The document discusses how to identify gaps between sales and marketing by creating an assessment framework to analyze past performance, current processes, strategy, and gathering customer feedback. It suggests surveying customers to understand preferences and pain points during the sales process. Identifying these gaps is important for companies to understand shortcomings and set goals to improve sales and marketing alignment.
The document provides advice from sales leaders on using social selling strategies effectively. It discusses how sales executives can lead with a focus on relationships by using LinkedIn to build credibility, identify where buyers are in the sales cycle, and encourage collaboration and alignment between sales and marketing teams through consistent messaging. The sales leaders emphasize focusing relationships over quantity, using metrics like the Social Selling Index to measure performance, and sharing quality content to position themselves as thought leaders in their industry.
Social Selling - Proven Strategies from the Worlds Best SellersMark Walton
The document provides strategies from top sales professionals on using social media, specifically LinkedIn, for sales. It discusses how social selling can help salespeople lead with a focus on relationships by building credibility through consistent messaging, identifying high and low performers using the Social Selling Index, and encouraging collaboration. Adopting these practices can help sales executives address challenges in managing complexity while driving growth. The document shares tips from industry leaders on effectively using conversations on LinkedIn to discuss value propositions, align sales and marketing messaging, and motivate sales teams to optimize social selling.
Proven Strategies From the World's Top Sales ProfessionalsJohn Crowley
The document discusses proven social selling strategies from top sales professionals. It highlights the importance of focusing on relationships, demonstrating thought leadership, and using data-driven efficiency. Interviews with sales executives provide insights on how to lead with relationships on LinkedIn, identify prospects, and measure social selling performance.
This document discusses how marketing and sales can improve collaboration to achieve their shared goal of sustainable profitability. It recommends that the two departments communicate more through regular meetings to understand each other's work and align on goals like defining quality leads. By working together on initiatives like content marketing and lead nurturing, companies can generate more sales-ready leads at a lower cost and increase sales performance metrics.
The Definitive Guide to Social Selling for LeadersSales for Life
Sales, marketing, and enablement leaders must work together to drive a successful digital transformation within their organization. The transformation involves 6 stages from random social activity to fully integrated sales and marketing teams. Social selling helps restore balance between buyers and sellers by engaging buyers on their terms and viewing sellers as more authentic.
The survey of 511 salespeople found that 72.6% of salespeople using social media as part of their selling process exceeded their quotas 23% more than peers not using social. 54% tracked deals back to social media use. Top reasons for social media use were networking, prospecting, and research. LinkedIn was the top social site used. 75% received no training, which may explain why 21.7% did not use social media due to not understanding it. Salespeople spent 5-10% of time on social media.
Lead Generation Strategies for Every Channel- Go For the Gold! [Free In-Depth...Mohamed Mahdy
Here are my top tips for sales and marketing alignment based on the document:
1. Define what a lead is together. Sales and marketing should meet regularly to agree on the definition of a qualified lead and iterate it over time based on changes.
2. Align on lead handoff. The teams need a shared understanding of when a lead becomes sales-ready and the process for passing leads from marketing to sales.
3. Implement service level agreements. Put timeframes in writing for how quickly sales must respond to marketing-generated leads. Include escalation procedures if timeframes are missed.
4. Measure leaders on the same goals. Both sales and marketing executives should be compensated based on revenue targets to ensure alignment on priorities
How content bridges the divide between sales and marketing by creating a unif...Varun Mittal
At LinkedIn, sales and marketing alignment is an important topic for us and for our customers. We
believe achieving alignment is crucial for sales and marketing to reach their full potential. Previous
global research from LinkedIn shows that 60% of respondents believed that misalignment between
sales and marketing could damage financial performance. From both the sales side and the marketing
side, there’s broad agreement that sales and marketing alignment can boost pipeline, improve
customer experience, and increase customer retention.
The document provides advice from sales leaders on using social selling strategies effectively. It discusses how sales executives can lead with a focus on relationships by using LinkedIn to build credibility, identify where buyers are in the sales cycle, and encourage collaboration and alignment between sales and marketing teams through consistent messaging. The sales leaders emphasize focusing relationships over quantity, using metrics like the Social Selling Index to measure performance, and sharing quality content to position themselves as thought leaders in their industry.
Social Selling - Proven Strategies from the Worlds Best SellersMark Walton
The document provides strategies from top sales professionals on using social media, specifically LinkedIn, for sales. It discusses how social selling can help salespeople lead with a focus on relationships by building credibility through consistent messaging, identifying high and low performers using the Social Selling Index, and encouraging collaboration. Adopting these practices can help sales executives address challenges in managing complexity while driving growth. The document shares tips from industry leaders on effectively using conversations on LinkedIn to discuss value propositions, align sales and marketing messaging, and motivate sales teams to optimize social selling.
Proven Strategies From the World's Top Sales ProfessionalsJohn Crowley
The document discusses proven social selling strategies from top sales professionals. It highlights the importance of focusing on relationships, demonstrating thought leadership, and using data-driven efficiency. Interviews with sales executives provide insights on how to lead with relationships on LinkedIn, identify prospects, and measure social selling performance.
This document discusses how marketing and sales can improve collaboration to achieve their shared goal of sustainable profitability. It recommends that the two departments communicate more through regular meetings to understand each other's work and align on goals like defining quality leads. By working together on initiatives like content marketing and lead nurturing, companies can generate more sales-ready leads at a lower cost and increase sales performance metrics.
The Definitive Guide to Social Selling for LeadersSales for Life
Sales, marketing, and enablement leaders must work together to drive a successful digital transformation within their organization. The transformation involves 6 stages from random social activity to fully integrated sales and marketing teams. Social selling helps restore balance between buyers and sellers by engaging buyers on their terms and viewing sellers as more authentic.
The survey of 511 salespeople found that 72.6% of salespeople using social media as part of their selling process exceeded their quotas 23% more than peers not using social. 54% tracked deals back to social media use. Top reasons for social media use were networking, prospecting, and research. LinkedIn was the top social site used. 75% received no training, which may explain why 21.7% did not use social media due to not understanding it. Salespeople spent 5-10% of time on social media.
Lead Generation Strategies for Every Channel- Go For the Gold! [Free In-Depth...Mohamed Mahdy
Here are my top tips for sales and marketing alignment based on the document:
1. Define what a lead is together. Sales and marketing should meet regularly to agree on the definition of a qualified lead and iterate it over time based on changes.
2. Align on lead handoff. The teams need a shared understanding of when a lead becomes sales-ready and the process for passing leads from marketing to sales.
3. Implement service level agreements. Put timeframes in writing for how quickly sales must respond to marketing-generated leads. Include escalation procedures if timeframes are missed.
4. Measure leaders on the same goals. Both sales and marketing executives should be compensated based on revenue targets to ensure alignment on priorities
How content bridges the divide between sales and marketing by creating a unif...Varun Mittal
At LinkedIn, sales and marketing alignment is an important topic for us and for our customers. We
believe achieving alignment is crucial for sales and marketing to reach their full potential. Previous
global research from LinkedIn shows that 60% of respondents believed that misalignment between
sales and marketing could damage financial performance. From both the sales side and the marketing
side, there’s broad agreement that sales and marketing alignment can boost pipeline, improve
customer experience, and increase customer retention.
Traditional lead generation has undergone substantial changes in recent years, thanks to new online and social marketing techniques. In particular, the abundance of information readily available online has led to the rise of the “self-directed buyer” and the emergence of new ways to develop and qualify potential leads before passing them to sales.
In the age of the self-directed buyer, marketers need to find new ways to reach their potential customers and get heard through the noise. Instead of finding customers through mass advertising and email blasts, marketers must now focus on being found, and learn to build enduring relationships with buyers. This massive shift has sparked a huge transformation in marketing.
www.bibbyconsultinggroup.com.au
Follow us:
Instagram: http://instagram.com/bibbyconsulting
Facebook: http://facebook.com/bibbyconsulting
Twitter: http://twitter.com/bibbyconsulting
Google+:http://plus.google.com/+Bibbyconsulti...
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This document summarizes perspectives from various thought leaders on trends in social selling in 2014-2015. Key trends highlighted include: the rise of content marketing and social networks leveling the playing field; social selling tools gaining maturity and a push for ROI metrics; and the need for sales and marketing integration and cultural change among salesforces. Thought leaders predict social selling will go mainstream in 2015 and bring changes to sales training, management, and expectations of sales reps.
Strategic B2B Marketing: Great insights for beginners and experience Marketer...Dolly Gujarathi
Moving from tactical to strategic B2B marketing
1. Tactical marketing focuses on generating leads through mass campaigns but often fails to properly identify customer needs and qualify leads. This results in low-quality leads that sales ignores and missed opportunities.
2. Strategic marketing takes a more structured approach to define goals, understand target markets and audiences, and implement integrated programs. This includes in-depth audience analysis and long-term lead nurturing strategies.
3. Strategic marketing is shown to generate 50% more sales-ready leads at 33% lower cost per lead. It also reduces the percentage of ignored marketing leads from as high as 80% to 25%. Taking a strategic approach improves lead quality and return on
Introduction to integrated marketing sales and marketing alignmentNuno Fraga Coelho
This document discusses the importance of alignment between sales and marketing teams. It provides 7 steps to achieve alignment:
1. Get sales and marketing to agree on buyer profiles and prospect traits.
2. Develop an integrated content strategy by auditing current assets and ensuring content meets buyer needs.
3. Agree on common metrics and definitions like what qualifies a "sales ready" lead to ensure both teams are measuring the same things.
4. Establish SLAs that set targets for lead generation and handoff between teams to increase accountability.
5. Create a clear process for handing off leads from marketing to sales and feedback loops.
6. Develop a shared sales/marketing pipeline for increased visibility
This document discusses how companies can better differentiate themselves and increase revenues through "Thoughtful Selling". It notes that customers now find most product information online beforehand, so companies need to close the "insight gap" between their brand and products by providing unique insights. It recommends categorizing customers into "Take Us Forward", "Model It", and "Prove It" groups and matching insights to each group's needs. Additionally, it emphasizes aligning marketing campaigns and sales conversations by integrating efforts between departments to create high-performance programs grounded in unique insights.
Though marketing and sales have different objectives, greater collaboration can help both teams. When marketing and sales communicate more regularly and work as a unified team, sharing goals and responsibilities, companies see 20% more revenue. Regular meetings allow each side to understand how their work impacts opportunities and sales. By collecting and sharing common data through a joint dashboard, marketing and sales can better track leads from initial contact through closing deals.
This document provides a guide to lead nurturing strategies and best practices. It is divided into four parts that cover:
1) Defining lead nurturing and its importance for building relationships with prospects over time.
2) Basic lead nurturing campaigns including processing new leads and regular "stay in touch" communications.
3) Advanced lead nurturing techniques like accelerator and lifecycle campaigns.
4) Calculating the ROI of lead nurturing through worksheets and case studies.
The guide offers advice for marketers at all levels on developing effective long-term lead nurturing programs.
