Eight Procedures To Take
Control Of Sales And Marketing
Increasing Overall Sales and Marketing Effectiveness
If you are an organization spending $500,000 or more on marketing expenses
(e.g. advertising, trade shows, print materials, direct mail, etc.) then
STOP! We found it again. Why you ask…? Because marketing has the greatest
potential of being very unproductive. In fact, many marketing programs
struggle to break even, and actually frequently lose money. So if we
increase the overall effectiveness, then we can eliminate 50% or more of
your wasted marketing efforts, which translates into $250,000 in cash.
So now, let’s see how this actually works in a real-life scenario.
Sales and Marketing Company Policy Case Study
An organization with $500,000 in marketing expenses needed assistance. We
examined their sales and marketing process to understand and quantify the
lead flow, follow-up, and demand forecasting issues. Then we designed and
implemented a process to improve their sales cycle efficiency and tie it
closer to their customer’s buying cycles. After the marketing reductions, we
then reinvested $100,000 back into new processes for public relations and
Customer Relationship Management (CRM), both of which were suffering badly.
The metrics we developed reduced their marketing expenses by 60% overall and
increased their sales cycle efficiency from 40% to 60% within 6 months of
implementing the new procedures. With these new processes and reports, the
company now tracks sales cycle efficiency and life-time value rather than
just sales quota achievement, as the measure of their sales & marketing
effectiveness. The result: an extra $300,000 in cash plus a 50% increase in
process capability (capacity).
As we have seen time and time again, time can be our best friend, if only we
let it.
Methods to Design the New Sales & Marketing Process
• Improve Follow-up. Only about two percent (2%) of sales occur on the first
contact. Eighty percent (80%) of sales will require five to eight contacts
before the sale closes. This means that if you are contacting the prospect
less than five times or more than eight times, then you could have a problem
with follow-up.
• Sales Cycle Efficiency. Time kills deals. The speed at which a prospect is
converted into a customer and the number of prospects required to make that
conversion determines your sales cycle efficiency. So ask yourself, are you
taking the right steps to measure and reduce lost sales?
• Life-Time Value. How profitable a given customer is over time defines your
LTV or Life-Time Value. Companies spend ten times more to acquire a customer
than to keep a customer. However, existing customers are more likely to
purchase again, spend more money, and therefore become more profitable. If
you don’t know your LTV, then how do you know how much money to spend and on
which customer segment?
• Demand Forecasting. Every customer buys on a cycle. So this means that you
should track cycle times and variance to increase the accuracy of your
forecasting and the loyalty of the customer. Do you know when your customers
need to reorder?
• Improve Lead Quality. Do you have methods in place to measure the
conversion potential of each lead? Lead generation activities (i.e. forms)
should pre-qualify every new lead so that you can take the right follow-up
actions for the marketing offer. Strong leads produce strong sales.
• Increase Awareness. To keep the sales pipeline full of good quality leads
you must continuously increase the awareness of your company and the
solutions that it provides. Public relations is more efficient at building
awareness than advertising, yet many companies spend wildly on advertising
and trade shows while neglecting to fund public relations efforts much at
all. Increase your name recognition, not your budget.
• Reduce Discounting. Discounts represent deficiencies in the sales &
marketing processes, which means that you should use them sparingly.
Instead, determine the root cause and then fix the process that’s causing
the need to discount. Show customers the added value, and they won’t focus
on price.
• Train Personnel. Provide your sales & marketing personnel with regular
formal training. This will arm them with better product knowledge, as well
as presentation, negotiating and selling skills that will improve
effectiveness. This will boost both employee morale and the bottom line – a
win-win.
Control of Sales and Marketing Policy and Procedures
Improve your sales cycle efficiency. Reduce your marketing expenses. Tie it
closer to your customer’s buying cycles. And take control of your sales and
marketing program to let it work for you.
Improvement with Well-defined Policies and Procedures
With well-defined processes and procedures in place, you will increase
efficiency by reducing ineffective sales and marketing programs. And, again,
we make such improvements to create more cash on hand – all toward that
million dollar goal and to cross the finish line.
About the Author:
Chris Anderson is currently the managing director of Bizmanualz, Inc. and
co-author of policies and procedures manuals, producing the layout, process
design and implementation to increase performance. To learn how to increase
your business performance, visit:
http://www.bizmanualz.com/?src=ART80
Read more articles by:
Chris Anderson
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