Where do you stand, dear reader, on blog post length? I won’t tell you how many online column inches have ben devoted to this. The consensus is that it doesn’t matter, it depends. One thing they all seem to agree on, however, is that longer posts get linked to more often.

The conclusion they draw is that longer posts are therefore better. I take issue with this and offer a different explanation. The reason is tl;dr syndrome. Too long; didn’t read. People are busy, too busy to read long posts, so they just scan them.

This is how it goes: “Boy this is a long post. It’s good though, at least what I’ve read of it sounds good, but I can’t read any more, so I’d better share it anyway.”

So you get this kind of social media message: “Very interesting, important article on blah blah blah, worth a read.” Does this create a kind of social media maelstrom of mediocrity?

Better to create a blog post that people have time to get through properly, no?

 

We do so much work trying to persuade our customers to buy from us that we often forget that they hold the answers to our success. If we provide a good product or service and we have our customers’ interests at heart, they’ll want us to do well and they’ll want to build relationships with us. In short, they’re rooting for us.

– Want to know what success looks like for your customer? Ask the customer what they’re trying to achieve, what’s stoping them from getting there, and what they require to remove the barriers.

– Want to know why you won the deal, so you can improve your offering? Ask the customer.

– Want to know why you lost the deal, so you can improve your offering? Ask the customer, but make it easy to get honest feedback by sending someone not involved in the deal, because it might be personal.

– Want to know how you can sell better? Ask the customer how they want to buy.

– Want to know what products and services to develop next? Ask the customer. They may not know what the next big thing is going to be, but they know what’s big for them right now.

– Want to know how much to charge? Ask the customer what they’re prepared to pay.

If in doubt, customer will out, to paraphrase Mr Shakespeare…

The role of marketing is to influence the exchange of outcomes between two parties. This exchange normally involves one party parting with money, but not always. The role of personal selling, as one of the 4 main elements of the promotional mix, is to close the outcome in favour of the selling organisation – closing the deal.

The natural inclination of the sales organisation is to get the best possible deal, to extract as much out of the sale as possible. The phrase ‘don’t leave any money on the table’ is the mantra of the sales-maximising organisation. Taken too far, this short term mentality, that of treating the customer as someone you can shaft because they’re never likely to buy from you again, has been around as long the sales profession itself. It is flawed, and if you believe in karma, you’ll know that in some form it will come back to bite you.

A successful deal is all about a fair exchange. The deal has to feel right for both parties. If it doesn’t, one party will renege on the deal and it won’t stay on the books. Alternatively, if they can’t pull out because of contractual reasons, they will sour the relationship, if it isn’t sour already. They won’t be a repeat customer and they’ll also tell 3 times as many people about their experiences as they would if the deal was a fair one.

A fair exchange is a long term deal, a partnership, where both companies address their business problems and profit.

No-one said life was fair, but if you want to win in the long run, you can make it fair.

Clusters are good.

Clusters are good for customers, because there is competition for their business.

Clusters are good for companies because they provide a critical mass of talent that you don’t have to retrain.

Clusters are good for employees because there is competition for their talent.

Clusters = choice.  Just as a rising tide lifts all boats, a growing cluster raises the bar all round. That’s why all countries, regions and cities strive for industry clusters.

When you’re in a city that doesn’t have much of a cluster, you don’t have choice. Applaud the company that decides to be the first of its industry in your region. Then work to build the cluster.

 

Language change is neither progress or decay; it is simply change and is happening all the time. New words are constantly being coined and come into regular use, while some gradually disappear from favour with equal frequency.

One such example of the latter is ‘seldom’. It’s a handy word, being shorthand for ‘not very often’ and keeping sentences simpler because you don’t need to build a negative in. For example, you could say ‘you seldom hear that’, which is a good bit easier and more economical that ‘you don’t hear that very often.’

One occasionally hears middle-aged or older folk using the word, but never young people. Despite belonging to the former group, I don’t think I’ve ever used the word. It seems old-fashioned and a touch quaint to me, which befits its somewhat ancient and quirky origins.