Industry 4.0: Technology Insights for Channel Program OptimizationSeth Jacobsen
The concept of Industry 4.0 – also known as the fourth industrial revolution – is mostly rooted in data, analytics, autonomous learning, and the Internet of Things. The impact of smart technology, however, is not limited to the supply chain and manufacturing operations. Opportunities to innovate exist in the sales and distribution channel as well. Of course, the ultimate goal is to reduce costs, increase productivity and market share, and drive revenue growth.
Marketo: The definitive-guide-to-lead-generation Jan 2014Brian Crotty
Here are the key points about defining a lead from the document:
- A lead is a qualified prospect that is starting to exhibit buying behavior.
- When defining a lead, companies should consider both demographic factors (e.g. title, company) and psychographic factors (e.g. needs, pain points).
- Sales and marketing must agree on a universal lead definition through open discussion. They should define what makes a "good" lead versus a "bad" lead.
- In addition to demographics, B2B companies also consider firmographics like company size, industry, and existing products when defining leads.
- Qualifying leads based on their BANT (budget, authority, need, timeline
The definitive-guide-to-lead-generationGoWebBola.com
Here are the key points from the chapter:
- A lead is a qualified prospect that is starting to exhibit buying behavior.
- To define a lead, sales and marketing need to agree on demographic and firmographic criteria like title, company size, industry, as well as BANT criteria like budget, authority, need, and timeline.
- Leads should be categorized as Marketing Qualified Leads (MQLs) or Sales Qualified Leads (SQLs) depending on their stage in the buying process.
- Sales and marketing should agree on when leads move from MQLs to SQLs and the process for notifying sales of new leads.
- Service level agreements can be implemented to ensure sales
Master the art of Social Selling to increase sales by fostering relationships...VereigenMedia1
The goal of “social selling” is to increase sales by fostering relationships with potential prospects and stimulating conversations with those customers through social media platforms. For
example, on LinkedIn, marketing specialists share advice with a targeted audience of firms in a specific area (e.g., eCommerce, SaaS, finance).
Consistent participation on the platform increases their credibility and eventually, their
clientele. This approach allows you to market your business without making your posts look
like ads.
The goal of both traditional social media marketing and social selling is to make a sale. Social media marketing focuses on branding and aiming to reach a wider audience rather than just deal closures. On the other hand, in social selling, you leverage your own personal brand to connect with potential buyers. To put it simply, social selling is sales-focused, while social media marketing is more concerned with expanding a company’s brand. It’s setting yourself up as a credible thought leader or industry expert to get more sales.
The ultimate guide_getting_started_with_social_selling (1)David Blake
This document provides guidance on implementing social selling across sales and marketing teams. It discusses how digital disruption has changed buyer behavior and the sales process. It then provides case studies of companies that have successfully adopted social selling, highlighting benefits like increased revenue and improved lead generation. The document also provides specific recommendations for how sales and marketing can operationalize social selling, such as empowering the sales team through content and tracking engagement. The overall message is that social selling requires aligning sales and marketing teams and changing processes to adapt to today's digital landscape.
This document provides an overview of social selling and how to implement it effectively. It discusses how social selling can benefit buyers, sales professionals, and marketing professionals. It also provides case studies of companies that have successfully adopted social selling. Key points covered include defining roles for sales and marketing, operationalizing social selling, incentivizing teams, and tracking results. The overall message is that social selling requires aligning sales and marketing goals and changing traditional models to remain effective in today's digital landscape where buyers research online.
This document provides an introduction to inbound marketing. It discusses key concepts like buyer personas, the buyer's journey, and using content and SEO to attract potential customers at different stages of their journey. The document is from Doidea, an inbound marketing agency, and it serves as an eBook to teach beginners the basics of inbound marketing. It covers topics like understanding your audience, creating the right content for different stages, and optimizing content to rank higher in search engines. The overall goal of the document is to explain the core components of a successful inbound marketing strategy.
LinkedIn Whitepaper: How Sales Teams Can Build Pipeline FasterRobert Koehler
The document discusses how LinkedIn Sales Navigator helps sales teams build their sales pipeline faster. It provides targeted searches to find decision makers within accounts, insights into prospects from their LinkedIn profiles, and opportunities to leverage existing connections to secure warm introductions. Users report that Sales Navigator has shortened sales cycles, increased conversion rates, and helped more reps exceed their quotas. The conclusion states that a healthy pipeline is key to business growth and rep satisfaction, and social intelligence tools like Sales Navigator are transforming prospecting into a more effective process.
This ebook covers the following topics with regard to social selling across an enterprise.
1) Balancing Relationship-Based Culture and Performance
2) Social Selling Satisfies Revenue Demand and Buyers Needs
3) Driving Organizational Change in a Social World
4) Become a Trusted Advisor & Win More Deals
5) How LinkedIn and Other Leading Companies Drive a Relationship-Focused Sales Culture
The presentation entitled, "Demand Generation Marketing: How to Successfully Create Demand through
Outsourcing" is presented by Larry Fleischman, Director of Marketing for Televerde, a leading B2B provider in sales pipeline development solutions. For more information on demand generation marketing, visit the
Televerde website at http://www.televerde.com/solutions/demand-generation-marketing.
How to Drive 10X More Leads with Social SellingMohamed Mahdy
This document provides guidance on how sales organizations can implement social selling to drive more leads. It recommends training the sales team on social media use, providing approved content for them to share, and tracking engagement and results. Implementing these seven steps can help sales teams build authority as thought leaders, nurture leads, and ultimately close more deals through social interactions.
The document presents an overview of traditional and social media prospecting strategies used in the selling process. It discusses traditional methods like networking events, referrals, print advertising, sales letters, and door-to-door sales. For social media strategies, it outlines using social media groups and LinkedIn, warm calling and email marketing, LinkedIn Sales Navigator, and social/search advertising. The selling process involves researching prospects, presenting, addressing questions, closing the sale, and maintaining relationships.
The document provides commands and steps to verify connections and check the status of different components in an eNodeB network. It includes commands to check the S1-CP, S1-UP, X2 links and handover functionality. Additional commands are provided to check the health, restart, lock/unlock cells and sectors, and verify the software package version of an eNodeB.
LoRaWAN technology uses unlicensed spectrum and provides long range connectivity for IoT devices. It uses chirp spread spectrum modulation and supports different data rates and frequency bandwidths depending on regional regulations. LoRaWAN networks have a star topology with IoT devices connecting to gateways and using a central network server. IoT devices are classified into different classes depending on their communication needs, with Class A devices allowing bidirectional communication through scheduled bursts.
More Related Content
Similar to Solving-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pdf
Traditional lead generation has undergone substantial changes in recent years, thanks to new online and social marketing techniques. In particular, the abundance of information readily available online has led to the rise of the “self-directed buyer” and the emergence of new ways to develop and qualify potential leads before passing them to sales.
In the age of the self-directed buyer, marketers need to find new ways to reach their potential customers and get heard through the noise. Instead of finding customers through mass advertising and email blasts, marketers must now focus on being found, and learn to build enduring relationships with buyers. This massive shift has sparked a huge transformation in marketing.
www.bibbyconsultinggroup.com.au
Follow us:
Instagram: http://instagram.com/bibbyconsulting
Facebook: http://facebook.com/bibbyconsulting
Twitter: http://twitter.com/bibbyconsulting
Google+:http://plus.google.com/+Bibbyconsulti...
LinkedIn: http://linkedin.com/company/bibby-con...
Bibby Consulting: http://bibbyconsultinggroup.com.au
Nathanial Bibby: http://nathanialbibby.com.au
LinkedInsider: http://linkedinsider.com.au
This document summarizes perspectives from various thought leaders on trends in social selling in 2014-2015. Key trends highlighted include: the rise of content marketing and social networks leveling the playing field; social selling tools gaining maturity and a push for ROI metrics; and the need for sales and marketing integration and cultural change among salesforces. Thought leaders predict social selling will go mainstream in 2015 and bring changes to sales training, management, and expectations of sales reps.
Strategic B2B Marketing: Great insights for beginners and experience Marketer...Dolly Gujarathi
Moving from tactical to strategic B2B marketing
1. Tactical marketing focuses on generating leads through mass campaigns but often fails to properly identify customer needs and qualify leads. This results in low-quality leads that sales ignores and missed opportunities.
2. Strategic marketing takes a more structured approach to define goals, understand target markets and audiences, and implement integrated programs. This includes in-depth audience analysis and long-term lead nurturing strategies.
3. Strategic marketing is shown to generate 50% more sales-ready leads at 33% lower cost per lead. It also reduces the percentage of ignored marketing leads from as high as 80% to 25%. Taking a strategic approach improves lead quality and return on
Introduction to integrated marketing sales and marketing alignmentNuno Fraga Coelho
This document discusses the importance of alignment between sales and marketing teams. It provides 7 steps to achieve alignment:
1. Get sales and marketing to agree on buyer profiles and prospect traits.
2. Develop an integrated content strategy by auditing current assets and ensuring content meets buyer needs.
3. Agree on common metrics and definitions like what qualifies a "sales ready" lead to ensure both teams are measuring the same things.
4. Establish SLAs that set targets for lead generation and handoff between teams to increase accountability.
5. Create a clear process for handing off leads from marketing to sales and feedback loops.
6. Develop a shared sales/marketing pipeline for increased visibility
This document discusses how companies can better differentiate themselves and increase revenues through "Thoughtful Selling". It notes that customers now find most product information online beforehand, so companies need to close the "insight gap" between their brand and products by providing unique insights. It recommends categorizing customers into "Take Us Forward", "Model It", and "Prove It" groups and matching insights to each group's needs. Additionally, it emphasizes aligning marketing campaigns and sales conversations by integrating efforts between departments to create high-performance programs grounded in unique insights.
Though marketing and sales have different objectives, greater collaboration can help both teams. When marketing and sales communicate more regularly and work as a unified team, sharing goals and responsibilities, companies see 20% more revenue. Regular meetings allow each side to understand how their work impacts opportunities and sales. By collecting and sharing common data through a joint dashboard, marketing and sales can better track leads from initial contact through closing deals.
This document provides a guide to lead nurturing strategies and best practices. It is divided into four parts that cover:
1) Defining lead nurturing and its importance for building relationships with prospects over time.
2) Basic lead nurturing campaigns including processing new leads and regular "stay in touch" communications.
3) Advanced lead nurturing techniques like accelerator and lifecycle campaigns.
4) Calculating the ROI of lead nurturing through worksheets and case studies.
The guide offers advice for marketers at all levels on developing effective long-term lead nurturing programs.
Industry 4.0: Technology Insights for Channel Program OptimizationSeth Jacobsen
The concept of Industry 4.0 – also known as the fourth industrial revolution – is mostly rooted in data, analytics, autonomous learning, and the Internet of Things. The impact of smart technology, however, is not limited to the supply chain and manufacturing operations. Opportunities to innovate exist in the sales and distribution channel as well. Of course, the ultimate goal is to reduce costs, increase productivity and market share, and drive revenue growth.
