
coincidence and the huge opportunity at that moment instead of a well planned
marketing and strategy.
When launching the next product the management experience in marketing plans is
lacking and the market opportunity is less big as previously. Moreover the original
product or solution still sells to the same market.
Marketing is put under pressure to overachieve without much budget or a well planned
strategy.
The Sales team is under pressure to redo the incredible sales achievements of the first
product without a real big demand from the market.
Then the management of the company will blame marketing and the salesmen for under
achieving. They used to be so much better during their conquest of the market.
However management will never question themselves as they are convinced of their
own greatness proven by their first overnight accidental commercial success. They still
live on the dream of their original achievement not wanting to see the truth.
Only good management is capable of continuing bringing successful products to the
market – most companies are a one trick pony.
They are digging up new leads, pushing aside objections and convincing buyers in order
to reach their targets.
Things need to get done, actions taken, emails replied to, calls answered – all in function
of getting deals closed and bringing in revenue, all in the here and now.
During their sales journey they will encounter hurdles and dead ends that make them
stop dead in their sales cycle.
A possible problem is they often don’t have a complete market overview and only notice
those hurdles that are right in front of them.
As these hurdles are their #1 roadblock at that moment they will blow up their
importance and present them to their Sales Manager. If the Sales manager is in need for
Sales revenue (which one isn’t?) he sure will expose the problems his Sales team is
facing to company management.
This is where marketing or product marketing should be ahead of the Sales team. Even
before any hurdle or bump in the sales cycle, marketing or product marketing should
have remarked the trend or market shift and informed company management about it.
They might have even started to prepare new products or solutions in order to anticipate
the upcoming market shift.
If the Salesman hits the bump it’s probably too late.
The Salesmen should be on the ground, in the trenches, whereas marketing or Product
marketing should be hovering over the market in order to spot trends and market shifts
in advance so they can at least warn and try to prepare the salesmen.
Does your marketing team anticipate market shifts and guides the salesmen?
Or… does this only happen in an ideal world?
18 Reasons salesmen are quitting the company (how bad this is)
What does it mean when your sales people are leaving the company?
Not just one Salesman, but 2 or 3 within a short time span of several weeks.
Any of these reasons is a fundamental problem for the company. Each of them is hard to
overcome and to change.
Sales people act as sole traders or entrepreneurs who sell their skills and services to
their employer. They will work for best employer they can find at the best price (not
necessary for the least effort).
When the business is no longer interesting your Salesmen will start looking for other
opportunities and change employer when they see a good opportunity.
When your sales people are leaving your company, it is indicating the problems have
become significant and it is probably almost too late: it’s your last chance to make
changes or to change course.
Of course you first need to understand the problem.
If Salesmen are leaving your company it is like the last call as without Salesmen no
revenue.
In order to make the problem even worse: your best Salesmen will leave the first as they
It is apparent the products or solutions your company provides are OK or interesting but
you have become the main interest.
During the sales process it becomes clear the potential customer (he or she) has a crush
on you. In order to meet-up with you additional meetings are being scheduled.
At first this doesn’t seem a problem and you feel like you are heading for an easy sell.
You will win the deal – no doubt. Your competitors will not understand it.
The question is what should you do? Can you live with this situation? Will you be able to
live with this situation later on?
Once the first sale has been closed your Sales manager expects additional or recurrent
sales from the customer. This requires you to go and visit your “lover” again.
Everything can be handled and kept under control until he or she starts making
advances to you or proposes to meet over a business lunch.
Then you need to come up with a good plan where you are heading too:
- An escape route
- Play the game for while and look for an early exit.
- Go for it: the relation.
In all cases the situation will become complex and difficult.
Keeping it a secret
Getting into a relation with a customer needs to be kept secret. However as more people
are involved in company management, decision processes and purchases in B2B
people will start guessing and gossip will emerge as several facts and events are being
put together.
For example you are winning deals with this company you normally could not win.
Once a gossip started it spreads faster than any good news.
As from the moment you engage in this relation the potential customer obtains power
over you as a sales rep.:
- Relation means sales – No relation implies any more sales
- The secret can be used against you when problems arise by both companies involved
It is very likely that one day problems will arise in the relation or with the products or
services of your company. At that moment your relation will be exposed and used
against you as the customer is always right.
Decisions decide
Great companies are those that make the least bad decisions.
Not taking any decision can also be a bad or wrong decision, but it takes longer to notice
it was a bad decision not deciding.
During any day all companies take decisions on purchases, on personnel, on marketing,
on products, on pricing, on competitors, …
The stream of decisions and decision points never stops as there is always a next
decision:
- To be taken
- Not to be taken
- Postponed until later.
The main problem is that one cannot look into the future, making all decisions equal
good when taken.
It is only afterwards that the real verdict becomes clear.