I put it alongside that other old-fashioned word which also saves you a negative, namely ‘lest’. I give it as another example – lest you forget :-).

 

 

 

Everyone needs a passion to keep them going through the cycles of work and the seasons of the year. I’m not talking here about loved ones, your family and friends. I’m talking about vices: music festivals, music, live theatre, hobbies, travel or holidays, that kind of thing. These are high points that can anchor a period in your life and stand out from the day-to-day stuff we do in order to afford to enjoy the high points.

For me it’s the catharsis of sport, both playing it and watching it. Participating in sport and attending or watching broadcasts of key sporting events define the time of the year for me. Let me walk you through a typical year of this sports fan, plucked out of my head without the need to check the calendar:

January – dark, miserable, poverty-stricken. Just in time, the Australian Open tennis hoves into view to save the one month that’s pretty much a waste of time. A foreign bonus comes to close the month down, in the form of the Superbowl. We in marketing can kid ourselves we’re working by watching the ads on youtube.

February – when you think Spring will never come, the 6 Nations Rugby championships comes to the rescue, closely followed by the business end of Champions League football.

March – more rugger and more soccer. US Sweet Sixteen and Final Four college hoops if you’re into that stuff. And is that the imperceptibly lengthening and warming days of Spring I detect?

April – the Masters golf at Augusta. The best major, though I’ve never been able to pin down why. Yes, and the snooker world championship too. Stick with it, it’s a drug.

May – the reward of a monster month. The death throes of the football and rugby leagues, the Champions League final, the Heineken Cup final and the best tennis major to attend – apparently; it always sneaks up on me before I’ve thought about summer trips – the glorious French Open. The lung-bursting, clay-drenched minute-long rallies.

June – Ah, the summer is here in earnest. The US Open golf tournament, the toughest major. Anyone for cricket? There’s usually a test series to follow, and the athletics Diamond League circuit winds up. The NBA finals remind me that I’m not ideally built for the hoops. Oh and Wimbledon, aka Wimbers, always the last week of June and first week of July. Happy days.

July – The Open, at the home of golf. Four halcyon days, even if the weather’s howling.

August – The US Open tennis. Hotter than the hinges of Hades, rather like the Australian Open. Supreme athleticism and the lungs of Miguel Indurain required. Sometimes they sneak the US PGA in as well during August, and so our cup over-floweth.

September – The baseball action gets down to the nitty gritty. Decent footie awaits as the Champions League swings into action with group matches to lift the mid-week blues.

October – The Autumn rugby internationals give us an annual reminder of why the southern hemisphere lads are better than us northern folks.

November – More rubgy, the final group matches in the Champions League, and the ATP tennis finals as we wind down for the holiday period.

December – Crimbo! Far too much on to think about sport, kind of, although between Christmas and New Year the good people from the darts world are good enough to give us two rival championships to help us finish off the turkey fricassee. We’re usually getting tonked at the cricket by the Aussies down under as well.

Bonus events in the summer can really make the summer: a world cup or an Olympics every second summer. The autumn is enhanced beyond measure by the biennial Ryder Cup. A Lions rugby tour or a Rugby World Cup can make the winter.

Boy! Anyone would think that there can’t be any time left for family and work. Work hard and play hard is the only way to get through it :-).

One of the guiding rules I have heard among oenophiles is this: if you like the wine, it’s a good wine. This brings up a really interesting point on people’s preferences, the differences between subjectivity and objectivity, and how that affects the purchase process and in turn the marketing we design to influence purchase.

Many people either can’t or won’t make the distinction between liking something and judging its quality. ‘If I like it, then it must be good’ is perhaps one view. Think about a piece of musical genre, or a sporting style, a movie, a wine, or any B2B or B2C product or service you come into contact with. It’s unusual to hear someone say ‘it’s good, but I don’t like it’, or ‘it’s not a great product, but I like it.’