Marketo: The definitive-guide-to-lead-generation Jan 2014Brian Crotty
Here are the key points about defining a lead from the document:
- A lead is a qualified prospect that is starting to exhibit buying behavior.
- When defining a lead, companies should consider both demographic factors (e.g. title, company) and psychographic factors (e.g. needs, pain points).
- Sales and marketing must agree on a universal lead definition through open discussion. They should define what makes a "good" lead versus a "bad" lead.
- In addition to demographics, B2B companies also consider firmographics like company size, industry, and existing products when defining leads.
- Qualifying leads based on their BANT (budget, authority, need, timeline
The definitive-guide-to-lead-generationGoWebBola.com
Here are the key points from the chapter:
- A lead is a qualified prospect that is starting to exhibit buying behavior.
- To define a lead, sales and marketing need to agree on demographic and firmographic criteria like title, company size, industry, as well as BANT criteria like budget, authority, need, and timeline.
- Leads should be categorized as Marketing Qualified Leads (MQLs) or Sales Qualified Leads (SQLs) depending on their stage in the buying process.
- Sales and marketing should agree on when leads move from MQLs to SQLs and the process for notifying sales of new leads.
- Service level agreements can be implemented to ensure sales
Master the art of Social Selling to increase sales by fostering relationships...VereigenMedia1
The goal of “social selling” is to increase sales by fostering relationships with potential prospects and stimulating conversations with those customers through social media platforms. For
example, on LinkedIn, marketing specialists share advice with a targeted audience of firms in a specific area (e.g., eCommerce, SaaS, finance).
Consistent participation on the platform increases their credibility and eventually, their
clientele. This approach allows you to market your business without making your posts look
like ads.
The goal of both traditional social media marketing and social selling is to make a sale. Social media marketing focuses on branding and aiming to reach a wider audience rather than just deal closures. On the other hand, in social selling, you leverage your own personal brand to connect with potential buyers. To put it simply, social selling is sales-focused, while social media marketing is more concerned with expanding a company’s brand. It’s setting yourself up as a credible thought leader or industry expert to get more sales.
The ultimate guide_getting_started_with_social_selling (1)David Blake
This document provides guidance on implementing social selling across sales and marketing teams. It discusses how digital disruption has changed buyer behavior and the sales process. It then provides case studies of companies that have successfully adopted social selling, highlighting benefits like increased revenue and improved lead generation. The document also provides specific recommendations for how sales and marketing can operationalize social selling, such as empowering the sales team through content and tracking engagement. The overall message is that social selling requires aligning sales and marketing teams and changing processes to adapt to today's digital landscape.
This document provides an overview of social selling and how to implement it effectively. It discusses how social selling can benefit buyers, sales professionals, and marketing professionals. It also provides case studies of companies that have successfully adopted social selling. Key points covered include defining roles for sales and marketing, operationalizing social selling, incentivizing teams, and tracking results. The overall message is that social selling requires aligning sales and marketing goals and changing traditional models to remain effective in today's digital landscape where buyers research online.
This document provides an introduction to inbound marketing. It discusses key concepts like buyer personas, the buyer's journey, and using content and SEO to attract potential customers at different stages of their journey. The document is from Doidea, an inbound marketing agency, and it serves as an eBook to teach beginners the basics of inbound marketing. It covers topics like understanding your audience, creating the right content for different stages, and optimizing content to rank higher in search engines. The overall goal of the document is to explain the core components of a successful inbound marketing strategy.
LinkedIn Whitepaper: How Sales Teams Can Build Pipeline FasterRobert Koehler
The document discusses how LinkedIn Sales Navigator helps sales teams build their sales pipeline faster. It provides targeted searches to find decision makers within accounts, insights into prospects from their LinkedIn profiles, and opportunities to leverage existing connections to secure warm introductions. Users report that Sales Navigator has shortened sales cycles, increased conversion rates, and helped more reps exceed their quotas. The conclusion states that a healthy pipeline is key to business growth and rep satisfaction, and social intelligence tools like Sales Navigator are transforming prospecting into a more effective process.
This ebook covers the following topics with regard to social selling across an enterprise.
1) Balancing Relationship-Based Culture and Performance
2) Social Selling Satisfies Revenue Demand and Buyers Needs
3) Driving Organizational Change in a Social World
4) Become a Trusted Advisor & Win More Deals
5) How LinkedIn and Other Leading Companies Drive a Relationship-Focused Sales Culture
The presentation entitled, "Demand Generation Marketing: How to Successfully Create Demand through
Outsourcing" is presented by Larry Fleischman, Director of Marketing for Televerde, a leading B2B provider in sales pipeline development solutions. For more information on demand generation marketing, visit the
Televerde website at http://www.televerde.com/solutions/demand-generation-marketing.
How to Drive 10X More Leads with Social SellingMohamed Mahdy
This document provides guidance on how sales organizations can implement social selling to drive more leads. It recommends training the sales team on social media use, providing approved content for them to share, and tracking engagement and results. Implementing these seven steps can help sales teams build authority as thought leaders, nurture leads, and ultimately close more deals through social interactions.
The document presents an overview of traditional and social media prospecting strategies used in the selling process. It discusses traditional methods like networking events, referrals, print advertising, sales letters, and door-to-door sales. For social media strategies, it outlines using social media groups and LinkedIn, warm calling and email marketing, LinkedIn Sales Navigator, and social/search advertising. The selling process involves researching prospects, presenting, addressing questions, closing the sale, and maintaining relationships.
Similar to Solving-Sales-and-Marketing-Alignment.pdf (20)
The document provides commands and steps to verify connections and check the status of different components in an eNodeB network. It includes commands to check the S1-CP, S1-UP, X2 links and handover functionality. Additional commands are provided to check the health, restart, lock/unlock cells and sectors, and verify the software package version of an eNodeB.
LoRaWAN technology uses unlicensed spectrum and provides long range connectivity for IoT devices. It uses chirp spread spectrum modulation and supports different data rates and frequency bandwidths depending on regional regulations. LoRaWAN networks have a star topology with IoT devices connecting to gateways and using a central network server. IoT devices are classified into different classes depending on their communication needs, with Class A devices allowing bidirectional communication through scheduled bursts.
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This document summarizes key concepts from chapters on atomic structure and quantum mechanics. It describes electromagnetic radiation and its wave-particle duality. Matter is found to have both particle and wave properties. The atomic spectrum of hydrogen is explained by Bohr's model of discrete electron energy levels. Later, the quantum mechanical model using Schrodinger's equation provides a more accurate description by defining atomic orbitals using quantum numbers. Orbital shapes, energies, and electron configurations are also summarized.
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Chapter 1 introduces fundamental concepts like the three states of matter, elements and compounds, and physical and chemical properties.
Chapter 2 discusses atomic structure, including Dalton's atomic theory, early experiments that led to modern atomic models, and the organization of the periodic table. It also introduces molecules, ions, and chemical bonding.
Chapter 3 covers stoichiometry, including atomic masses, the mole concept, and percent composition of compounds.
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This document provides an overview of solving problems involving ages through different methods like forming equations, using tricks, and practice problems on numbers. It discusses techniques like using ratios, looking for divisible values, tracking changes in ratios over time, and setting up equations with different timelines. Sample problems are provided covering topics like ratios of ages, sums and differences of ages, and properties of two-digit numbers. The document aims to explain easier methods for solving age and number problems to save time on exams.
ABB pursued a strategy of rapid growth through acquisitions in the 1990s while decentralizing operations. In the 2000s, ABB emphasized quality, efficiency, and technological innovation. Under CEO Percy Barnevik, ABB used a multidomestic approach and strategies like customer focus, quality management, and time-based management. Barnevik and later CEOs restructured ABB's organization to improve margins, returns, and reliability. ABB's power products strategy focused on fixing transformers, streamlining products, and updating high-voltage platforms. For power systems, ABB aimed to increase margins, leverage existing customers, and focus on core activities like transmission while pushing new applications.
This document provides an overview of ABB Group and its operations in Greece. ABB is a global leader in power and automation technologies, with 145,000 employees in around 100 countries. In Greece, ABB has been operating since the 1920s and currently has around 285 employees. It has major operations in power systems, process automation, discrete automation and motion, and low voltage products. ABB in Greece has annual revenues of around 90-100 million euros and serves over 1,700 active clients.
Jazz originated in 19th century New Orleans, influenced by African culture. It is characterized by improvisation, especially in styles like free jazz. Blues is one of the most well-known jazz genres, often associated with sadness emotions. Jazz musicians typically perform in small groups or big bands using instruments like piano, saxophone, trumpet, and trombone, and sometimes include vocalists. Louis Armstrong was a highly influential trumpeter and vocalist born in 1901 in New Orleans who helped develop jazz in the 1920s with his bands Hot Five and Hot Seven before gaining international fame later in his career. He made scatting famous and continued performing jazz until his death in 1971.
Mind maps are a visual way to organize ideas and information. They allow you to generate ideas, see relationships between topics, and improve memory. To create a mind map, use shapes, lines, images, keywords and a central idea to visually connect different branches of a topic. Examples show mind maps for a conference presentation, vacation planning, and class notes.
This document profiles 50 famous people who experienced failure or setbacks before achieving great success. It describes how many of the most well-known innovators, artists, and leaders faced numerous rejections and failures in their early careers, including Henry Ford, Walt Disney, Albert Einstein, Oprah Winfrey, J.K. Rowling, The Beatles, and Michael Jordan, before eventually attaining worldwide fame and recognition for their accomplishments.
This chapter discusses cell site development and the types of cell sites used in wireless networks. It describes macro cell sites as large, conventional sites and metro cell sites as smaller, lower-power sites concealed in fixtures. The chapter outlines factors considered in cell site planning such as coverage needs, zoning restrictions, and aesthetics. It also discusses trends toward adding small cell sites and using distributed antenna systems (DAS) to enhance coverage.
Telegram is a messaging platform that ushers in a new era of communication. Available for Android, Windows, Mac, and Linux, Telegram offers simplicity, privacy, synchronization across devices, speed, and powerful features. It allows users to create their own stickers with a user-friendly editor. With robust encryption, Telegram ensures message security and even offers self-destructing messages. The platform is open, with an API and source code accessible to everyone, making it a secure and social environment where groups can accommodate up to 200,000 members. Customize your messenger experience with Telegram's expressive features.
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Explore the latest trends in Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and discover how modern practices are transforming business visibility. This document delves into the shift from keyword optimization to user intent, highlighting key trends such as voice search optimization, artificial intelligence, mobile-first indexing, and the importance of E-A-T principles. Enhance your online presence with expert insights from Digital Marketing Lab, your partner in maximizing SEO performance.
