I am here at the Sales 2.0 conference in San Francisco. Between the sessions, our host interposed a question that was asked in the conference coverage on Twitter (got to love it). The question was,
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"How do we get marketing involved in Sales 2.0.”
There was silence in the room. That silence speaks volumes.
I believe that there are 2 ways that companies can use Sales 2.0 to foster a collaborative environment between sales and marketing.
- Cooperate in the development of buyer personas.
- who they are
- what their role is
- what their need is
- what their motivation is
- what their behavior looks like
- Collaborate in understanding and aligning with the prospect’s buying process.
In his introduction to panel participation, Brett Wallace from Forrester Research talked about how they created buyer personas for their different audiences. They had even gone so far as to create life-size blow-ups of "people" who represented their different buyer personas and positioned them throughout the office. This keeps those personas at the top of everyone's mind.
A buyer persona is a profile of a type of prospect. It describes the attributes that help you understand:
Both marketing and sales have unique insight into these archetypes. That is why this is a perfect mechanism to use to bring the teams together under the Sales 2.0 umbrella. Both organizations will benefit from the unified perspectives the buyer persona offers.
There has been a lot of talk about the buying process here at the conference. There is universal agreement that supporting and sustaining the prospect’s buying process is a fundamental component of Sales 2.0.
Once again, both marketing and sales co-own support of the prospect’s buying process. Marketing activities including promotion and education (think corporate web site) are critical to ushering the prospect into the buying process and building persuasive momentum. At some point, sales takes over and hopefully builds the momentum to a close.
In order to ensure persuasive momentum through the prospect’s buying process, marketing and sales must both understand, collaborate, and coordinate their activities. At any point where the persuasive momentum breaks down, everyone loses regardless of who is holding the prospect at that point.
At the conference, a lot of the talk about getting marketing and sales to align has been around metrics, speaking the same language, etc. However, I think the faster, more effective way to align them is to create a collaborative environment by developing buyer personas and the buying process together.