Most reviews of restaurants, movies, books or other products tend to be either a number of stars, which is a quality attribution, and a thumb or thumbs up, which for me means whether or not they like it, but which could also be construed as a quality recommendation. Quality should be an objective thing, whereas liking something, or not, should be purely subjective. I would like to see more reviews that make a distinction between the two. I’m interested in your opinion, and that means you telling me why it’s good and why you like it. I value your view and that’s why the why is important to me.

So when it comes to marketing and sales, we need to figure out what is important to our customer:

– do they distinguish between I like and It’s Good?

– what would help us find this out?

– do both I like and It’s Good have to be in place for us to be able to positively influence their purchasing behaviour?

– do we want to sell to the I Likes or the It’s Goods?

I think the answer to all these questions is it depends, and is something you should figure out for your own situation.

 

 

One of the joys of having studied Latin and Greek at school and college is that sometimes you know what a word is even though you’ve never seen or heard it before, even if it’s on its own with no guiding context.

The example I always used to give was ‘autobiography’, composed of 3 Greek words: auto, meaning self; bio, meaning life; and graphy, meaning write. That’s an easy one though! Prepositions can give excellent clues as to what sense to make of compound words. To digress for one moment: the word preposition itself, somewhat deliciously, also contains a preposition. Anyway, take a Latin word like fero, meaning carry. It gives you all manner of compound words like infer, transfer, offer, differ and so on.

There must be a hundred prepositions in use; they’re jolly handy. Most of them give obvious clues, like inter of international – between, trans of translate – across, with the juicy bonus of the ‘late’ part being from the same root word as fero, and tele of television – also across.

I thought I’d share a few others with you that are perhaps less obvious and more obscure.

Epi (Greek for on as in on top of), which helps with the words epitaph, epigram, epidermis.

Peri (Greek for around), giving us the fabulous peripatetic, periphrastic and – unlucky for some usually in this context – peridontal. See how the second half of the word stays with the Greek and uses dontal for tooth, rather than the Latin dental? Cool isn’t it?

Ante (Latin for before, not to be confused with Anti which is against), giving us antediluvian, antecedents and anteater – just kidding about the last one…

Cata (Greek for down), hints at the meaning of catalogue, catastrophe and, somewhat uncomfortably I would imagine, catheter.

Cum (Latin for with), giving us a host of words beginning with co-, like collusion, convention, composition, colloquial and so on.

Ultra (Latin for beyond), leading to ultrasonic and loads of aspirational business product and service names like ultraflex.

The classical scholars among you will have noted that many ancient prepositions have multiple meanings in English. I have, for this post however, tried to stay with the main meanings. You could also make the argument, and be on pretty solid ground, that for every example I’ve given there are as many others where the preposition means something else.

It’s simply a guide. The only way is to immerse yourself in the language(s) and you’ll be the richer for it :-).

I’m all for clarity of communication. I prefer it to innuendo, nuancing and saying one thing and really meaning another. I guess that would make me a poor business person or negotiator in some parts of the world. I’d have to work harder to make progress in those more inscrutable, deferential and stratified societies.

When I can give a simple answer to a simple question, I will. The trouble is, in much of our working lives – and a lot of our family or private lives – the questions are rarely simple, even though the answers might be.

That’s why my favourite answer  – the one I almost always fall back on – is ‘it depends.’ You’re not fudging your answer. You want to give a good answer so you use it to buy more time and seek qualification to the original question so that you can answer it as well as you can.

Here’s an example:

‘Should we hire this person?’

‘It depends.’

‘How so?’

‘Well, it depends on our plans for the role that this person would be filling. If we are looking for someone who has done the job before and who will hit the ground running, then yes I believe we should. If the role is a stepping stone to a more strategic role where someone is looking for ways to evolve the department and where that someone will need to bring broader and softer skills, then probably not.’

Have a try yourself tomorrow with your customers, partners and colleagues. You’ll be surprised how many times this holding answer allows you to give a better answer later than an inaccurate answer earlier.

I guess it makes me more diplomatic than I thought :-).

Many businesses with sales people don’t have a formally defined sales process. Many don’t even have an informally defined sales process. They either survive on organic growth and referrals or they muddle through, intuitively following a series of steps that either works for them or that they’ve always followed.