STUDY ON THE DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY OF HUZHOU TOURISMAJHSSR Journal
ABSTRACT: Huzhou has rich tourism resources, as early as a considerable development since the reform and
opening up, especially in recent years, Huzhou tourism has ushered in a new period of development
opportunities. At present, Huzhou tourism has become one of the most characteristic tourist cities on the East
China tourism line. With the development of Huzhou City, the tourism industry has been further improved, and
the tourism degree of the whole city has further increased the transformation and upgrading of the tourism
industry. However, the development of tourism in Huzhou City still lags far behind the tourism development of
major cities in East China. This round of research mainly analyzes the current development of tourism in
Huzhou City, on the basis of analyzing the specific situation, pointed out that the current development of
Huzhou tourism problems, and then analyzes these problems one by one, and put forward some specific
solutions, so as to promote the further rapid development of tourism in Huzhou City.
KEYWORDS:Huzhou; Travel; Development
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This tutorial presentation offers a beginner-friendly guide to using THREADS, Instagram's messaging app. It covers the basics of account setup, privacy settings, and explores the core features such as close friends lists, photo and video sharing, creative tools, and status updates. With practical tips and instructions, this tutorial will empower you to use THREADS effectively and stay connected with your close friends on Instagram in a private and engaging way.
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EASY TUTORIAL OF HOW TO USE REMINI BY: FEBLESS HERNANEFebless Hernane
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Lifecycle of a GME Trader: From Newbie to Diamond Handsmediavestfzllc
Your phone buzzes with a Reddit notification. It's the WallStreetBets forum, a cacophony of memes, rocketship emojis, and fervent discussions about Gamestop (GME) stock. A spark ignites within you - a mix of internet bravado, a rebellious urge to topple the hedge funds (remember Mr. Mayo?), and maybe that one late-night YouTube rabbit hole about tendies. You decide to YOLO (you only live once, right?).
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2. The lack of alignment between sales and marketing is an age-old problem that is
often addressed, yet rarely solved. Years ago, businesses didn’t need to worry about
the alignment because customers gathered in the same places, making it easy to
keep sales and marketing messages unified. But these methods no longer work in
today’s multichannel, buyer-centric world. The shift in the buying process underscores
the need for alignment.
Between poorly targeted messages, sales representatives that fail to understand the
potential customer, and the disconnect between sales and marketing, companies
are at a competitive disadvantage. According to Nielsen, 41% of online ads reach
the wrong audience. SiriusDecisions found that 70% of content goes unread. In
the worst news for the sales force, 72% of cold calls result in outright rejections.
And the success rate of cold calls to appointments is 0.3%, according to a Baylor
University study.
Why are sales and marketing still siloed? Companies know that sales and
marketing need to be aligned, but they either don’t know how to start or where the
discrepancies lie — is it communication? How leads are defined? Or do they have
misconceptions about each other that need to be addressed? As companies grow,
it is harder to track inconsistent messages, making them harder to fix. How do you
create a partnership between sales and marketing to move from generic messages to
a customized approach?
According to a study by InsideView and Demand Gen Report, 49% of respondents
said a communication breakdown is the greatest culprit. Broken and flawed
processes (43%), as well as sales and marketing being measured by different
metrics (40%), rounded out the reasons for the gap between sales and marketing.
Understanding the hurdles can help B2B organizations overcome their challenges.
To address this vexing problem, we created this guide to help you recognize the
causes of sales and marketing misalignment, and to formalize your processes around
measurement, messaging and everything in between.
Use this guide as your playbook to ask questions, build your programs and work
with your sales and marketing teams, as well as to learn best practices from the top
companies and leaders who’ve put them into practice.
Alex Hisaka
Content Marketing Manager
LinkedIn Sales Solutions
A NOTE TO THE
PROGRESSIVE
SALES LEADER
3. // S
TABLE OF CONTENTS
3 Step 1: Understand and identify your target buyer
5
Ask the Expert: Julie Ekstrom, SVP of Sales, IDG
Enterprise
6
Ask the Expert: Roxane Bal, Senior Insights Analyst,
LinkedIn Sales Solutions
7
Ask the Expert: Carola van der Linden, Global Virtual
Marketing Manager, Cisco
8 Step 2: Identify the gaps in sales and marketing
9
Ask the Expert: Rosemary Clancy, Social Media Sales
Program Manager, Oracle
10
Ask the Expert: Andrew Stein, Business Operations
Manager, LinkedIn Sales Solutions
11
Ask the Expert: Giles House, Chief Marketing Officer,
CallidusCloud
12 Step 3: Develop processes to bridge the gaps
13
Ask the Expert: Andrea Austin, VP of Enterprise Sales,
InsideView
14
Ask the Expert: Patrick Chen, Senior Manager,
Demand Generation, NA, LinkedIn Sales Solutions
15
Ask the Expert: Alissa Dettelbach, Marketing
Manager, Demand Generation, PGi
16
Step 4: Tools to improve sales and marketing
alignment
18
Ask the Expert: Josh Normand, VP of Strategic Sales,
Hootsuite
19
Ask the Expert: Richard Essig, VP of Corporate
Strategy and Development, Nolan Financial
20
Ask the Expert: Marcus Murphy, Global Partner
Development Manager, Infusionsoft
21
Ask the Expert: Debbie Farese, Director of Marketing,
Hubspot
22 Case Studies
23 Case study: Dell
25 Case study: American Express
27 Case Study: HCL
29 Conclusion
4. Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 3
UNDERSTANDANDIDENTIFY
YOURTARGETBUYER
Creating a marketing and sales strategy without a clear understanding of your
audience segments is like going out to sea without any navigational tools. You’re
out taking action, but you’re not working toward a specific goal. This is a huge
waste of time and money without clear potential for good ROI.
Who is your audience?
Marketing buyer profiles are limited in their
potential to uncover motivations and buying
patterns. And these can change based on
different regions and verticals. Your potential
buyer can be the CEO, a VP of sales or
marketing, or even a sales rep that influences
the decision-making process. Having context
on each type of audience segment is going
to help you market and sell.
What are their most pressing issues,
problems and desires?
Every person has something that keeps
him or her up at night. Whatever the issue,
whether it’s longstanding or short-term, it
should be the main point of the discussion
and invitation into their lives. Understand the
predominant problem and what’s driving
people to seek out products and services
like yours. Then, focus on establishing
52% of sales and
marketing professionals
point to lack of sufficient
data to support
segmentation as a
stumbling block
52%
74% of sales and
marketing professionals
cite customer intelligence
as the key to successful
prospecting
74%
Source: InsideView/Demand Gen Report
Step 1:
empathy with the audience you’re planning
to serve. Craft a clear offer based on the
positions you want to take.
Where are they coming from?
Understand what channels they are on and
their consumption habits. For example,
do they read blogs? Do they subscribe
to emails? They might prefer short-form,
interactive content, or they may want you
to dive deep for 1,000 words or more into
the topic in lengthy white papers. To really
dig into this, you have to understand how
marketing is speaking to these buyers today.
Both sales and marketing agree that
knowing your audience is key:
5. Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 4
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 4
BMC has found that their historic
buyer is transforming — quickly —
and now many other portions of an
organization are emerging as buyers
and implementers of their software.
As a result, there has been an effort at
BMC to develop new messaging and
narratives in order to resonate with
this changing buyer. This, of course,
has a major impact on the sales teams
and ensuring they are trained on this
new messaging and new buyer. Social
selling is going to continue to be a
cornerstone to their success.
BMC
SOFTWARE
SUCCESS
STORY
Step 1: Understand and
identify your target buyer
6. LI: How do your reps identify and learn
about their prospects?
JE: Like many industries, the world of tech
marketing is full of movement, and new titles have
been added over the last few years, expanding the
traditional types of roles we work with. Fortunately,
we have a team approach where sales team
members, account coordinators and marketing
work together to identify prospects. This includes
speaking with existing contacts about expanded
teams, using social — like LinkedIn — to learn about
contacts at a specific company, as well as capturing
inbound leads from content marketing promotions.
Once a prospect is identified, our sales executives
manage outreach to learn about this person’s
challenges and build a relationship to help them
find the best solutions.
LI: What role do social channels play in
the learning process?
JE: Research we conduct among tech decision-
makers explains that prospects want a knowledgeable
sales representative, from understanding their
industry to having a deep understanding of
solutions that can help solve problems.
Prior to calls, our team does its due diligence
on companies by reading their websites and
announcements.Additionally,we explore social feeds
to learn about product launches,event participation
and new content to understand how they are currently
promoting solutions. All of this research allows for
an engaged conversation. These conversations
are the foundation for future relationships,
and the more prepared our team is, the better
conversations and follow-up will be.
LI: What information do sales and
marketingteamsneedinordertomaximize
the performance of social channels?
JE: We want our sales team to be viewed as a
partner when they contact a prospect, whether
through email or a social channel. To help set this
tone, many of our sales executives have refreshed
their social profiles to outline how they can help a
B2B tech marketer, instead of skills that a recruiter
may be interested in, like strong negotiation skills.
Our sales executives are company ambassadors
across social. We encourage them to use the
channels that our customers use and to follow/like
the company pages, as well as the individuals that
they work with. They also share relevant messages
crafted by the marketing team, as well as their own
posts, to blend insights and personality.
LI: How are you using social channels to
bridge geographies among sales reps
who work in different regions?
JE: We are currently using social more for external
communications. We have found that weekly
conference calls are still one of the best ways
to outline announcements, share wins and ask
questions. Our CRM includes dashboards on
customer engagement and closed business, which
provides additional insight and details to the entire
sales team. Our marketing team also sends a weekly
email that calls out new tools the sales team can use
for customer and prospect engagement.
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 5
JULIE EKSTROM
Senior VP of Sales, IDG Enterprise
7. LI: How do social channels like
LinkedIn help sales reps better
understand their buyers?
RB: Social channels are key business intelligence
tools to make conversations with buyers more
meaningful! They empower sales reps to acquire
insights about their buyers at three different
levels: learn about companies, specific groups
of buyers and individual decision-makers. Reps
leverage social channels to stay informed on
a company’s latest news and updates (e.g., a
change in their strategy), to discover trends in
their clients’ industries (e.g., what the buying
process looks like), or to understand what matters
for a key contact or stakeholder.
LI: How do those same channels help
marketers define audiences and
develop customized messages?
RB: Social channels enable marketers to access
the most up-to-date information to engage with
their target audiences in a relevant way, and there
are four ways they do so:
1)
Find intelligence and reports about
specific audiences;
2)
Identify and search for audiences with granular
targeting based on members’ profiles;
3)
Reach out to them with custom messages at
scale; and
4)
Measure the performance of these messages
using analytics.
LI: How does your team use specific
LinkedIntoolstogatheraudienceinsights?
RB: My team turns complex data into actionable
and highly impactful insights by leveraging
LinkedIn’s rich data set, and conducting surveys
in order to help our clients and sales teams
make data-driven decisions. By analyzing data in
aggregate, we are able to target custom audiences
to understand their behaviors and opinions.
LI: How do those insights help you
deliver customized messages?
RB: In a world where it’s hard to reach
buyers and cut through the noise, my team
harnesses the power of data by distilling it into
recommendations and best-practices. We advise
sales and marketing on whom they should contact,
when they should contact them and what content
is most relevant to engage with them.