It is not the genius CEO with the great ideas, innovation or market concepts that make a
company successful as there are not so many alternatives and variations on the same
theme in a certain business.
Many companies with great new or very innovative concepts or products have failed or
have gotten acquired to be forgotten. In the end it is the company that makes most profit
that survives, rules and is successful. Innovation doesn’t bring revenue.
Innovation is not a guarantee for success – for becoming a successful company.
Moreover the more innovative the more new and fresh problems arise in a company that
need to be decided upon. The more likely the wrong decision can be made.
Decisions of competitors
It is not just the number of good or bad decisions: it is the level of bad and good
decisions compare to the competitors that make a difference.
If your competitor is making a lot dumb decisions, your company can take advantage by
making less stupid decisions.
In order to be successful, try to make less bad decisions than your competitors.
A high price will turn away those that don’t grasp your services fully.
In order to have your visitors understanding completely the benefits, advantages and
differentiators of your services requires more or clearer information on the website and
time from the visitors.
A low price will turn away people who find your service or product to cheap to believe or
expect no quality of service for this low price.
You need to prove your high or industry standard quality which is not easy to do over the
Internet: having references can solve this problem.
By putting the pricing publicly on your website, you will only address to those customers
willing to pay this price for the perceived value of your products or services.
At the same time the website pricing will bypass all sales people. They have nothing left
over than to give an equal or a ’special’ lower price than the one posted on your website.
Similar problem occurs in case your sales model uses resellers or system integrators.
At first we had a form proposing different options (users, visitors, leads in buckets) that
calculated the price on the website.
From day one it was the most popular visited page of the website after the home page. It
seemed to be an attraction to have a price calculated.
Compared to the number of price calculations relatively a few of them ever signed up.
Apparently people visiting the website, are very curious to know about your price or an
indicative price for a market, even if they are not interested in buying at all.
Thus good traffic but no conversions to sales or even to sign-ups for 30-days free trials.
Additionally we found that our pricing was too complex for a first time visitor as it
proposed 2 different plans.
Thus we removed the pricing calculation from the website and replaced it by ballpark
pricing for the 2 different services we provide. In order to get a price quotation we asked
to contact us by email.
Due to the fact we engaged with the visitors into a conversation by email the conversion
rate was much higher.
Still writing an email as simple is it might be seems difficult, especially if some basic
information that we asked for on the page, is required for a price quote. So we had many
email going out asking for the necessary data.
Additionally many people used a non-company email address to send the email, thus we
couldn’t verify if they were actually working at the company.
To avoid the large number of incomplete quotation requests, we appended the pricing
page with a simple form in order to streamline our pricing quotes and save us some time
with email replying.
Giving a ballpark pricing is more effective than to have a complex pricing calculation or
your complete price list on your website. Both can be too complex and cumbersome to
use as it needs a manual or explication.
Additionally, having to reply to the inquiries by email lets your sales team establish a first
contact with a lead: inbound marketing and engaging leads into conversations.
On the Internet speed is all important and people want to know quickly the price range.
If they have to take time to:
- Enter much data in a complex form
- Understand your pricing structure
- Send an email requiring formulating their needs
This is likely to happen less than completing simple form.
Having ballpark pricing and a simple form to complete improves inbound marketing.
Spreadsheet companies
Spreadsheet companies are companies that use a spreadsheet for any administrative
task: customers, leads, products, pricing, order entry, invoicing and personnel.
In most cases the smaller companies started using a spreadsheet to keep track of the
contact data of their customers, leads and prospects as this seemed the most
convenient and simple solution.
However they have ignored the several other issues that are related to spreadsheet use:
- The entered data will not be consistent as people always know a work-around.
- More data can be stored in a cell than visually presented.
- Spreadsheet locking when several people access the sheet.
- No retrieval if someone erases or changes data in a field.
- Multiple versions of the same spreadsheet can easily exist.
- When multiple versions exist, duplicate records are obvious.
- The larger the data in the spreadsheet(s) become, the harder to use the spreadsheets.
- Entering duplicate records is a waste of time.
- Worse updating duplicate records is a real loss.
- Retrieving data will be cumbersome and time consuming.
- Compiling or consolidating data becomes a tedious time-wasting challenge.
- Company-wide overviews about leads, funnel, and pipeline are almost impossible.
- Invoicing based upon the spreadsheet data can become cumbersome.
- Using the CRM spreadsheet as an invoicing system can increase even more the
problems.
- Security is very low as a spreadsheet can easily be emailed or copied on a memory
stick.
All these issues are good business reasons for companies to switch over to a real CRM,
still many smaller companies haven’t switched.
The challenge for CRM Vendors is not to compete with each other with more functions
and features, but to get these ‘Spreadsheet Companies’ to start using a CRM.
In order to achieve the vendors need to listen to these ‘Spreadsheet Companies’.
