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September 22, 2005

New look and feel for Revolutionary Marketing and Sales Strategies

Dear Valued Subscribers,

I heard from many of you about the readability of the template used previously.  Plus I had gotten into more complex HTML coding than my capabilities allow.

Today is the start of a new look and feel for Revolutionary Marketing and Sales Strategies.

Don't forget to do your part and voice your opinion in our latest poll.  Results will be interpreted and posted in about a month, whenever we get a large enough sample size.

Enjoy,

Scott

August 16, 2005

A Vapor Trail from SAP - Chris Selland

Is Salesforce.com getting under the skin of SAP?  You betcha !!! Read this post from Chris Selland, one of the most insightful and imbedded sources in the CRM marketplace.

A Vapor Trail from SAP

August 05, 2005

Chelsea - Allstar Panthers - National Champs

This is unrelated to marketing or sales.  My youngest daughter cheers competitively (like the ESPN stuff).  With all the blood, sweat and tears she puts into it and all the time, energy and money my wife and I put into it I feel okay bragging a bit.

Her squad won Nationals at this year's championships in Orlando.  Here are some pics:

National Championship Photos

June 29, 2005

New Cross-Functional Authors

Please join me in welcoming several new distinguished business/thought leaders to the Revolutionary Marketing and Sales Strategies newsfeed as co-authors. The reason that I chose so many high-quality, diverse individuals is because I don't want my subscribers to be side-saddled with simply my point of view or a Marketing/Sales-centric view of those very subjects, Marketing and Sales. Those of you who know me well enough understand that I'm coming at this from an overall organizational, cross-functional view.

As you will see, every one of these individuals could easily support a readership base of their own, and many actually do. Every one of them, though, adds some element that I consider to be unique and worth integrating and sharing. As the value need dictates additional authors will be continuosly added. Below is a bio link on each author. As you read their bio, you'll see why I feel such excitement about content:

This is a group that could easily be the core leadership team of any company in the world !!!

The content to be covered will focus on Marketing and Sales functions from a holistic perspective.  We'll cover:

  • People, process and technology
  • Strategy, Planning, Executing and Managing
  • Cross-functional viewpoints, cause/effect levers and alignment points in the following areas:
    • Sales - Field and Management
    • Marketing
    • Finance/Accounting
    • Supply Chain/Logistics
    • Product Development/Management
    • Customer Service
  • Executive, Managerial and Staff level impacts and issues
  • Hiring, training, motivating, enabling, performance mgmt

I am confident you will enjoy and find large nuggets of value as we move forward.  Now let's go out and make an impact ... today!!!

June 22, 2005

The Importance of 'AND'

First of all, I want to thank Scott for inviting me to participate as a guest contributor to this weblog.  The evolution of Marketing and Sales Effectiveness is a topic which I have dealt with for the last 15 years, and I enjoy any opportunity to discuss the topic.

In my view, the key word in the phrase 'Marketing and Sales Effectiveness' is the and - because where the real failure usually takes place is between Sales and Marketing, rather than within either function.  It's been a regular occcurence for me to walk into companies where Sales and Marketing are each working their respective tails off - but the company isn't hitting their numbers.  The fault isn't that either isn't doing their jobs - but it's that they're not working together.

I look forward to your thoughts, feedback and comments, and invite you to contact me anytime at chris@selland.us or cselland@covingtonassociates.com.

Also feel free to stop by my weblog anytime - I post quite often on the CRM technology market. 

April 15, 2005

Accenture, Shaheen & Siebel

I just couldn't help but pointing out the coincidence of the latest news.  These stories came out the same day:

Shaheen was CEO of Andersen Consulting & was the driving force in separating from Arthur Andersen ... just in the nick of time with the Enron scandal.  Then George Shaheen, arguably one of the brighted business minds around, took the bait for the dotcom dream of Webvan which has flopped.  It's refreshing to see that someone like a George Shaheen, could make a bonehead move like that, just like I did ... with the same results.  He was the CEO of the most powerful professional services company in the world.