For example, one of my colleagues analyzed
how a salesperson’s relationship with a prospect
impacts the likelihood of an InMail response. One
of the takeaways was that sales professionals see
a 46% lift in InMail acceptance rates when having
at least one commonality with a prospect versus
having no commonalities.
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 6
ROXANE BAL
Senior Insights Analyst, LinkedIn Sales Solutions
8. LI: How does your marketing team
work with sales to develop the right
buyer personas?
CV: We create buyer personas in Cisco to
identify the perfect buyer, the perfect person
that we could target with a marketing message
based off segments, job descriptions and based
on where a person is currently in the buyer
journey. We have four definitions of customers
that we’re targeting. We really emphasize
the personalization of marketing, so we also
encourage our sales teams to send personalized
messages as much as possible. Although the
buyer persona may give us very important
information about the buyer, like where they are,
we also keep in mind where the buyer fits in the
process, which is important for the salesperson
to know.
LI: What types of data help you define
audience segments?
CV: We’ve segmented the audience and defined
each type of customer so our salespeople can
map prospects against those segments. The data
is based on the number of employees that work
for that company and where there are industry
spenders. When there are 0-99 employees, we
call it a small company; 100-250, a small business;
250-999, it’s in-market or commercial, which is the
segment I work in. We have a segmented sales
organization, meaning we have a sales group that
operates in the Cisco office and uses collaboration
tools and social platforms to have an ongoing
dialogue with their particular customers.
LI: What role do social channels like
LinkedIn play?
CV: We teach our sales teams, both internally-
based teams, as well as those in the field, that
the buyer’s journey has changed dramatically.
Seventy percent of the buyer’s journey happens
online; picking up the phone or sending an email
is rare. If we cold call, it goes to voicemail, and
we never receive anything back unless we have
an established relationship with that customer.
Cisco has Twitter handles for countries and topics
like the solutions we sell. We also have LinkedIn
and Facebook communities because, in addition
to having a corporate social visibility, we also
require a sales presence on social media. Twitter
and LinkedIn are what our audience uses the
most, so it’s important for our salespeople to
have a presence on those same platforms. We
also have LinkedIn Sales Navigator to support
our sales community so they could learn more
about customers and do social learning — find
out what kind of questions they are posting, what
communities they are a part of and what kind
of blogs they post. It gives Cisco great insight
into the contacts at a company we want to sell to
and how that company is broken down. Another
advantage of LinkedIn is finding lines of business
within LinkedIn Sales Navigator. All of these
channels have become the default for how a Cisco
sales rep works throughout the day.
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 7
CAROLA VAN DER LINDEN
Global Virtual Marketing Manager, Cisco
9. Driving Social Media Adoption and Revenue | 8
Driving Social Media Adoption and Revenue | 8
IDENTIFY THE GAPS IN
SALES AND MARKETING
Every B2B company identifies gaps at some point in the sales cycle, but it can
be difficult sometimes to isolate the root cause. Here are some steps to take to
find your gaps and begin plugging them.
CREATE AN ASSESSMENT
FRAMEWORK
Work with your leadership team to identify
current shortcomings and then set goals
for where you want the team to end up for
better alignment.
Analyze prior sales and marketing
performance
If you’re going to improve your win/loss ratio,
it’s important that you understand your prior
performance through the sales cycle. This
allows you to spot patterns or trends that may
have relevance to why your opportunities end
up as a win, a loss or a no decision.
Assess current sales and marketing
processes
Identify what are the key sales and marketing
process gaps. Consider the following:
•
What steps need to be added, deleted or
improved?
•
Has your organization defined the ideal way
to sell and market its solutions?
•
Does it have a proven, repeatable process
for generating leads and converting them
through stages into orders and repeat orders?
Assess current sales and marketing strategy
Attention often turns to strategic gaps,
which often is outside of the control of the
salesperson who has an important bearing
on success. Consider examining:
• Target customer profile and market focus
• Messaging and proposition
• Implementation
• Short-term focus and sporadic sales drives
• Demand generation
• Position as expert in the industry
Survey customers
Feedback from customers can provide
you with a plethora of knowledge about
your own sales process shortcomings. For
example, you can ask questions like:
•
Did the sales team establish realistic
expectations for the implementation time
frame and subsequent results?
•
Which methods of engagement do you
prefer with your account executive?
•
Did we take too long to respond to
questions or provide you with requested
information during the sales process?
Step 2:
WHERE ARE WE NOW
Common practice
Forecast sales
Past performance
Perceived Needs
Today’s skills and sales training
Strategy (what we say)
Management view
Our solutions
How we sell
WHERE WE WANT TO BE
Best practice
Sales target
Future potential
Real needs
Tomorrow’s skills and sales training
Implementation (what we do)
Team view
Market needs
How our customers buy
10. LI: What factors led you to rethink
the relationship between sales and
marketing?
RC: At Oracle, we have a program of sales
reps who work with marketing to leverage and
execute sales campaigns for EMEA. Specifically,
my team works closely with marketing to help
localize messages and identify hot topics within
various industry sectors. Since social selling is
about engaging within customers in a meaningful
way, we do that by sharing relevant and valuable
content. Our inside-sales teams really leverage
the Oracle message with their network, and that
employee advocacy approach really amplifies the
marketing messages. Since sales reps know their
customers, they’ll localize or translate messages
so that it resonates with their customers. This
leads to increased engagement rates, and the
idea of globalization has led to our sales and
marketing teams really collaborating well.
LI: How did you analyze past
performance?
RC: The key reason for having a social selling
program is so that we can engage with our
customers on platforms where they are active.
When a rep has a territory, we want them to have
touch points with those accounts,have saved leads
within Sales Navigator and then be able to speak to
their pain points.To measure this,we use a blend
of marketing metrics: content sharing,customer
engagement,influence on pipeline,tracking
opportunities and correlation to sales performance.
We look at engagement rates, reach, our Engage
with Insights score, our Social Selling Index (SSI) at an
organization and team level, and how SSI correlates
to performance.
LI: What were the key takeaways?
RC: Social selling is a fundamental sales skill and
is something that is in the DNA of Oracle reps,
so we work together with marketing to create
and deliver valuable content at different stages
of the sales cycle. We do social media listening
to understand the customer, so we really know
our customer’s voice. We encourage sales reps
to share information in a “411 way,” to show they
are up-to-date with industry trends, and to share
both pieces of marketing content and pieces that
are interesting to them. Sales is not overly reliant
on marketing material, and we help marketing by
showing them examples of what works well and
what reactions we’re getting. We can give real-time
feedback from our reps.
LI: How did the interplay of sales and
marketing change and what has been
its impact?
RC: Our marketing message now has an
expanded reach because sales reps are leveraging
the network better. Another big impact is a
heightened customer experience. Sales reps are
now in touch with their customers on a daily basis,
they get better feedback and can understanding
pain points better, which in turn helps us develop
better campaigns that are focused on overcoming
those challenges. This has all given sales and
marketing the ability to be more agile together.
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 9
ROSEMARY CLANCY
Social Media Sales Program Manager, Oracle
11. LI: Why is sales and marketing alignment
important in any organization?
AS: Sales and marketing alignment is important
because marketing should provide sales with
leverage, and therefore sales reps should be more
productive due to marketing efforts. The only way
to make sure that truly happens is to make sure
they’re aligned. For example, if a salesperson
can spend a certain percentage of their time
per day on inbound as opposed to prospecting
themselves, assuming those leads are good and
they’ve expressed what makes a lead good, they
should be able to open more opportunities and
close more bookings as a result. Also, imagine that
with every dollar that you pump into marketing,
you can effectively raise the group of sales reps’
quotas by that dollar, and quantify a way to make
sure marketing is fully aligned with sales.
LI: How can marketers improve the
quality of their leads for sales?
AS: There are two schools of thought — the first is
to target selectively and to make sure the inbound
leads that marketing is driving are well aligned
with the types of leads that sales is looking to convert.
The second one is for marketing to drive as much
awareness and as many leads as they can.In order to
do so, they need to have a process in place, such as
lead scoring, so that only the cream of the crop gets
sent on to sales reps.At LinkedIn,we try to do both of
those,both broad-reaching and targeted campaigns.
LI: How does sales and marketing
alignment affect lead conversion
and bookings?
AS: Assuming marketing is providing the leverage
they are supposed to, sales should be more
productive and be able to increase their quotas.
Their alignment is key, because it’s the qualitative
feedback that you get from sales reps that marketing
should incorporate into their campaigns and who
they target. Sometimes it’s making sure everyone is
on the same page, consistently converting to the top
and bottom of the funnel.
LI: What is your best piece of advice
to organizations that are struggling to
align their sales and marketing teams?
AS: It’s critical to align those teams, but it can be
painful. The first step to alignment is making sure
the lines of communication are open between
the two teams. Another way to encourage
collaboration is a distinct focus on the customer
rather than the internal teams. It is also important
to stick with the final goal and be patient. Sales
and marketing alignment takes time, but the
final product is having a well-oiled machine,
which is best for the company. Fight through the
challenges; it may get worse before it gets better,
but it will get better.
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 10
ANDREW STEIN
Business Operations Manager, LinkedIn Sales Solutions
12. LI: How did you identify the
disconnections between sales
and marketing?
GH: By looking at our data, we could see a lot
of leads being passed over. They were stalled,
and we found that there was a bit of a disconnect
between sales and marketing. Also, we discovered
that the sales team wasn’t always following the
procedure to move the leads forward. We were
scratching our heads, wondering if [our processes
were] working, because we didn’t see it getting
very far down the pipeline. There was definitely
a breakdown, and we needed to remedy it,
along with aligning on expectations, rules of
engagement and a redefined process.
Other than examining data, salespeople are good
at giving feedback. Ours gave us feedback on
what the definition of a lead was so that we could
keep iterating on that. They also let us know what
they wanted to take on, and we changed their
workload based on what they already had on their
plates and their sales capacity. It’s a fluid thing,
rather than a point-in-time exercise.
LI: What role did data play in the
identification of the gaps?
GH: With our data, we were looking at the funnel,
our marketing automation system and our CRM to
identify where activity was occurring. In the end,
we got in deep with leads and the creation dates
on opportunities. One of the things we found
was that sales was recreating and re-entering
opportunities instead of traversing through the
lead record. It was an educational opportunity, so it
helps to dig into data to find things like this.
LI: How did realignment impact your
sales and marketing strategy?
GH: Strategically, it didn’t impact it. Our intent
from the beginning was to be well-aligned. It’s
something you absolutely have to do; it’s not
an optional, “If I’ve got time, I’ll talk about it with
my sales leader, head of marketing or head of
demand generation.” You can’t be successful if
sales isn’t closing on leads. There can be none of
this “marketing first, we’ll lead the way to the deal.”
The deal doesn’t happen without sales closing it.
Our job in marketing is to find the meat; their job
is to kill it, skin it and bring it home to the cave.
It’s important to make sure they’re following up
on the leads you’ve invested in, and it’s important
that you do your due diligence by checking in with
salespeople and leadership at every level. Make
sure they’re well-fed, or if there’s too much on their
plate, dial back and qualify prospects harder.
