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Are B2B and B2C Sales and Marketing Roles Becoming Extinct?

 

We talk a lot about B2B and B2C marketing here, but is sales just the lonely stepchild at the end of the inbound marketing funnel? Is marketing becoming so automated you don't need marketers anymore? The dynamics of sales and marketing have changed radically in recent years, putting far more emphasis on relationship building throughout the sales pipeline and turning classic sales and marketing processes on their aging heads.

b2b and b2c sales and marketing processes are becoming extinctI know I'm going to get a lot of classic sales people and die-hard marketers throwing darts and citing their tried-and-true methods for capturing leads and converting them to customers. I'm counting on that actually. I say it's time to throw out all of that garbage and start getting real about what sales and marketing means these days:

  1. It ain't about your company - consumers across the board, whether in B2B or B2C, are looking for someone they can trust. You. That's it. Pure and simple.
  2. Consumers don't want to be part of a process. Don't you hate it when the car salesman hands you off the accessories salesperson, then the Sales Manager comes in the room to close you? Just sell me the f$%^&ing car people!
  3. Consumers want information, not fluff. Stow the fancy brochures, the special gifts, the sales events and the ads. Surveys show that stuff still works sometimes, but it's definitely on the way out.
  4. Be there or be square. Be real. You have to be out there where the consumers are, talking to them and providing them with what they want, information from a trusted source. Yes, that means social media 24/7. Forget about your life. You are now part of the Matrix.
  5. Which hat do I wear? So the conventional wisdom these days is, you need to do both marketing and sales at the same time via social media. Popeycock! Your job as sales/marketing person is not to do sales and marketing. Your job is to help consumers get what they want, hopefully from you, but if not, no big deal.

So what does the new B2B and B2C sales-and-marketing person do for a living?

We think before we act - yes you heard that right. We make ourselves available instead of hunting for prospects. We listen. We help. We educate. We present new ideas and we enable people to solve their own problems. We figure out how our stuff can help them do that and we offer it at a reasonable price.

This all sounds like pie-in-the-sky, but is it? I think the dinosaurs in the Jurassic age looked at the little mammals scurrying around and laughed at them. Yeah, there's a meteor on the way, and it's called Sales 2.0 or Marketing 2.0 or just plain common sense.

O.K. let fly those darts all you sales and marketing gurus.

Photo credit: Jeremy Burgin


Comments

Brian Halligan has been quoted as saying that the internet has flattened the world. If you as a business owner aren't good at getting found, you have no shot. Get good at inbound marketing. That being said, Brian's quote also says that when you get found, you could now be competing with 100's or 1,000's of competitors instead of the one or two guys around the corner. When your marketing gets you noticed and a prospect knocks on your door, you may only get one shot. You better have your sales game face on. 
 
 
 
Real live situation. We recently coached a client on the next conversation that they expected with a specific opportunity. They got the business. The reason that I mention this specific case is that our client was in Napa Valley and the opportunity was in Massachusetts. 3,000 miles. How many competitors were between the two? He used his marketing to get noticed. He used his new sales skills to close the deal. 
 
 
 
Hope this helps.
Posted @ Tuesday, September 21, 2010 9:01 AM by Rick Roberge (The RainMaker Maker)
Rick, great quote and comment. My question is, what does your "game face" look like these days? It had better not be "salesy" or "markety", or you'll be discovered and eliminated. A huge part of being found, as well described in Brian's book and elsewhere, is being the "go-to" person for information on your field. When people come to you, it's because they already trust you, at least to some extent. The sales process becomes a working relationship, not a mission to close the sale. That's what the consumer wants. You can argue that it may take longer to close and you open the door to competitors, but if you are the recognized leader, you will still win in the end. Better clients, more repeat sales and lots more word-of-mouth marketing.
Posted @ Tuesday, September 21, 2010 9:26 AM by John McTigue
On the money, John. Unfortunately, many business owners get their sales tactics from watching television and the movies and when prospects see those tired old 'moves', they block the message even though the message might be the right one. 
 
Your second point is more difficult to balance. Sharing knowledge with appearing to be a know-it-all or preacher.
Posted @ Tuesday, September 21, 2010 10:03 AM by Rick Roberge - Sales Guru
Rick, I think Chris Brogan got it right in Trust Agents. You have to be a real leader, not a false prophet. People recognize real leaders. It may take time, but the effect is cumulative. Once you get there, keep giving, and for Pete's sake, don't screw it up!
Posted @ Tuesday, September 21, 2010 10:28 AM by John McTigue
Good point both Rick and John. The latest webinar from Hubspot is the direction I am taking my biz, and my clients, in. The lines between marketing and sales need to blur even more. Marketing needs to enable sales to close, where sales needs to feeback to marketing on how and what is closing to attract quality leads. This way the message matches the experience, and the marketing 'face' and the sales 'face' are on in the same from the customer's view point. (to a degree). The more I learn about sales, the better my marketing gets.
Posted @ Tuesday, September 21, 2010 2:39 PM by Carole Mahoney
Carole, now see what you went and did? By posting a helpful comment, you got my attention. I went to your blog and subscribed to your RSS feed, and now you can be sure I'll be tweeting your posts. No marketing, no sales - just good ol' collaboration. That's the way this stuff really works.
Posted @ Tuesday, September 21, 2010 2:47 PM by John McTigue
doh! I meant to post the link to the hubspot webinar that I mentioned too: good, mind altering stuff! 
 
http://www.hubspot.com/webinars/webinar-on-demand-marketing-and-sales-alignment/ 
 
And thanks John- ditto to you!
Posted @ Tuesday, September 21, 2010 3:09 PM by Carole Mahoney
Marketing is becoming in many ways about answering the questions people are asking about a particular situation/product/problem and producing content that educates people and of course that can be easily found. 
 
Sales, or should I say good sales people, are about answering the questions people are NOT asking but should. When a sales person can come in and with their experience fill in the blanks that show up in the buying process then they are viewed as valuable. 
 
In manufacturing where I spend a good deal of time, it is still about one on one relationships and people. If you are a jerk and can't be trusted you won't get the order no matter how good your Sales 2.0 skills or how many Twitter followers you have.  
 
Sales will always be about the person and people - if not, then it will be something else - call it marketing or whatever but it won't be sales.
Posted @ Wednesday, September 22, 2010 7:32 AM by Todd Hockenberry
Todd, I agree with you. Consultive sales and marketing (perhaps merged into a single function) are the way to go these days. Social media plays the role of always-on communications between and among interested parties, but the fact that it is open enables new, unforeseen opportunities. Your online persona and "influence" help by attracting qualified leads without having to do much direct prospecting.
Posted @ Wednesday, September 22, 2010 7:56 AM by John McTigue
Rebekah, that is so cool that you guys were on this 2 years ago. It seems that back then Marketers were worried about the technology, the openness and the democracy that social media was bringing online in a hurry. Now it seems to me that all of that technology is the norm and what's changing now is consumers' expectations. They're already way past our feeble attempts to reach them with "new media". They now hold the power and they're really starting to push the "off" button on our marketing strategies. Does that mean we're out of a job? No, I think it means we need to just stop being marketers and start being consumers again. Run with the herd. They may even start to listen again.
Posted @ Wednesday, September 22, 2010 6:00 PM by John McTigue
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