Just coincidental timing that Shaheen was named CEO of THE major player in the CRM space and his old firm was announced as the leader in the CRM Service Provider space.  I smell a major alliance or M&A in the making ... maybe Accenture/Siebel due to allegiances/relationships or possible another competing consulting firm as an act of defiance.

March 22, 2005

90% Of Most Influential Need Improved BI

A just-released study by my friends (and ex-employer) at Accenture states the obvious ... the need for greater BI ... but the scale of the issue is what is surprising ... 90%.  Almost all major organizations would benefit from improved BI.  What about the mid-tier players?  I would "assume" the percentage is even higher.

To see why this may be so look at the poll results in the upper right hand side of this web page.

Link: Companies Need to Improve Business Intelligence Capabilities to Drive Growth, Accenture Study Finds.

March 21, 2005

The McKinsey Quarterly Chart Focus Newsletter

This article by McKinsey shows an alarming failure rate of effective merger management.  McKinsey points out that this high failure rate of mergers is due to over-estimation of synergies.  While that is definitely, true, it is also related to poor strategy development and the timeliness/quality of the execution. 

Link: The McKinsey Quarterly Chart Focus Newsletter.

March 02, 2005

Intelligent Consultative Selling Input Needed

Before you leave this website your input would be appreciated through participation in the poll in the top right hand side bar.  Thanks.

March 01, 2005

Tom Peters Rocks

There's not much I can add to this from Tom Peters.  If you don't find at least 50 valuable, insightful nuggets in here you need to read it more reflectively.

Tom's Insights

Get out there ... stir it up ... have fun ... promote a cause ...  be different ... brand YOU ... live ... be happy

February 22, 2005

Understanding Customer Relationships

Excellent article that points to complexity of establishing and maintaining customer relationships. We, humans, are certainly complex organisms (hahaha). The text in teletype italics is a paragraph that I pulled from the attached article that gives a ton of credence to our Executive Link application. That very issue is what we have tried to achieve in the R&D of the product. The ability to have this level of insight is what it takes to legitimately lay claim to the consultative selling definition.

Data Alone Won't Help You Understand Customer Relationships - by Jim Barnes, Barnes Marketing Associates, Inc.

"Conventional marketing research is often flawed in that it asks customers what we can do to improve. The answer usually is that we should do what we already do, but do it faster, more accurately or more often. It doesn't give us the insight that we need to impress a customer or to establish an emotional connection."

Link: Item.

February 20, 2005

Six Sigma Client Acquisition Strategy and Execution

Walter Shewhart, J. Edwards Deming, Kaoru Ishikawa, Joseph Juran, Armand Feigenbaum, Genichi Taguchi, Dorian Shainin

Who are these people?  What is their claim to fame?  How in the world do they relate to Marketing and/or Sales?  They are centainly not a name like Tony Parinello, Bob Beck, Rick Page, Michael Bosworth, Stephen Heiman, or Neil Rackham ... Sales Gurus.

Each one of them are considered to be a modern era "quality guru".  The below attached article is about applying traditional quality practices into Marketing and Sales.

Unlocking A Six Sigma Mindset in Pursuit Strategy

February 15, 2005

Customer Loyalty

This article is scary. It is the anti-thesis of everything I preach.  Read it and cringe!!!! 

Link: DMNews.com | News | Article.

There's good news and bad news

  • Good? I / we have a lot of work to keep us busy
  • Bad? I / we have a lot of work to keep us busy

February 14, 2005

CRM Failures - Really?

Stories and statistics of CRM projects being deemed failures 75%+ of the time are running rampant in the marketplace.  In my opinion, unfairly so.

SearchCRM.com 2004 Link: 'F' word still dominates CRM thoughts.