It is not just enough to convince the management with benefits and advantages, but also
to win the real battle with the users as they need to make the change and do the effort.
CRM vendors need to come up with tangible and intangible benefits that will convert
both management and the users.
It is probably easier to convince management than getting the users on your side as they
need to commit to use the CRM. They have to leave their ‘Unlimited Free World’ for a
more structured systems environment.
This requires the CRM to deliver clear benefits over the spreadsheet or useful
functionalities that are not achievable within a spreadsheet (e.g. LEADSExplorer
provides the company names of the visitors and visiting data useful for improving both
lead generation and customer retention, email integration and visual analysis of visit
behavior in relation to communications).
How to get the real customer experience: buy your own product
As a vendor you might use your own product for your business.
However still that is not the real customer experience that your customer gets.
In order to have the real customer experience you should have to go through the
process of:
- Search
- Selection
- Evaluation /comparison
- Purchase
In order to go through the complete customer experience, you should even place a real
order and really buy your own product.
Only this will give you the possibility to even try out the Customer Service or the After
Sales Service of your company and your competitors.
After this experience you can evaluate and compare the different offerings on the
market.
Never forget that the perceived value is sometimes more important than the real value.
The price is what the customer wants to pay for a product or service.
Also the expectations created can create an additional perceived value.
1. Most people use a search engine to start a session: they search using keywords
instead of entering the url.
2. Even domain names are entered in Google’s search form with the comfort that Google
will correct or suggest if they make a typo. It’s also faster compared to having to edit the
http://… in the url-bar.
3. Url shortening services are masking the domain name /url: short urls are used in
comments and micro blogs. Although we might see a bit of a backlash against these in
the near future, as twitter started filtering malicious url’s today.
4. Links from other websites are increasingly gaining importance compared to on-page
SEO. It is usually better to have 10.000 links to 1 domain vs 10.000 links to 10 domains.
The value of the url / domain name in branding is evaporating as people are no longer
using the domain names direct or landing by accident on typo’s (still no documented
decline in typosquatting?)
So why would you pay more for all those domain name combinations and tld’s?
Your keywords and the content of the website have become more important as the
search engines need to present your website top ranked in the Search Engine Result
Pages (SERP).
If people search your website, product or company then it should pop-up on top.
Are you stil hanging on to all those domain names and their derivatives?
Should you?
In the era before Cloud computing and Saas (Software-as-a-Service) for on premise
software solutions, one of the important decision makers in the B2B complex sale was
the CIO, IT Executive or EDP manager.
Currently the key decision maker or buyer for web services is the business process
owner or the executive managing the line of business. The involvement of the IT
department has diminished. There are no specific IT requirements needed in order to
use a web service: any browser will do just fine.
The manager and the users are getting more involved in the decision process as it is a
service for their use. Usually it’s also possible to get a free trial period: just sign op and
start using. Goodbye to the day-long installation procedures where database and
client/server installations are required.
Instead of buying one monolithic solution suite that needed to solve and cover all
problems of the entire enterprise the Saas trend has enabled to embrace best of breed
solutions. Thus several separate solutions that excel in their area will be selected,
driving down the costs at the same time.
This shift has changed the B2B complex sale for software solutions for ever.
Instead of having one long sales cycle, the different main functionalities are segregated
leading to smaller separate buying decisions. Each of them has a shorter sales process
with the goal optimizing the cost benefit for each separate function.
Due to this a new problem is created as all these individual processes need to
collaborate and exchange data: driving up the total cost of ownership again.
These changes in decision makers and buying process implies also change of focus in
marketing as the CIO, IT Executive or EDP Manager are no longer involved and
concerned directly.
The marketing message can even put more focus on the benefits, advantages of the
solution addressing the business process owners or the executive line manager. It is no
longer about great technology, but usability and usefulness. A large part of the decision
making process has often shifted to the actual end users, as they have been able to try
the solution in advance.
For the entire software business this is a tremendous marketing shift as information
technology started out to be marketed very technically and has now become a non-
technical product.
Just like cars the function is known: cars drive fine – web services operate neatly.
Features and usability can make the difference.
Passion is lurking around the corner.
Behavioural scientists Sheena Iyengar and Mark Lepper conducted a (now classic)
study in order to find out if offering too much choice made people indecisive. They set up
a booth in a large supermarket, well known for it’s abundance of choice, where shoppers
could sample a number of jam flavours all from the same relatively inexpensive brand.
During the study, the number of flavours were varied so that either 6 or 24 flavours were
displayed. The selection was rotated hourly. After tasting, shoppers were given a
discount coupon. So regardless of the flavours encountered at the booth, shoppers were
eventually confronted with the full range of flavours in the aisle.
The results were surprising: of the shoppers passing the extensive selection of jams,
60% stopped vs 40% of those who passed the limited selection.