‘Process, Schmocess,’ they say. ‘We don’t need a process, we all know what we’re doing.’ That may be true, but do you all know what each other is doing? And how does someone manage you if you’re all doing things your own way? How can they plan and grow the business?

Companies design and follow a sales process for a variety of reasons. Times change, and so do industries and companies, so you want to make sure you’re best serving your industry. Every sales organisation has good and less good salespeople, and you want to instil the behaviours of the good people in the less good. If there is an ideal way of selling that closes the most amount of deals to the long term benefit of your customers, everyone should follow it. You can’t possibly sell to customers until you understand how they want to buy, and a sales process is simply the buying stages that your customer wants to go through to buy from you. Your sales process is simply a mirror of that buying process.

You may feel you’re in an industry that is slow to embrace the latest technologies like social media, but all of your customers and prospects have access to the Internet. This has huge ramifications for you as a selling organisation because it means that companies can complete the first stages of the buying process without ever involving you; they do the online the equivalent of asking around, which means looking at your website, industry discussion groups, forums, review portals. Before they would phone you up and ask for a brochure. If they’re not showing and telling in the first stages of their buying process, you’re missing out on the first stages of your selling process, if you even have one. So you need a sales process that acknowledges this and pushes you to get information early that can help you compete.

I was over-simplifying when I said your sales process is a mirror of your customers’ and prospects’ buying process. Your customers may choose to buy in different ways from you, especially if you have a range of products and services. Then you need to group your customers into buying groups that make sense to you and design a sales process for each group. In other words, you need multiple sales processes – yikes!

Here are eight things you need to take into account.

– your customers’ buying process – and therefore your sales process – will reflect the thing that’s being bought. You don’t want a 7-stage process for something that’s bought over a phone call, and you don’t want a 1-stage process when someone is taking 9 months to decide to invest half a million with you

– a sales process is a linear series of steps you take to guide your customer towards buying something that will uniquely or best help them fix their problem. You do the steps in order, you don’t ask for the order before you know if you’re talking to the decision-maker

– a sales stage mirrors a portion of the buying journey that represents a meaningful milestone to your customer. Example buying stages of a sales process might be: define the problem, design the requirements, evaluate the alternatives, select the winner, negotiate, do the deal, implement the project, review the progress

– a sales stage mirrors the buying stage. Example buying stages might be: identify the prospect, qualify the prospect, define the requirements, demonstrate the evidence, acquire the business, get the order, implement it, review the progress

– each sales stage should contain a series of steps that you need to take in order to progress the sale. Ideally, these steps are verified by the customer. For example, has the customer confirmed when the project has to start by? Has the customer confirmed the quote is acceptable?

– get your sales people to feed into and buy into the sales process. You need them all to follow it. When they’re all doing the right things – which are the same things – at the right time, with the right kind of customer, and are recording the information in the right way, you then have objective, scientific activities and data on which to base your forecasts, your planning and your coaching, rather than no data, or subjective data based on people’s estimate of how they’re doing. As you know, some are optimistic, some are sandbaggers, and the rest fall somewhere in between

– find a sales technology that allows you to design and manage a range of different sales processes, so that you can report on and coach according to the specific parts of your business. The technology should guide your sales people through the steps to take, and cause them the minimum amount of keying and effort to keep up to date. It has to give them back much more than they put in. This is so much easier said than done, so choose the technology carefully. If it makes them win more deals, it makes them more successful and wealthier, which makes them smile more, which makes them want to use the system more. Behold, the ‘virtuous circle’

– you’re looking to instil regular, repeatable, ‘best practice’ behaviours. When you bring in this kind of thing, you are doing change management, and most people – and especially sales people – resist change. Small checks early and often, not large infrequent milestones, are the way to go, otherwise the new behaviours will never become the accepted behaviours

Don’t know where to start? Ask a sales consultant, or look online for sample sales processes, then adapt them for your use.

Despite what you might think, you need sales process in your life. It’s the spine for your business. You ain’t going anywhere without it.