LI: How has this realignment helped your
company connect marketing to revenue?
GH: Operationally, we’re able to attribute a lot
more revenue to marketing programs, which is
exactly what you need to do when you’re battling
for budget in the boardroom. It has allowed us
to demonstrate a lot more ROI on marketing and
personnel, which has allowed us to continue to
grow the team, and grow in excess of 30% quarter
on quarter.
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 11
GILES HOUSE
Chief Marketing Officer, CallidusCloud
13. Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 12
DEVELOP PROCESSESTO
BRIDGETHE GAPS
Realigning both teams toward the same revenue goal is an important first step,
but the strategy for getting there needs to be defined together. Have your sales
and marketing teams work together to achieve the following:
Align on goals
Arrive at a shared understanding and agree
on the business objectives both teams want
to pursue as a springboard for the next steps.
Determine the lead process
Create a defined workflow that helps the
organization track the steps from the point at
which a lead is generated to when the lead is
handed off to sales. You can start by defining
your sales pipeline stages in your CRM. The
textbook approach is similar to this:
Inquiry → MQL (marketing qualified lead)
→ SAO (sales accepted opportunity)
→ SQO (sales qualified opportunity)
→ Closed/Won deal
This process may evolve as you try different
campaigns and get feedback from sales.
Develop a qualified lead definition
Determine when a lead is ready to be passed
to sales. This should include information
such as company size, seniority, industry and
behavioral information, such as whether the
lead attended an event, requested content or
asked for a demo.
Determine the lead hand-off process
Define which leads will be handed to sales
and how sales will follow up on these leads.
Develop Service Level Agreements (SLAs)
Resolve what the performance metrics will
be that marketing and sales must deliver. For
example, marketing will agree to deliver a
predetermined number of qualified leads,
and sales will agree to follow up on qualified
leads in a specific time frame.
Step 3:
“
We’re going to see where
salespeople need to be much
more aware and attuned to their
respective markets. They’re going
to have to go beyond what the
marketing operations can provide,
and really get into their own
unique viewpoints and develop
a lot of those marketing skills on
an individual basis. I think from
a marketing perspective, we’re
going to continue to be more
mindful of what the sales needs
are, particularly as more and
more of the sales process is really
happening online.”
— David Gadarian,
Head of Digital and Social Media
at Dassault Systèmes
14. LI: Has the alignment of the sales
and marketing departments helped
lift sales?
AA: The focus of sales is best placed on
progressing qualified/accepted opportunities
through the sales cycle, which has complexity
and needs the right amount of pressure to ensure
momentum is not lost. Sales and marketing
teams ultimately share the responsibility of
demand generation and sales development
(campaign execution, event participation, etc.).
An aligned sales and marketing team has trust
that allows marketing to focus on top-of-funnel
lead generation and deeper in the funnel
opportunity nudging, and allows sales to drive
those opportunities to a win. The trust and shared
responsibility comes from alignment. When trust
does not exist, both teams try and blame each
other for the hiccups that will always occur in the
course of our efforts.
LI: What impact has realignment had
on overall workflow?
AA: The workflow in an organization with an
aligned sales and marketing team is designed
and managed collaboratively. Aligned teams
are not hesitant to fail because they know how
to fall forward — learning from the failures and
getting better faster. Alignment fosters a desire
to understand the “why” vs. only focusing on
the “what.” The workflow is understood better,
adjusted collaboratively, and exceptions are
managed without blame. There are going to be
workflow falters, and if the teams trust each other
the issues will be resolved quicker because there
isn’t the fear of finger-pointing.
LI: How do your reps work with
marketing to develop and deliver
tailored messages?
AA: We have a “Smarketing” meeting (a regularly
scheduled sales and marketing meeting) that
aligns the teams. We have operational meetings
that allow for a double-check on a campaign,
event, webinar, etc. We engage top field reps
with marketing team members to brainstorm and
experiment together. Even if the marketing team
is just humoring the sales team, we feel we are
being asked, heard and engaged. We perform
A / B test messages, and marketing proactively
seeks our input and feedback on what is and is
not working.
LI: How does this collaboration with
marketing smooth the customer
journey?
AA: The collaboration with marketing has allowed
us to remove the concept of a funnel altogether
and replace that with an infinity concept. The
infinity symbol best represents how we partner
with marketing to engage along the customer
journey. We collaborate to find leads, engage
prospects, close customers and grow those
relationships. We nurture leads, prospects and
customers — InsideView operates as a thought
leader in the market. We have great solutions, but
we have great ideas as well.
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 13
ANDREA AUSTIN
VP of Enterprise Sales, InsideView
15. LI: Why is segmentation and
targeting important in marketing?
PC: You’ve heard the old adage that great
marketing engages the right person, with the
right message, at the right time and place. In
a world where the informed and connected
consumer holds sway, segmentation and
targeting are table stakes in achieving this
plan. It shouldn’t be news to any marketer that
it’s imperative to approach consumers with
the messages and offers that are relevant to
them, and ideally, that they actually want to see.
Think of your worst experiences with a brand’s
marketing, and it’s likely that much of the poor
experience was caused by a lack of diligence
in segmentation and targeting (e.g., that all too
familiar display ad that follows you around the
web, hawking a product you bought just the
other day).
Marketers need to be even more vigilant in
today’s hyper-connected world, where a poor
brand experience can wind up going viral within
seconds — or on a less extreme scale, where the
unsubscribe or opt-out link is just a tap away.
Going the extra mile to truly understand the
different segments of consumers you’re trying
to reach will pay dividends in the long-term and
help to build the trust that is needed to win over
consumers’ minds and hearts.
LI: How do segmentation and
targeting impact sales?
PC: Focusing on the right segments of your
prospect audience is key in being able to tailor
your content and messaging in a way that truly
resonates with your target buyer. If you’re running
campaigns that are aimed at the right folks, and
your content serves to activate and engage these
prospects, then the resultant leads you deliver
to sales are more likely to be (1) the right people
they should be speaking with, and (2) engaged
and interested in the products and solutions your
company is offering. As a marketer, it’s not only
our job to deliver the right types of leads, but to
also warm these leads up and reduce the friction a
salesperson may encounter when speaking with a
prospect for the first time.
LI: How can LinkedIn help sales and
marketing better understand the
buyer experience?
PC: A great benefit of LinkedIn is all of the
rich data that professionals actively share with
the platform and community. From liking and
sharing content, to penning their own articles,
community members bring forth a wealth of
insight into what they’re thinking about and what
they’re interested in. For sales and marketing, this
is where we can really tap into the pulse of the
buyer. By participating in the LinkedIn community,
through groups or via Pulse articles, you have the
ideal opportunity to genuinely engage with the
people that you are marketing or selling to and
understand what’s top of mind for these buyers.
Moreover, by understanding a potential buyer’s
professional background, you can get a better
sense of their unique needs (e.g., a sales rep who
recently became a manager for the first time).
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 14
PATRICK CHEN
Senior Manager, Demand Generation, NA, LinkedIn Sales Solutions
16. LI: How has sales and marketing
alignment helped you improve your
marketing strategy?
AD: By aligning with sales, our marketing strategy
is more focused and targeted. We are able to
home in on the key customer and prospective
accounts that our sales team is selling to and
help reach, engage and influence this audience.
We’re focusing on not only helping to generate
pipeline, but also accelerate opportunities within
the pipeline. That helps foster a collaborative
partnership between the sales and marketing
teams. Additionally, our goals for 2016 are more
tightly aligned with the sales goals. Establishing
the same goals forces our teams to work more
closely together to define the best strategies for
meeting and exceeding these objectives.
LI: What has been the biggest
workflow impact in the marketing
department?
AD: The biggest workflow impact has been
around focusing our efforts on account-based
marketing. Instead of simply targeting 3-5 key
personas, we are targeting three roles within our
target accounts. By aligning our targets with sales’
key targets, we are having to adjust some of our
processes. For example, when passing leads for
these target accounts, we have to ensure the leads
are assigned to the correct account owner. This
lead management process is manual, although we
are looking to automate this process.
LI: Has alignment helped raise the
profile of the marketing department?
AD: I think the alignment has helped build a
partnership between marketing and sales.Instead
of looking to marketing as the “lead driver,” we
are now seen as a strategic partner in driving
opportunities and influencing pipeline.
LI: How do you gauge the success of
the collaboration?
AD: We measure the success in many different
ways. First, the marketing team is constantly asking
for feedback from sales. The most effective way
we can improve our programs and efforts is by
understanding if the sales team finds them useful
and impactful. If we aren’t helping sales in their
efforts (or worse, hindering their efforts), then
we need to reevaluate our programs and adjust
them to be more successful. With similar pipeline
and revenue growth goals, it’s imperative that
the sales team supports our marketing efforts.
Secondly, we measure our influence and impact
on generating opportunities and revenue. We
look at the opportunities and revenue generated
by both sales and marketing to see where we
are most impactful and where we can improve.
Lastly, every year the marketing team sends out a
scorecard survey to the sales team, which further
helps us focus our efforts. This is an extensive
survey, but since it is only sent annually, we receive
useful feedback that helps us plan our strategy for
the year.
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 15
ALISSA DETTELBACH
Marketing Manager, Demand Generation, PGi
17. Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 16
TOOLS TO IMPROVE
SALES AND MARKETING
ALIGNMENT
The good news for organizations is that aligning sales and marketing doesn’t
require starting from scratch. Tools exist to help you find buyer information that
is useful to the sales and marketing teams, which can then be used to create
personalized messaging.
Our data sets LinkedIn Sales Solutions apart
from any other sales tool you’ll use. We’ve
built the world’s largest professional network
— over 400M members strong. And we’ve
assembled the most up-to-date information
available about the buyers you need to
engage. More importantly, we give you
tools to translate this information into the
personalized sales experience buyers expect.
These tools focus on three different aspects of
selling: target, understand and act.
Target
Delivering a personalized sales experience
starts with targeting buyers who want to
talk to you and are ready to buy. Quickly
search millions of member profiles via
search filters and receive automated lead
recommendations that flag buyers who are
sending out buying signals.
Understand
To personalize the sales experience, you
need to understand the buyer and be
ready to advise him before you engage.
Understand what’s top-of-mind for the buyer
based on a real-time feed of the content he’s
publishing and the updates he’s sending out.
Identify colleagues who have worked with
him and can provide insight into his interests
and needs.
Act
Today’s buyer expects you to build rapport
quickly, and provide sustained value by
anticipating and delivering on her needs.
Identify shared interests and experiences,
then send a personalized InMail to break
the ice. Get a warm introduction from
a colleague. Provide a steady feed of
relevant content that will move the purchase
decision forward.
Step 4:
18. Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 17
How LinkedIn can help sales
LinkedIn provides a driving force behind
sales, helping professionals build their
leads and pipelines. Through LinkedIn,
professionals:
• Create 45% more opportunities
• Are 51% more likely to achieve quotas
• Are 80% more productive
LinkedIn leverages more than 433M
professional profiles and tools to aid
professionals in social selling. These tools
include:
LinkedIn Advanced Search
Create lead lists with custom searches to
source and close deals.