But from those who were able to sample the extensive selection, only 3% actually
bought the jam compared to a staggering 30% from those who had sampled from the 6
flavours.
Overall result is that 6 times as much jam was sold when there were only 6 compared to
24 flavors to sample from!
The researchers suggested that too many choices, although highly appealing at first,
might lead to frustration in the decision making process. Too many options to
differentiate might result in the customer not being able to engage with the task at hand,
leading to an overall reduction in interest in the product and a decrease in sales.
We think there might even be a fear of loss involved: ‘what if I pick the wrong choice?’
When Procter & Gamble reduced the number of Head & Shoulders varieties from 26 to
15, they experienced an immediate 10% increase in sales. Not as dramatic as Sheena
and Mark’s jam study, but still too large to go unnoticed.
Offering a limited set of products or services for a market or as a solution will also make
it more likely for people to retain the main features and differences.
Offering too few products however might mean you miss a part of the market you are
addressing. As usual, finding a good balance is key here.
On the other hand your marketing collateral and website will be less complex as you
only need to explain a few products and their differences.
Have you ever wondered whether you’re giving your customers too much choice?
It is relatively easy to find and select several Bed & Breakfast locations in each area as
most seem to have a website or are grouped on portals. Sending them a standard
inquiry email for availability of a room and pricing is the easy part, fast and can be done
in large quantities.
Thus for every response you need to reply the email and ask more specific questions.
As you send out many similar emails, it get hard to know which B&B is answering:
including the name of the B&B and link to the website would be a great help in order to
make your information gathering more efficient.
1. Read
Read the email first before answering. Many emails are replied without answering to the
specific questions or case.
2. Label
Label all incoming and outgoing emails in order to be able to retrieve them later.
Even more practical if your CRM automatically collects your emails by customer or lead.
Additionally you can add a keyword in the reply subject in order to know the content.
weekends of course.
People do remember the first reply, especially if it brought additional info or an additional
benefit.
If your service is complex or one-off (like project business) then your answer can take
longer, but at least you would send out a confirmation of receiving the email with a
possible first question.
7. Call to action
The reply email should have a clear call to action: what should the interested party do
next.
This can be the link to the payment page or the free sign-up.
In case of B2C (like B&B) the action is probably the purchase (payment), whereas
in B2B a meeting, references or a free trial should be the action to aim at.
10. Re-read
Before sending: re-read.
Once send – recall and correction is impossible.
Everybody is convinced we need to save the world by producing less CO2 gas to slow
down global warming.
Consumers:
Ironically when it comes to having our daily meal we don’t cut down on eating meat,
although cows produce more CO2 gas than cars.
Consumers need to see a direct benefit before they start buying green as in most cases
it will involve higher costs.
Governments try to solve this by subsidizing investments in green technology or
technologies that help to consume less energy.
Still people will continue to eat large amounts of meat.
Businesses:
If a company has to decide upon the higher costs involved with green or renewable
energy it is unlikely they will chose this as this will decrease the operating income.
These benefits can range from subsidizes to image improvement of the brand.
The costs related to the green energy or green manufacturing processes have to be
bared by someone in the entire production process or food chain.
In most cases, the decision of going green comes down to a balance between higher
production or operation costs and the intangible benefit from the PR or increase in brand
naming of the company as there is no direct related tangible benefit.
If the place in the production process, where the additional costs are made, have no
relation to the tangible or intangible benefit else in the process, then the going green is
unlikely to happen.
If the implementer of the green production process can calculate the incurred additional
costs into his sales price then there is no problem. However in most cases this is not
possible.
If you are trying to sell green tech to companies make sure you have a benefit
beyond just going green as business don’t survive on idealism.
c) No clue:
The original founders of the company are long gone or moved to less influential
positions.
The people with vision have been replaced by people who can execute, but have no
vision.
The company management is clueless what to do next as they always have operated
within the same constraints.
d) Risk avoidance:
The founders of the company spotted a market opportunity and took the risk to start the
company (as they had nothing or little to lose).
Once the company got successful and bigger, risk avoidance became more important
than taking risks.
Innovation and new products are a big risk.
- New ideas and concepts can only be embraced by abandoning current revenue
streams.
It is the dilemma between the proven business of yesterday and today versus the new
business of tomorrow with all the risks and uncertainties involved.
Leading companies just don’t take the risk for the apparently small rewards.
Re-invent
Only a few companies have been able to re-invent themselves, like:
- IBM
- GE
- Apple
- Microsoft
- Sony
- Samsung
-…
Currently Google is the market leader in search and many are challenging or teasing:
Amongst others:
- Competitors with similar products or services: Microsoft with Bing
- Challengers with innovating competing products or services: Quintura
- Contenders that focus on a niche segment in the market: WolframAlpha
However if the business is really bad, then they will not proclaim this at all. They will hide
the truth.
