Archives for posts with tag: B2B Marketing

In 25-plus years of B2B marketing, I’ve left a few banana skins on the floor, and failed to pick them up before slipping on them myself. This is why I’m sharing a short series of banana skins so that you might see them before it’s too late – unless you already know them, in which case, you’re ahead of me.

B2B marketing banana skin no 8 to avoid is this: thinking the big deal is in before the big deal is really in. There’s no better feeling in the B2B marketing world than knowing your marketing efforts made a difference, that they hooked in a major or strategic customer. It’s almost always time for some serious mental cartwheels.

That big deal, however, is never truly ‘in’, until you’ve received the contractual paperwork. Verbal commitments mean very little. And then it still might not happen, or the implementation might be problematic, or the customer may negotiate away the marketing clauses at a higher or unseen level to you. And even then the deal may not be a crowning success, preventing you from leveraging further marketing and advocacy benefits.

The best way to deal with this is to hope for the best, plan for the worst. If you have 2 or 3 of these large deals on the hook, you’ve safety in numbers, you’ve some insurance. Always ask yourself what you would need to do to double the pipeline number, to smash it to smithereens, to bring in twice the number of marquee customers. Then that ‘sure fire’ deal becomes far less of an issue, but no less of an opportunity if it goes swimmingly.

I’m amassing a relatively short list of B2B marketing banana skins to avoid, based largely on my history of occasionally planting my heel on the floor with gay abandon, hitting the yellow stuff and ending up chest skywards. Hopefully you don’t do the same, or at least less often.

B2B marketing banana skin no 7 to skip round is this: thinking you can police your brand. You can’t; it’s not possible.

OK, so you can to a degree in the B2B world, and you should certainly put guidelines in place and make it as easy as possible for your stakeholders to toe the line and not dilute your asset.

However, all the new, good, short domain names have been gone for 15 years, so there is the distinct probability that customers will mis-pronounce your name – company or products – mis-spell your name, or mis-use your name, that’s if they don’t forget it.

Thanks to the wonders of office productivity tools, your staff and partners will adapt your brand identity for documents, signage, collateral, interfaces and so on. They’ll use the wrong colours, the wrong typeface, the wrong pointsize, the wrong spacing, and generally place it in a bunch of contexts for which it wasn’t designed or intended. They’ll not know the messaging, or adapt it to their own purposes, or not use it properly.

What can you do about this? What you’re already probably doing, which is to issue guidelines, reminders and encouragement to protect the company’s investment since consistency, culture and value is what it’s all about.

Do your best to police your brand, but don’t be a fascist about it and don’t let it disrupt your sleep. There are other, bigger fish to fry (unless you’re vegetarian).

When you’ve spent over two decades in B2B marketing, you’re bound to slip on a few banana skins along the way. You tend to be the better from it in the long run too, which is why I’m sharing a series of them with you, curated by me from a list of memorable and not-so-memorable faux pas along the way.

B2B marketing banana skin no 6 is this: don’t assume that your marketing budget is fixed. It is not. It is a fluid, movable feast subject to the fortunes of your company and likely be adjusted up or down – sometimes a few times during a financial year.

I’m generally for front-loading expenditure in a budget period. The earlier you can make the investment, the earlier you can see the rewards. Then, if you’ve very little or nothing left in Q4, hopefully you can ride the wave of the good work that’s gone before and see the returns come in before the next financial year. On the other hand, if things don’t go well in H1 you might find that rug of a big event earmarked for Q4 gets pulled from under your feet.

If you’re ahead of plan, there’s every chance you can bid for and be allocated additional funds. Also, if you can demonstrate why a market is proving harder to crack than you anticipated, the executive might go to the well some more for you.

Let’s face it, we all hope that our budgets get revised upward during the year. It’s wise to bear in mind that there’s always a chance they might get revised down too.

I’m putting together a series of blog posts covering what I consider to be the main B2B marketing banana skins best avoided, largely culled from my own experience and which I failed to avoid myself.

B2B marketing banana skin no 5 to avoid slipping on is this: failing to follow the purchasing process properly.

I know, it sounds obvious, but if you’re new to a role, you’re keen to get some projects rolling and stamp your authority on things, it might even be your own budget, and your own P&L…you still need to follow the purchasing process.

I’ve fallen foul of this by assuming wrongly that I could spend my budget as I saw fit. Sometimes you need to get 3 or more quotes, sometimes you need to raise a purchase order, sometimes the finance director needs to sanction all expenditure even though it’s coming from your pot. If you commission work without going through the proper channels, your FD will be slow to pay the invoice and your suppliers will not be best pleased. Worse still, they may not release the funds at all, and then your ability to commit to work and sign contracts will be called into question.

Sometimes you get lucky and your best suppliers are smart enough to ask you exactly how your purchase process works. Then you can find out from the right people and follow it.

Better still, check first before you commit to anything :-).

Having made my share of B2B marketing mistakes, I’m exploring some of the banana skins you should avoid in your own B2B marketing role.

B2B marketing banana skin no 4 to avoid is this: don’t get too bound up strategising when you also need to be executing.