The perception of failure is usually due to wishful thinking or unrealistic expectations (or maybe overselling).  What is it that we really expect a CRM tool to do?  To increase sales?  To lower cost of sales?  If you think of what CRM tools do ... the answer is neither.  CRM tools are critical to a businesses success needed them to track and manage past/present/planned activity (calls, meetings, to-do lists) and to keep track of sales pipeline quantity/timing/probability.  Yes, they do provide some level of efficiencies from a time management perspective and help sales efforts from the perspective of ensuring that we are following up on a regular basis.  But ... CRM, in and of itself, does nothing to help us sell more, sell faster, or sell more profitably.  Sales occur because:

  • of a relationship developed between the sales person and the decision-maker based on credibility, knowledge, trust, confidence
  • the decision-maker feels the sales person understands their issue(s)
  • the decision-maker perceives that the sales person's organization has a solution that will alleviate his/her pain

The degree to which the above three bullet points are true also play a large part in determining the quality (or reality) of the sales pipeline.

CRM tools are not, and never were, intended to help us sell more, sell faster, or sell more profitably.  So if that is the expectation that the 75% failure rate is based upon ... it's an unfair measuring stick.

February 12, 2005

Executive Level Sales Strategies

Back in January I attended an AIMA (Atlanta Interactive Marketing Association) meeting where the topic of discussion was "alignment of sales and marketing organizations".  John Neeson, one of the co-founders of Sirius Decisions (and a 12 year Gartner executive), was one of the panel members.  After the event I was fortunate enough to meet and have a brief discussion with John where we had a real meeting of the minds.  John connected me with Paul Shiman, who heads up the research for Sirius.

I am constantly in search of new insights from the best and brightest minds in the marketing and sales areas ... especially as it relates to high-level c-suite sales.  My purpose is to verify, and continue to verify, what we, at Sales Builders, say in our marketing literature.  Remember now, that the roots of Sirius go back to Gartner and some serious research (no pun intended .. yes it was ... hahaha).

Paul and I even almost said it in using the same wording:

If you are to gain access to the executive suite, they expect that you come to the table already aware of the issues they are facing in their industry and their role in that industry.  They don't have the time, and will not take the time, to teach you.  You cannot gain access by pitching your offering.  You must approach the executive and constantly work with them from an empathic viewpoint ... from their seat. 

If not, then, like the author of Mutual Respect, Bob Beck, says ... "you'll be thrown under the bus with the rest of the people that the executive perceives to be 'quota-carrying sales reps'."

Believe me, our conversations will continue ...

February 10, 2005

Cross-Functional Team Selling

Jim Barnes is an ex-KPMG Partner, a close friend of mine, and an extremely highly-valued personal advisor. His company, Customerteam, has developed, an innovative approach where enterprise-wide selling efforts are team-based, cross-functional, and address specific customer issues throughout the quote-to-cash cycle. Here's a blurb that I perfectly align with from their homepage:

… the best way to manage your most important customers.

In the beginning of the 21st century, the large corporation dominates the economic landscape. Acquisitions and mergers continue to occur in every business category. Fewer and fewer companies control the lion’s share of sales, and of course, revenue.

Naturally, these powerful firms are quickly becoming your most important customers. If you provide them with the level of service they require, your business will be in excellent position to prosper and grow.

That’s where Customerteam comes in. We’ll help you create a unique and highly effective team around each of your largest customers. Each team enables you to provide substantially better service, and to become more profitable as well.

The marketplace has evolved. Today, it takes a team to succeed.

This short clip certainly puts it all in perspective. If the market has truly evolved, and believe me it has, what have you done to change how you go-to-market with your solution offering.

Customerteam Video Clip

Certainly, if we combine ... :

... We will have successfully instituted a well-oiled team of trusted advisors who serve the specific needs of our best and most profitable customers both in acquisition and retention phases ... the most correct, customer-centric focus possible.  And yes ... that IS intended to imply that being customer-centric across all clients is a mistake.