Thus be aware of companies with a CEO or Sales manager who paints a very positive or
rosy picture of the business of the company.
As the fight for survival sharpens the competition between you and your nearest
competitor for survival or market share, you could push the envelope so far you are
driving your competitor to bankruptcy.
You could offer such low prices or you could provide a better sales process as you still
have the money to spend, that your competitor isn’t winning any deal anymore.
You could just keep on undermining his pricing or sales process so the competitor
doesn’t close any deal anymore: thus no sales – no revenue.
As he runs out of cash and bank loans are scares these days, you would even get the
opportunity to acquire the company or the assets of the company.
Eliminating your nearest competitor will not grow the market and could even decrease
your sales as:
1. Your competitor attracts the attention to the (your) market.
2. Your competitor makes the market more interesting.
3. Your competitor will keep challenging you.
4. Your competitor will help or drive you to innovation.
5. Your competitor and you offer people choice from different vendors.
6. Your competitor could become desperate and ruin the market by exposing trade
secrets.
7. Your competitor can open new parts of the market: niches too difficult to supply for
your size.
8. Your competitor can open new territories not yet reachable or profitable for your
large scale operation.
9. Your competitor will close the sales deals that you don’t want.
10. Your competitor will please as the underdog.
11. Your pricing will be questioned and will drive less sales.
12. Your sales attitude will change as you win all deals: not making your brand popular.
13. Your market will shrink instead of growing due to the lack of competition.
14. Your marketing will become less effective, thus less interest from the potential
customers.
Keeping alive
You can kill, eliminate or acquire several competitors in your market but make sure to
keep the last one.
As without any competitors there is no market but a monopoly that nobody likes and
trusts.
You have personally extinguished the market as there is no market: just one vendor.
Thus keeping the competitor alive and small enough so he can’t become a threat is the
best situation.
Every now and then let him win a deal, just in order to keep him alive.
If you need to cook for your family, you need to have an idea, look for and find the
recipe. Buy the ingredients. Then cook the dinner and serve the meal on time as the
family expects the meal.
Good there are no dishes to wash if you have a dishwashing machine.
Almost every hour a show will air about cooking giving the necessary ideas for change.
Still you can always cook the same dish as 2 weeks ago without receiving a complaint.
It is very challenging to serve a good meal that is being appreciated by your family.
Moreover as your goal is to keep your family together for the dinner, you have to excel
over previous dinners.
If you have a blog, you need to have an idea, look for the concept. Collect the related
links and data. Then write the post and publish it on time as your readers expect your
essay.
Good there is no physical delivery to be done.
Bloggers can relate to and refer to other blog posts to write their posts. However if you
haven’t got a clue what to write, then you have a problem as you can’t copy previous
content.
It is very challenging to serve a good blog post that is being appreciated by your readers
everyday. Moreover as your goal is to expand your readership and reach you have to
excel over the previous posts.
Having a guest posting on your blog is like take away food or going out for dinner to a
restaurant.
Thus bloggers and mothers (assuming most family cooking is being done by mothers)
are related as they both feel the pressure to achieve:
- To feed their family with food.
- To feed their readers with content.
Both require skill: cooking sa kill and a blogging skill.
Aside from all other functions and jobs, the most import one is getting the invoices paid.
That is essential for the continuity of any company.
A deal is only done when the money has been paid and the customer is happy and
confident.
The accountant has little or no relation with the customer and has little insight in the
relationship or the problems with the products delivered or services supplied.
On the other hand the salesman knows his customers and is aware of the entire story of
the different deals from the beginning to the end. He also has indications about potential
further purchases, which can make him weak as he is already aiming for the next
commission or bonus.
Can the Salesman appear to be the nice guy in order to keep the relationship going?
Whereas the accountant is then the bad guy as he is collecting the money?
Or should the Salesman collect the money and use the conversation opportunity to
engage in a sales conversation if that is still possible?
In our view an Entrepreneur will discover a market opportunity, find a solution or build a
solution for it. Then his major task and challenge is to market the solution, find leads,
sell, close the sales and get the invoices paid.
Bernard Lunn confuses an Entrepreneur with someone who has or aims to have a
Venture Capitalist Paid Job.
This someone with a great idea or concept who will seek a Venture Capitalist or
Business Angel for funding his company. Funding with enough money in order he can
get paid for the next couple of years.
The differences:
The Entrepreneur will generate revenue.
The Venture Capital Paid Job Man will burn money.
The Entrepreneur is not looking for funding although he will need loans for expanding his
business.
The Venture Capital paid job man needs funding and after a while more funding.
Just advertise that you offer more services than before as Laura Ries explains using the
advertising campaign of UPS: “We do more than shipping” (New York Times campaign
spotlight).