LinkedIn Saved Leads
Narrow down prospects, save profiles and
be notified when they change companies or
positions.
Social Selling Index
Measure and track your social selling efforts.
How LinkedIn can help marketers
LinkedIn provides a platform for marketers
to build brands, raise awareness and
generate leads.
LinkedIn Sponsored InMail
Provide valuable content to your target
audience in their LinkedIn inboxes.
Sponsored Updates
Get your content to the top of the feed, and
to the world’s largest professional audience
across desktops and mobile platforms.
CRM
Import data directly into Salesforce or
Microsoft Dynamics.
19. LI: What were the biggest challenges
in aligning sales and marketing?
JN: I think sales and marketing alignment
challenges come from a lack of alignment
on goals. Everyone has the corporate goal of
revenue and customers, but as those goals get
translated down through departments (marketing
often reports to something different than sales),
sometimes things get lost in translation. There’s
always good intentions; for instance, marketing
may have a good lead goal, but sometimes the
tactical goals can be in conflict. Other challenges
include: quantity of leads over quality of leads,
and making sure things are followed up with and
tracked in the right way.
LI: What did Hootsuite do to achieve
success?
JN: I think there are a number of things — we
over-communicate at multiple levels, not meeting
for the sake of meetings, we’re very respectful of
people’s time, there’s an agenda, everyone has
clear roles and responsibilities. Before we go to
an onsite event, there’s a ground plan — a plan to
optimize the event once we’re there and to change
tactics when needed. When discussing goals, we
discuss a successful outcome using data analytics;
for instance, we know this event generated more
revenue this year vs last year, etc. We have specific
goals about revenue we want to drive from each
event. It’s about really strong communication and
collaboration, everyone has ownership — it’s a
marketing event, but sales has a very clear goal.
This all comes down to alignment at every level of
the organization — everyone is acting like the CEO
of that particular event and ensuring a successful
outcome. There’s no magic to it; it’s just people
coming together and collaborating.
LI: How did using LinkedIn help sales
and marketing?
JN: If you think about sales and marketing as a
part of the same process, it’s the same process
of customer acquisition, and LinkedIn is essential
in every stage of the process; in fact it’s changed
the selling process. If you think about every stage
of the sales and marketing cycle: awareness,
outreach, acquisitions and advocacy, social
plays a role in that entire continuum. I can’t
imagine someone doing social selling without
incorporating LinkedIn. We’re using LinkedIn to
create awareness, promote brands, do account
research and listen to buying signals. We’re using
it in the entire process: people like your brand,
then recommend it, then we get to use that in
the process of reaching out to our next client.
We’re using it to touch the entire customer
lifecycle.
LI: What were the results?
JN: I don’t know how anyone in my role or
anyone on my team could possibly achieve their
goals without LinkedIn. I can absolutely point to
very specific sales opportunities that were the
direct result of LinkedIn. We became aware of
an opportunity, found the right stakeholder to
reach out to — a large portion of the selling cycle
occurred on LinkedIn. There’s absolute evidence
that it’s increasing our sales pipeline, increasing
revenue. I can’t imagine now a sales cycle for at
least a decade where LinkedIn didn’t play a role in
that sales process.
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 18
JOSH NORMAND
VP of Strategic Sales, Hootsuite
20. LI: What were the biggest
challenges in aligning sales and
marketing?
RE: When a company is very successful and has
grown over the years, it’s difficult to introduce
new marketing initiatives and there can be some
rigidity facing anything new, which includes
marketing and sales strategies. People will say that
what we were already doing is working and ask
why should we change it. So that “old versus new”
tension is reflective in the nature of aligning sales
and marketing, too.
LI: What did Nolan Financial do to
achieve success?
RE: I think that when a lot of new ideas emerge
in an organization, the key is introducing them
on a small scale, and letting the results dictate
the [path forward]. For instance, we said “Let’s
test Sales Navigator in groups,” so we tested it
and got positive responses early on, and then we
were able to dial up and use it more and more to
really integrate it.
LI: How did using LinkedIn help
sales and marketing?
RE: Sales Navigator actually allowed us to tackle
one of the biggest challenges in our industry,
which was how to most successfully communicate
with those really high up in a company. Since we
deal with large B2B transactions in our industry,
it’s very important to identify those executive-level
stakeholders and those decision-makers. Sales
Navigator let us identify who has a connection
with those stakeholders within our company, and
therefore how we can most effectively reach out
to them.
LI: What were the results?
RE: When we launched Sales Navigator, the
quality of our prospects and the quality of our
pipeline has lit up. We used to not know if it
was a firm that we wanted to do business with
or if we had a good relationship with that firm,
but now we’ve eliminated the question mark of
whether the relationship is there, because we
know it’s there. Now our pipeline is strong, we
have good prospects and we’ve really reduced
the amount of bad prospects. About 50% to 75%
of our prospects used to be bad, but now that
percentage is reduced to 25%.
I can happily say we’re in the process of closing
our first two large deals 13 months after using
Sales Navigator, so we now have revenue to stand
behind it as well.
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 19
RICHARD ESSIG
VP of Corporate Strategy and Development, Nolan Financial
21. LI: What were the biggest
challenges in aligning sales and
marketing?
MM: We’re actually kind of an anomaly because
we have a sales and marketing team that is
synonymous. Our marketing team drives leads
through inbound marketing (e.g., E-books,
speakers), and all of those leads are pushed to
our lead development team, which then uses
Sales Navigator to vet the leads, qualify them and
escalate them to a sales executive. The marketing
team is so engrained in that portion — that’s our
engine. The only challenge is communication,
mostly if marketing doesn’t know what we’re
looking for. It actually requires making sure
marketing understands the social selling process
so they can better qualify leads. Essentially,
it comes down to making sure marketing
understands the social selling process and what
leads we are looking for so they can better
qualify leads.
LI: What did Infusionsoft do to
achieve success?
MM: The biggest thing we did to achieve success
was implement social selling — it’s a big piece of
our sales cycle. Our company leverages CRM and
marketing automation, so when that’s connected
to LinkedIn, the leads that we spend a lot of time
cultivating are put into our CRM data bank. Then,
our automation can build out those leads, and that
is how we achieve success.
LI: How did using LinkedIn help
sales and marketing?
MM: Our marketing team has really robust
LinkedIn profiles that set the tone for how our
sales profiles should be shaped. Also, LinkedIn
gave our sales team the ability to compile the
type of information that works for our sales
team. Personally, I love Sales Navigator because
I can track SSI scores and I can see ROI, that way
our sales team can give direct feedback that
can actually shape our marketing. For instance,
saying, “hey this article is great,” or “this didn’t get
a lot of traction.”
LI: What were the results?
MM: With Sales Navigator, we saw the lack of a
short-term satisfaction mindset: we saw partners
staying longer because they built a more solid
relationship with us. We felt like we earned their
business and built a long-lasting relationship,
that we went through the full sales process
and then fully onboarded them. We retained
more long-term customers because there was
less of a pressure sale upfront. Sales Navigator,
coupled with tactical salespeople, gave us a huge
advantage. To me, there’s nothing better than it on
the planet.
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 20
MARCUS MURPHY
Global Partner Development Manager, Infusionsoft
22. LI: What were the biggest challenges
in aligning sales and marketing?
DF: The biggest challenges tend to be that both
groups are extremely busy and can get caught up
in their own short-term goals. Marketing’s most
direct goals tend to be generating leads, while for
sales, it is to close customers. So each party needs
to be reminded that they are all trying to solve for
the same thing: the customer. At the end of the
day we each have a different role to play in making
that happen.
LI: What did Hubspot do to achieve
success?
DF: There are a few key things that we’ve done.
The first is that we’ve created an SLA between
marketing and sales. A specific example of that
is that our marketing team has a number of
marketing qualified leads that they’re committed
to delivering to the sales team every month,
which is a mutually agreed-upon number. On
the flip side, the sales team has committed to
working those leads in a timely manner. Another
important component is communication. Every
month we hold a “Smarketing meeting,” which
brings together the entire marketing team and
entire sales team to look back on the past month’s
performance, big wins and shared initiatives. The
third component is the dedication of marketers
who work on nurturing leads and supporting sales.
My team, which is the sales enablement team,
is specifically dedicated to sales and marketing
alignment. We organizationally sit with marketing,
but physically sit with sales, so that we are very
accessible to them, hear what they do and are in
the trenches with them.
LI: How did using LinkedIn help sales
and marketing?
DF: We really believe in the inbound marketing
and sales philosophy; both teams want to be
helpful rather than interruptive. When we use
LinkedIn Sales Navigator, we’re providing relevant
and timely information to people. We tend to
generate a lot of interest through our website,
so when our sales team reaches out to those
who are interested, they can leverage insights
found through LinkedIn to be more helpful
and personal. Sales and marketing stay aligned
through this inbound marketing mentality, as well
as by using LinkedIn.
LI: What were the results?
DF: It’s helped us to have more relevant and
helpful conversations, and speak to people who
are evaluating our products and services on their
terms. The way people shop and buy has changed
so much … they want a salesperson to be helpful.
By using LinkedIn, salespeople have information
about their buyers and are therefore having more
effective, helpful and fruitful conversations.
ASK THE EXPERT
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 21
DEBBIE FARESE
Director of Marketing, Hubspot
23. CASE STUDIES
Think of a great brand experience
and Netflix might come to mind.
The online movie company not only
understands their audiences,
but can tailor the experience for each
individual preference. The result?
Less work on your end. You don’t have
to tell them what you want because
they already know.
Regardless of your region or industry,
you want to mimic best practices from
the companies that do it well so you
can do it at your own company.
Here’s how Dell, American Express
and HCL provided a consistent
and personalized sales and
marketing experience, which
ultimately boosted sales.
24. Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 23
DELL ALIGNMENT RESULTS IN
AWARD-WINNING LEAD GEN PROGRAM
Round Rock, TX-based technology giant Dell boasts a wide portfolio of products and services, ranging from consumer-grade laptops
and desktops to enterprise-class servers, networking equipment, and consulting and application services. With such diverse offerings,
the “spray and pray” method of pushing out content to everyone who downloads a white paper isn’t effective. Content needs to be
personalized, not generic, and be part of a lead nurture program.
If a business is a storefront, and customers are
lining up to enter, the difference between a brick
and mortar store is that anyone can come in,
browse and find a sales associate to help with a
purchase. However, that doesn’t happen online;
the situation is more like a screener is standing at
the doorway, asking prospects if they’re ready to
buy. If they are, the screener sends the prospect
to the appropriate sales associate; if not, they’re
told to come back when they’re ready.
Dell’s goal was to keep engaging those prospects
until they were ready to purchase, offering
them personalized information in a lead nurture
program that was tailored to their interests. The
end result would be a nurture strategy that took
into account unique customer scenarios and
enable customers to consume content relevant to
their needs. It would help them stand out against
the competition, align content to the buying cycle
and focus content on critical information that
answered customers’ unasked questions.