February 07, 2005

CRM Bits - Emotive Attributes of the Customer Relationship

This IBM guy, Scott Walters, has some great insights into where CRM applications fall short.  His comments refer specifically to the Financial Sector, but, believe me, these issues cross sectors.  Remember ... value is not derived from technology in and of itself.  Value of this type of technology is only realized when it enables and strengthens relationships with key influencers and decision-makers within our best client's organizations.

Scott Walters, IBM Global Consulting Services - CRM article

Enjoy!

February 02, 2005

You Best Know VITO ... Very Well

What could just an average salesperson do with this arrow in her/his quiver?  How about a great salesperson?  How about an entire sales organization?  Better yet, how about Marketing, Sales and Product Development/Management?  Would that define "customer-centric" or what?  In fact, it would redefine that term to "customer role-centric."

Vertical-Specific, Role-SpJ0313765_1ecific Intelligence - EXAMPLE: Healthcare CFO Profile 

Intelligent Selling

This below link is another weblog I publish dedicated to dicussions related to gathering and leveraging prospect and client intelligence.  In a previous post I quoted a study from UNC's Kenan-Flagler Business School that conducted a survey in which the #1 reason executives grant access to salespeople is ---- Ability of the salesperson to understand their issues.  Plainly said, "Executives buy, not because they understand, but because they feel understood."

http://trustedadvisor.typepad.com/prospect_intelligence

January 27, 2005

Customer-Centric AND Profitable Marketing & Sales Alignment

As boring as it sounds this article's full attention will focus on breaking down the title of this article ... it's meaning, implications and application.

"Customer-Centric AND Profitable Marketing & Sales Alignment"

Customer-Centric:

Many marketing and sales organizations tout that they have fully adopted a customer-centric (versus a product- centric) focus and/or a consultative sales approach.  That's great, as happy customers are the lifeblood of any business.  If our organization is not focused on solving issues that our clients are currently experiencing then, quite honestly, there's not much of a reason to waste a lot more time. 

This leads into the definition of customer.  Let's face it, Company A never sold anything to Company B.  It's Bob selling to Suzy based on Suzy's perception of Bob (competency, knowledge, honesty and most importantly, Bob's ability to solve Suzy's issues).   The customer is the person(s) you interact with ... not their company.  Novel concept, huh?

Profitable:

What?  You mean we have to somehow make them happy that we're making a profit off of them?  The answer can be either "yes" and/or "no".  This is a quote from Peter Drucker from 1954, "The true business of every company is getting and keeping customers".

While this is great and timeless wisdom, Michael King, of Grizzard Performance Group (GPG), says that we must add the following to the end of that quote, "... who are providing us with an acceptable level of profit margin."  Here is a link to a white paper by Michael that will shed greater clarity on this issue:

                          Grizzard 2004 Customer Based Marketing Survey

Marketing & Sales Alignment (Throw Product Development/Mgmt in there too)

I love networking and learning.  It's my primary vehicle for creating demand and, frankly, staying sane.  Over the past few months I've attended tons of meetings related to the Marketing, Sales and Technology areas.  This concept of alignment seems to be an issue that all companies are struggling with, none of which have been overly successful at closing the gap.  At a recent AIMA (Atlanta Interactive Marketing Assn) event they had a panel discussion on exactly this alignment issue.  The panel members were John Neeson of Sirius Decisions, Rory Holland of Holland Interactive and Colleen Crafton of MAPICS.  Here is a link to notes I took at this meeting: AIMA Jan05 Meeting Notes

Let's put it all together in a vision statement that we live:

"We build tremendous value for our stakeholders as we are acutely targeted in on better serving the needs of our most profitable customers.  We accomplish this by:

  • Utilizing Customer Profitability Management (CPM) methods and tools to ensure that we are in constant touch of who our best customers are
  • Alignment of Marketing, Sales and Product Development/Mgmt on solving vertical-specific and role-specific issues the individuals within our client organizations are currently experiencing.
  • Becoming an organization of "Trusted Advisors" to our best customers
  • Focusing the majority of our resources, budget and efforts on retaining our best customers"

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    The Allstar Panther Cheerleading - National Championship Pursuit

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