The UPS Store has a $30 million advertising campaign that should explain a large
number of new services, like document printing and office supplies.
Their goal is to compete with FedEx office (formerly Kinko’s).
This advertising campaign sure will confuse their customers and potential customers as
UPS is known for parcel delivery. That has been made very clear over many years.
People and companies expect one certain service or services in just one field from a
brand.
This is the service for which the brand stands for.
It has required many years to build this relation between the solution offered and the
brand.
Adding on more services can kill the image of the brand and it will confuse customers
and leads.
A company cannot be good at many things and different services in different fields.
Moreover if you need a certain service, it is the power of the brand that makes you
connect your need with the service of the brand.
If too many services are related to the brand, the image for what the brand stands for will
become less strong. And the newly added services will pop-up less in the customers’
mind.
For every new service added, the message of information needs to be presented to your
customers and potential customers as your company needs to make clear it supplies this
service too.
The more services to explain: the more chance to become boring or to overkill.
The more services per brand, the lesser the likelihood that someone will remember one
of the services.
Still each of them requires being presented and explained in detail.
Thus your marketing cost will increase significantly due to:
- The additional content to be generated
- The increase of the number of messages using advertising, email campaigns, direct
mail campaigns, …
- The increase of marketing collateral (printed and online)
- The increase of different advertisements each explaining a different service.
- The required efforts of focusing and balancing the amount of messages per service.
Comparing costs
Compare the opportunity cost of being different with the costs involved of being different.
Opportunity: Will you sell more if your products or solutions are different?
Cost of being different: What will be the cost of designing, producing, marketing and
selling a product or a solution that is quite different?
In your marketing and during every sales process, you will need to explain the difference
and convince your potential customers of the benefits provided by the difference. That
will be consuming money, time and effort.
Lost sales: if people don’t understand or miss to see the benefit, sales will be lost.
Of course being different gives you the opportunity to explain, stand out of the crowd and
break away from the average or the mediocre.
If you have been heard or if your messaged gets passed on, people might listen or retain
your message.
If not: then you stand no chance with your very different, unique and outstanding
solution.
It will be harder and more difficult to explain the specific features, functions and benefits,
than to tell what the audience wants or expects to hear. This allows them classifying
your solutions or products in a certain category: that’s easy and convenient.
Understanding something new demands an effort. And it cannot be classified easily.
Even if they pay attention, they still can misinterpret and draw the wrong conclusions.
There are more risks involved in being a differentiator than go with the flow.
A good example of differentiator was the Dyson Vacuum Cleaner with differentiators:
- No bag
- Constant suction
- Higher cost of purchase – lower cost of operation due to the no bag
James Dyson wrote a book about it: Against the Odds (autobiography).
It took years before the product was designed and it took a long time for addressing the
right market:
- Originally the Dyson vacuum cleaner was intended for the High Income and it had a
first success in Japan at a premium price.
- In the end the Two Income Families have bought the vacuum cleaner in large
quantities.
The High Income families had cleaning ladies and thus didn’t care about the dust bag or
the constant suction.
The Two Incomes Families had to vacuum themselves and running out of dust bags or
less suction causes an interruption in their cleaning work.
The Dyson vacuum cleaner turned out to be a big success, but how many other
solutions or products that are different turn out not to be successful at all?
To be different or not
It is well known that two shops with similar products in a street sell more than one, as it
gives the buyers the opportunity to compare. Thus why be different?
People like to compare similar solutions and products.
Thus why would you want your products or solutions to be different altogether?
- The total price of being different can be too high: development, production, marketing
and selling.
- The risks involved of technology failure and marketing failure.
- The incomparability problem: your different solution doesn’t compare with the other
solutions in the market.
Having a market offering similar to the competition might be the best solution in many
cases for most companies.
Standing out from the crowed is hard and challenging work and involves many risks.
Being different could be highly successful or a very big waste and loss: in most cases
nothing in between.
- The best lead generation solutions to get the most and the best leads of your market.
This could turn out to be better than being a differentiator.
Who are the best: the big invoice or the engaged customers?
It is great to have customers that allow you to invoice large amounts of money as this
keeps the company running and growing in revenue.
However the most valuable customers are those that make suggestions for
improvement, report errors or defects in order to improve your products and solutions. It
is not just money they bring to the company but mainly their market and business
intelligence, knowledge and experience.
They participate for improving your solutions.
Thus the most valuable customers in B2B are those customers that communicate and
make remarks on your products: they engage in your future.
Engaged customers
These customers challenge the company and management, but at the same time help
the company prepare for changes in the market and future demands.
Instead of relentless producing or generating the same stuff, these customers will make
sure you never will sit back and forget to adapt your solutions to the ever changing
needs of the market.
Indifferent customers
The big invoice companies are is very valuable for the current situation of a company,
whereas the engaged companies are important for the future of your company.