But to do that, Dell needed to align sales and
marketing teams to define the buying cycle,
determine the best content to send and how to
break down the content to push it to customers.
Dell has specific global business units: an end
user computing business unit that is responsible
for client product marketing for laptops and
desktops, as well as an enterprise group that
focuses on the enterprise solutions such as
storage, big data and cloud computing. At the
highest level, these two groups determine what
the marketing stories are and what the priority
products are, according to Paul Jackson, Global
Marketing Consultant. These groups are the
pipeline that feeds the content inventory.
The end user computing business unit and the
enterprise group collaborate on the content,
and organize it in a way that’s accessible with
automation tools, and that helps them to best
respond to conversations with customers. Sales
coordination is a little different; sales views this
solution as sales enablement that takes the
not-ready prospects and keeps working them.
Automation is what pulls the program together,
taking leads, and using rules and logic to send
a prospect to a specific account representative,
identify topics of interest and the like.
To enable what could be potentially thousands
of conversions, Dell needed a lot of modular
CASE STUDY: DELL
25. Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 24
content. Instead of traditional emails, Dell
developed interchangeable content blocks
driven by the platforms used and the
customers’ interests. Contacts are entered
into the lead nurturing program as a result
of analyzing digital behavioral activity,
commonly from the Dell website: product
pages visited, assets downloaded. This is
also integrated with databases of event
attendees, so Dell is able to identify who
the attendees are, what companies they
work for and what their areas of interest
are. If the customer isn’t deemed “sales
ready,” the customer is entered into the lead
nurture program to continue and sustain the
conversation that began at the initial website
or event contact.
The rules of the automation try to interpret
behavior based on the source of the lead,
whether it’s email, direct mail, online
advertising or something else. Coupled with
the topic that the customer is engaging with,
Dell uses automated logic that assigns a
value and triggers the type of content that
goes out to the prospect.
For example, a customer (an IT decision-
maker) may be looking at a page on
big data. She downloads a white paper,
triggering logic that will send her an email
about three different facets of big data. It’s
done non-invasively, no pricing information
included, so that it’s helpful information on
big data. Ideally, the customer will click on a
topic or watch a video to learn more, which
helps Dell respond more specifically. On the
flip side, if the customer doesn’t engage with
the email, the program waits, then sends
a slightly different follow-up to help the
customer course-correct to what interests
her. Dell created over 18,000 global modular
content elements, featuring 1,200 assets
and supporting 25 solution topics across 10
global programs.
The results speak for themselves: Dell’s lead
nurture program has delivered a 35% higher
average order value for nurtured contacts
versus non-nurtured contacts. Contacts
have also engaged in personalized nurture
emails 300% more than traditional “push”
messages. By developing personalized
content and working to align sales and
marketing, Dell has won coveted awards for
its content, including Demand Gen Report’s
Killer Content Award and Oracle’s Markie
award. And, of course, it has boosted the
bottom line. The lesson learned is to get
personal with sales and marketing − meeting
and exceeding customer expectations.
CASE STUDY: DELL
26. Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 25
MARKETING-DRIVEN INITIATIVE PLAYS
KEY ROLE IN AMEX CONTENT HUB
American Express and its Global Corporate Payments (GCP) division wanted to position themselves as leaders in the corporate travel
industry. To do that, they would need distinguishing content to provide their audience, as well as engage with prospects, customers and
their employees themselves. The company’s efforts began in the marketing department, but sales played a large role, as well, to help
American Express reach its goals — and in the process, won a Killer Content Award from Demand Gen Report.
A partnership with the Global Business Travel
Association (GBTA) led to a comprehensive
research report that focused on the experience
and satisfaction of business travelers worldwide.
The primary goal was to educate companies and
suppliers about which aspects of business travel,
including expense management and technology,
needed attention.
To do that, from a content perspective, American
Express launched a social selling pilot working
team. This team was comprised of different
employees across a broad swath of departments
— including sales and marketing — and
geographic locations. Marketing established the
team, but sales and account development were
the main participants to provide customer insight.
American Express created a content hub within
the Global Corporate Payments section of its
website, which featured the original research with
GBTA. It also added supplementary assets, such
as blog articles, listicles, infographics and event
presentations — all based on customer insight.
The working team updated the content calendar
and identified content to promote. Behind the
scenes, American Express cultivated content
by surveying customers and looking at it from
the customer’s point of view. This way, the team
could provide feedback ahead of time based on
what customers were saying, as well as review
interactions with previous content. That way, if a
product announcement was coming, or customer
feedback had indicated a pressing new problem
with business travel, the team could be prepared
to share it in a way relevant to American Express
customers. “We really based the content on
what our customers care about, their main pain
points around business travel,” said Pablo Rivero,
Director of Strategy and Business Planning.
With a lot of testing and refining, American
Express chose varied channels to distribute
its content. Partnering with its public relations
team and GBTA’s public relations team helped
it gain reach from industry publications, which
customers are reading. In addition to press
outreach, American Express also leveraged
event activation, digital activation and social
engagement to build awareness around the
research. Paid, earned and owned media
channels, including the use of LinkedIn, helped
boost the content hub’s profile. Every channel
CASE STUDY: AMERICAN EXPRESS
27. Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 26
took a 360-degree approach; from its own
channels, American Express used email,
newsletters and social distribution.
The end results were impressive: American
Express garnered a reach of more than
100 million publications and over 1,500
page visits. On LinkedIn, American Express
achieved a 100% higher engagement rate
than the Financial Services benchmark. A
great deal of the traffic was organic and
earned. Additionally, 20% of the content hub’s
followers are American Express employees,
which helps keep them engaged.
American Express took survey data and was
able to extend its life by involving sales and
business development to provide customer
insight. Then, it could support additional
content assets and different formats for
content, creating a place for its customers to
get information on topics relevant to them.
“We were so successful because we didn’t
just push content related to the product,”
Rivero said. The content that American
Express published, based on what the
customers wanted, included insights,
findings and recommendations that had
nothing to do with American Express, like
pieces on business traveler preferences,
mobile connectivity and safety for business
travelers. The idea was to generate interest
for customers, so that even if American
Express wasn’t the solution to the problem,
the content hub could point readers in the
right direction.
CASE STUDY: AMERICAN EXPRESS
28. Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 27
STRONGER ALIGNMENT THROUGH
LINKEDIN SALES NAVIGATOR
HCL Technologies, a global IT services company, has a sizable sales force that pursues
complex deals globally and across industries, including Fortune 500 companies. The
company faced alignment and collaboration issues between the sales and marketing
team, which was affecting its ability to pinpoint marketing-qualified and sales-accepted
leads. HCL also understood that buyers are doing so much of their research online with
no sales contact at all, so it needed a new sales enablement approach to engage buyers.
Last year, HCL began the process of selecting
and implementing a marketing automation
platform and, more recently, it has begun to
incorporate LinkedIn Sales Navigator after an
evaluation period showed promise. That, in turn,
is integrated into its CRM to ensure adoption.
Both sales and marketing professionals within
HCL received licenses to the tool. “Our marketing
team is also active on LinkedIn — they use
Sales Navigator to research accounts we’re
targeting, and they create content that’s most
relevant and helpful for them,” said Ramanathan
Sivasubramaniam, Global Head of Sales
Marketing Excellence, HCL Technologies. “That
gives our sales team a really effective tool to build
a meaningful rapport.”
The response was overwhelming. Ninety percent
of HCL sales users agreed LinkedIn Sales
Navigator helped them identify and learn more
about decision-makers.
“We track and encourage our teams by using
LinkedIn’s Social Selling Index (SSI) as one of our
main KPIs. It’s useful for benchmarking ourselves
against our peers and seeing where we need to
step up our training,” Sivasubramaniam said.
“
LinkedIn Sales Navigator is
a very important part of our
sales and marketing strategy.
It’s helped us deepen our
relationships with customers,
and in doing so, deliver on our
brand promise.”
– Ramanathan Sivasubramaniam,
Global Head of Sales Marketing Excellence,
HCL Technologies
CASE STUDY: HCL
29. Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 28
“One of the key programs my team runs is
publishing a monthly newsletter focused
around Sales Navigator. It has an internal
leaderboard, so everyone can see where
they stand, and it includes success stories.
That allows us to inspire each other and learn
from our collective experiences — building
relationships internally, as well as externally.”
As a result of implementing Sales Navigator,
the sales team made $500 million worth of
deals in contract value and they increased
InMails 200% sent within two quarters.
In addition, users of Sales Navigator, on
average, had 17 times more connections
than non-users, and were able to connect
with more than 7,000 decision-makers in just
six months of use.
“For any B2B marketer or sales professional,
Sales Navigator is a must,” Sivasubramaniam
said. “We’ve been using the product for three
years and have seen much improvement.”
CASE STUDY: HCL
30. Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 29
CONCLUSION
Sales and marketing can no longer exist
in silos. Being able to align the two
departments is critical when it comes
to delivering personalized content to
customers, and that requires finding the
discrepancies between the departments
and working to fix them. For some
companies, that may require defining
what exactly is a lead and when it should
be handed off to sales; for others, it may
necessitate breaking down misconceptions.
It’s not that the departments are working
at cross-purposes; both want the same
results, and they both know that they need
customer intelligence to drive successful
prospecting and personalized content.
It’s this tailored content that will drive
engagement and sales, and it requires
defining the audience and learning its
consumption habits.
Define Your Audience
Using social tools, you’ll be able to obtain
customer intelligence, including their pain
points and preferences. Your audience may
include buyers with differing levels within
their companies, each with their own needs
and motivations, and the context that you can
gain will help you market and sell to them.
Identify Sales And Marketing Gaps
Sometimes it’s difficult to isolate the root
cause. However, analyzing prior sales
and marketing performance, assessing
current sales and marketing processes and
strategy, and surveying customers — going
straight to the horse’s mouth — can go a
long way toward finding the weak spots
that are hindering your sales and marketing
alignment.
Develop Processes To Bridge The Gaps
Get sales and marketing to agree on goals,
as well as determine the lead process, the
definition of what a lead is and how these
leads will be provided to sales. Additionally,
developing service level agreements for
sales and marketing based on agreed-upon
performance metrics helps remove the
guesswork.
Investigate Tools To Streamline Alignment
And Provide Updated Buyer Information
Tools such as LinkedIn Sales Navigator will
help you target likely buyers, understand
their motivations and needs, and build the
rapport necessary to deliver on those needs.
Every organization has the opportunity to
reach its full potential by aligning sales
and marketing. As the testimony of these
experts demonstrates, the practices that
lead to successfully breaking down silos
and creating personalized content may
not be as complex as most people think.
The key is to know your buyers, know your
weaknesses, bridge the gaps and be ready
to introduce tools to make the process
easier. By following the advice from these
experts, you’ll be able to do just that.
For more information on LinkedIn Sales
Navigator, click here.
Solving Sales And Marketing Alignment | 29