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Invest in Sales Training or Marketing?

June 16th, 2008 @ 5:30 am

5 Comments

Categories: Cold Calls, General, Marketing, Sales Process, Sales Skills, Sales Tips

Tags: Marketing, Sales Training, Brochure, Sales Strategy, Sales Force Management, Sales, Geoffrey James

Which way to go?

A reader writes:

I purchased a staffing agency that provides outstanding customer service. The company has literally been open everyday for the last 52 years, including every holiday and every weekend. We have two vans and two drivers that ensure workers are dropped off and picked up from jobsites 24/hours per day. The company has done absolutely no advertising or marketing of any sort in 52 years. So the question is, where is the best place to start: website, direct mail, brochures, etc.

Let’s start with some basics. The sole purpose of marketing in a B2B firm is to generate qualified leads that convert easily into customers. The trick to doing these things well is figuring out how to get the most for your money.

Direct mail, in my view, is foolish in your case. It’s hard to tell (from the outside looking in) which companies need staffing services, so that makes it harder to come up with an effective demographic for a mailing list. As for brochures, nobody in the B2B world ever read a brochure and bought anything as a result. See my post: “Brochures are Total BS.”

A website might not be a bad idea, providing you don’t spend much. Face it: you don’t need a “world class” site because you’re only marketing to your local area, so spend a thousand dollars (or less) for a generic brochure-ware site, then forget about it. As for advertising, you might consider running an in a local business magazine as an experiment. But don’t spend a lot of money. Local TV? Fuggedabodit. Not targeted enough.

In my opinion, the smartest thing you could do would be to build on the success that your firm has already experienced. To do this, you should immediately get your sales reps trained on the latest techniques in referral selling. The idea is to make it easier for your customers to recommend you to their peers, which is what’s been driving your business. Here are two blog posts on that subject: “How to Generate Your Own Leads” and “Five Rules for Great Referrals”.

That should solve the problem of lead generation and should help enormously with your close rate, because referrals generate the kind of leads that are most likely to be pre-qualified and most likely to close.  Of course, your sales staff needs to have good consulting skills, communication skills and closing skills, but that would be part of any reasonably well-designed sales training plan.

In short, if I were you, I’d put the bulk of my investment for future growth into sales training.  The very fact that your company has thrived without marketing and advertising for so long is pretty clear evidence that it’s not going to be all that useful.  Properly targeted sales training, by contrast, is likely to pay off, big time.

Readers: Any other suggestions for this guy?  Am I selling marketing short in this case?

This Blog's Best Post: The Ultimate Cold Calling Tool

 
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  •  
    1

    vbarberger

    06/17/08 | Report as spam

    Do not under estimate the power of the Web

    I would not under-estimate the power of the Internet. The $$ you will invest in your Website can bring an excellent ROI, but you need to spend more than one thousand $.
    With a well thought Web site, you could not only bring new customer, but lower the operational costs by simplify the processes or speed up the ordering.
    What is more, if this company has a lot of satisfied clients, they could show some testimonials, interact with the clients by using a blog, etc..

  •  
    2

    lmciver

    06/17/08 | Report as spam

    Agree & Disagree

    Agreed on underestimating the power of the web (but it can be overestimated too).
    Disagree that they "have" to spend more than $1000 - not necessary if they are savvy enough to research what works and self teach how to put one up.

  •  
    3

    Geoffrey James, Sales Machine

    06/17/08 | Report as spam

    It's a local business

    There's not going to be enough of a customer base to justify "Sales 2.0" interactions. All you'd end up with is a forum with two or three old posts on it.

  •  
    4

    lmciver

    06/17/08 | Report as spam

    Re: It's a Local Business

    I'm a little confused about your message- I wasn't referring to web 2.0, just simply that they need to get themselves listed in their local web business directories to help justify the expense/trouble of putting together a simple website and not put any money into marketing.

  •  
    5

    lmciver

    06/17/08 | Report as spam

    RE: Invest in Sales Training or Marketing?

    Agreed that refining their sales referral process is best for these folks.
    If they put together a simple website, they should work to get themselves listed in the local web directories for their services (many are free, just time consuming) - especially if they do not drive traffic to their website via "marketing." This gets them some links and possible referrals who go to the website to check them out and verify they are legitimate.

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