It is rather uncommon that the big invoice companies are also your most engaged
companies as the size of the company creates a bigger gap between vendor and user
than in case of a small or medium sized company.
Still it can happen that your biggest customer is also your best engaged customer.
In the nineties when CRM model was introduced, the employees and the economic use
of CRM where different:
- In the beginnings of CRM the employees entering the data were mainly tele-operators
or lesser paid employees, whereas now valuable high cost time of sales reps, sales
manager and account managers is required as they are urged to use the CRM too.
- The change in technology and the use of technology by Sales has changed
significantly:
. From letters, telephone and fax to email and online website forms.
. From printed leaflets to be send by letter to the website.
. From a physical meeting to a web seminar.
. From landline telephone calls to mobile which increased the number of
communication messages significantly.
- The amount of data has increased significantly as electronic communication uses have
lowered the cost of a communication:
. A letter or a fax costs significantly more than an email.
. A physical meeting costs a multiple of a web meeting.
. A voip call or an Instant Message costs less than a landline phone call.
This results in more data to be entered by higher qualified employees means the CRM is
becoming more costly to operate.
It is obvious all data that is already electronically available within the company should be
streamed into the CRM:
- Email: a CRM should have all in- and outgoing emails by customer or lead.
- Online forms: a CRM should capture the data from the online forms by lead
- Website: a CRM should present when a customer or lead has been visiting your
website and what he has visited on your website for lead generation and customer
retention.
- Internet data concerning customers and leads should be presented in the CRM in order
to be up-to-date as a Sales rep., Sales Manager or Account Manager before a meeting
or telephone call.
These changes and integrations will turn the CRM as a data entry solution into a data
source which is the future of CRM.
How much information that you haven’t entered yourself does your CRM currently
provide?
Thus apparently a conference is the ideal place to expose your brand name and to get
into contact with your market.
Due to the high fee for attending the conference, it is likely the real decision makers or
the influencers will be present.
Thus you just need to rent a booth for getting exposure and get valuable leads.
These should be quality leads compared to the leads of an industry trade show.
Besides the limited number of attendees on a conference that limit the nulber of potential
leads, there are two other limiting factors:
Short amount of sales time
A trade show runs the whole day during several days.
A conference is only one or two days with several very short amounts of time for
opportunities to communicate with the attendees:
- In the morning before the conference starts when some have a coffee or a small
breakfast.
- During the coffee breaks.
- The brief moment when the attendees leave the conference room and move to the
restaurant.
Thus most of the time the entire booth staff is standing or sitting idle.
Labelled as Sales
Your staff being connected with the booth and your brand, they are immediately labelled
as “Sales”. This will block most open conversations with the attendees.
Sales people they don’t know are not perceived as a trusted party on the conference.
The speakers are the trusted party, not your sales people.
- Publish case studies with the best well known brand names you have amongst your
clients.
- Get a certification: then send out press release concerning this certification and put the
logo on website.
The 5 functions
In whatever market or industry and in any business, where it all comes down to is:
1) Getting leads
2) Closing sales
3) Delivering on time
4) Getting the customer to pay on time
5) Nurturing for customer retention
This sales cycle needs to keep on going like the perpetual mobile.
In this view R&D, Production, Service, Support, Accounting and Human Resources are
all supporting functions for getting marketing and sales going in order to make money.
In smaller companies sales and marketing are one dept or one person, whereas in larger
companies they are separated.
Whatever:
- The nature or origin of a company is: R&D, engineering, trade, import/export
- A company produces or supplies to the market: production, servicing, consulting
At least there needs to be sales and marketing to keep the business going.
In these times of economic crisis and recession (depression), we all will need to do with
less: both as a consumer as in business.
Thus less consumption, less purchasing, less marketing, less cash, less credit.
Less expenses, less products, less services, less sales support, less commissions,
lower margins.
However all will require more effort as you will need to bring the same performance in
sales and marketing with less support.
Less support like: advertising, trade shows, leaflets, presentations, web seminars.
Same performance: keep the sales coming.
Everything is on a shoestring, except your sales quotas.
As you have to adapt to the change created by the change in both sales and
marketing, you should show your “Mastership” for generating leads and sales by using
your best capabilities:
- The most cost effective marketing methods.
- The best sales techniques – your best sales skills
In Marketing:
In Sales:
Instead of pursuing all possible leads, you should qualify your leads even better as
following up leads costs money. The more efficient your lead qualification, the lower the
costs of your sales process.
Sales and Marketing are all under a tight budget, thus you need to be inventive or
innovative by embracing new solutions.
Will you be able to perform the same in Sales and Marketing with less (on a
shoestring)?
This is when and where your Mastership will show in both your skills and your
innovation.
If people need to pay for an unlimited service, then they feel they will be paying too
much as they won’t be able to use the capacity entirely. They feel they are paying for the
unconsumed part too.
Customers just want to pay for what they actually use.
Unlimited is beyond their real needs.
Limit is required
In order to comply:
- With human nature
- The parsimony of people
And to avoid pricing or discount discussions.
- The functionality.
- The features included.
The salesman tries to offer the best solution for the customer. No matter what.
If the solution selected or solutions offered by his company are not suited for the
customer, the salesman explains why and he doesn’t close the sales.
However he has been honest as he has given information to the customer and brought
confidence. This builds a relationship.
On a next occasion the customer will trust the salesman even more. Of course it is a
gamble if there will be a next occasion.
However chances are the customer will praise the vendor to his colleagues and friends.
This is the case where salesman has reached his budget or is confident he will make his
budget without any doubts. Over achieving a budget is bad too, as the next budget will
be increased significantly due to selling significantly more than the budget.
The Bad:
The salesman closes the deal even if the solution is not the perfect fit for solving the
problem of the customer. Afterwards, the customer is not completely satisfied but the
situation is manageable.
On the next occasion the customer will be wary of the salesman and the vendor
company. Thus might not buy again. He probably will not advice the vendor to his peer
group.
In this case the salesman just needs a few sales in order to get his yearly or quarterly
sales quota. With the budget within reach, in his view an almost good enough solution
for the customer is best of both worlds for him and his customer. The customer is likely
to see this differently.
The Ugly:
The salesman closes the deal by giving a significant discount and many promises about
services, functions or features with the sole purpose of making his budget (and getting
his commission), even if the solution isn’t suited for solving the problem of the customer.
It is clear the salesman is way below budget and he is scrambling to get close deals in
order to get a large part of his budget. Staying alive is more important than the
satisfaction of the customers.
There will be probably no next occasion as the customer will look elsewhere.
It is likely the salesman has left the company after closing several deals in order to get
close to his budget, bringing him commissions. He leaves the vendor company behind
with unsatisfied customers and several issues.
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly is an Italian spaghetti western of Sergio Leone from
1966 starring:
- Clint Eastwood as Blondie: The Good, a subdued, self-assured bounty hunter.
- Lee Van Cleef as Angel Eyes: The Bad, a ruthless, sociopath mercenary without
feelings, who kills anyone in his path.
- Eli Wallach as Tuco: The Ugly, Tuco Benedicto Pacifico Juan Maria Ramirez, a
comical, oafish, fast talking bandit who is wanted by the authorities.
All three in search of a $200,000 bounty, just like salesmen are in search of making their
budget – and getting their commissions.
Have you ever been The Bad or The Ugly? Or are always The Good?
Or have you been all three of them during your career in Sales?
When sms (texting) was introduced about 15 years ago, hardly any marketer for the
mobile operators believed in the commercial success.
Nobody really believed in it as there were many reasons against it:
- Short message: no decent message can fit on 160 characters
- Difficult to enter text: multiple keystrokes on the mobile phone for one character
- Not convenient for switching between words and numbers
- Uncertain delivery of the message – no Service Level Agreement
- Most expensive method of data communication ever
The price per amount of data carried is at least 3 times more expensive than that of a
voice call.
As the required investments were relatively low compared to the total cost of a mobile
network, the operators deployed sms (texting).
Against all odds the consumer loved the 160 character messages and it became the
biggest revenue generator for mobile operators: low cost for them – high cost for the
consumer.
If you have a solution that has many reasons not to become a success, but it brings one
or more function(s) or feature(s) that is perceived as an incredible benefit or advantage
over a competing service, then it will succeed.
If you have products or services that are lagging behind in sales or not getting the favor
of your customers, then you have to analyze it against the competing solutions in order
to find the one significant benefit.
This perceived benefit can be for a particular market, thus you need to put your solution
into perspective of different markets in order to see where it can fit and become popular.
Once you know, then you need to market this big (perceived) benefit by all means to that
market or those buyers group.
Thus don’t shed solutions or products but analyze them for their perceived benefit in
different markets. Then revitalize them using a marketing campaign focused on the big
perceived benefit(s).
The vacuum cleaner without a bag (and with constant suction): Dyson
1) Way too expensive at first as only families in Japan bought it
2) The intended market of rich people in UK didn’t buy as they didn’t care, but the two-
income did.
The TriCityNews of Monmouth County, N.J. ignores the Internet but thrives
No Internet content – just a boiler plate about the newspaper and advertising prices.
VHS – The JVC video format had lesser features and lower image quality than Sony
Corporation’s Betamax and Philips’ Video 2000.
However both contenders were missing the adult movie offering of VHS.
Microsoft Windows 1.0 and 2.0 were no match for Apple Mac Os of that time, however
Microsoft Windows won.
For many reasons.
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