It’s only natural that if you’re new to a role you want to take a step back, take stock and figure out where to go from here. This is a sensible approach, but it must be done in tandem with the ongoing running of your business.

In one of my first management roles I was hired to effect a change in strategy. I introduced a strategic review of the business, sucking in the sales force as well as the marketing team, to make sure we had done our homework, were properly aligned and were putting down the right roots to grow our new strategy.

A month later, what did we have to show for our efforts? Well, a month of no sales because the business has turned in on itself and was not actively marketing and selling. We had become preoccupied on strategy and had forgotten to keep executing.

If you don’t keep the ‘old’ stuff going at the same time as you figure out the new stuff, you won’t be able to effect the right transition. Today’s sales provide the ammunition with which to change your approach and execute tomorrow’s plan. If you delay too long, you might not have a business left when you look up from behind the parapet.

Nothing happens if someone doesn’t sell something, so keep selling even while you change direction.

I’m sharing a series of banana skins to avoid in the world of B2B marketing, in the hope that you won’t slip on them as I did, and many before me.

B2B marketing banana skin no 3 to avoid is this: don’t think you’ll perfectly crack data quality. Data quality is always flawed, because of the human element. Once you rely on people to enter data or amass information, you’re prey to fallibility and competing priorities.

When it comes to buying data for marketing purposes, or getting your sales people to correctly enter data into the system, or interrogating the data you have to get something useful out of it for decision-making, you’re onto a loser from the word go. Even if you’re using automation to amass and update your data, at some point in the chain of events you’ll have effectively paid people not a huge amount of money to get through the quantity and not focus on the quality. Too much focus on quality over a smaller amount of data makes it unprofitable for them and unaffordable for you.

Instead, realise that a certain percentage of data accuracy is all you can ever aim for, and try to put in place processes and incentives so that those who benefit from good data can see what’s in it for them if they make reasonable efforts.

As I mentioned in my previous post – although these posts are not sequential so you don’t need to read a previous post for homework like some of my other blogging series – I’m putting together a series of B2B marketing banana skins to avoid which will hopefully help you short-cut progress in your career and get to where you want to be quicker than I did.

My B2B marketing banana skin no 2 to avoid is this: don’t think you’ll get all the information you need from your CRM system. This may sound slightly controversial, since there is a wealth of excellent CRM – customer relationship management – systems out there that you can customise for your own specific purposes.

You’ll get a lot of the information you need, but not all. This is because it’s incredibly hard to design a brief for how you want your CRM system to behave before you start using it, especially if your business is in a relatively fast-moving industry. Once you start using it, you’ll realise things that you hadn’t thought of and you’ll want to make changes, which is hard to do once it’s been implemented. It’s one of the unspoken catch-22 rules of CRM systems. You’re always playing catch-up. The reports you create and the forecasting you do are rarely exactly what you’re looking for.

We live in a world of precious resources and if your business spends an unreasonably indulgent amount of time trying to perfect your CRM, you’ll become uncompetitive.

Focus on the few key aspects of your system that will govern the largest part of your success. The other aspects are nice-to-haves, which is to say they’re won’t-ever-haves.

I’ve been working in business to business – aka B2B – marketing for a long time. This means I’ve made a lot of mistakes and slipped on a lot of banana skins, an awful lot of them. Far too many to devote a post to every single one of them, I’m afraid. I thought it worthwhile, however, to share a few of them over the next few weeks.

So here’s my B2B marketing banana skin no 1 to avoid. It’s this: thinking the research is going to give you answers.

You have to do the research into your market of course. You can’t base many decisions without information. My point here is the research you do for your business is never enough, and it’s never exactly the right information.

I’ve worked in several businesses and in each case we’ve sought to get certain information to help us form our strategy. You simply can’t get the information you need, sliced in the way you want it. Even the information experts, the ones who do nothing else for a living, can’t give you exactly what you need. If you could get it, you’ve probably missed the market.

Avoid the B2B marketing banana skin of thinking you’ll get a perfect market picture. You’ll get some of it, and you’ll have to make assumptions and do qualified guesswork on the rest. Study the information you have and make your best play. Don’t wait for something perfect to come along. It won’t. Pick a point and go.

I was at a music concert the other day. Popular music. It was the main act of the gig and featured a band who were not stellar or globally known but have a few hits under the belt that you would recognise.

I couldn’t name any of their songs while we were driving to the gig, but when they came on you knew them, and could sing along. There were 2 or 3 thousand at the gig, most of whom, I would guess, were fans.

Like a lot of bands, they had a new album coming out and so played a lot of new stuff. Whenever they played one of their big songs, however, the reaction of the audience was immediate and immense, visceral really.

It got me thinking, saddo that I am, about B2B marketing. This connection, this way of moving people, this level of engagement in a band/brand is something that B2B marketers can only dream about. After all, when you hear your favourite song come on, from your favourite band, the song that evokes a great holiday or time in your life, a song that you named your first child after, it inspires a feeling that you’re unlikely to see replicated when you come into work on the Monday and fire up the software that you couldn’t do your job without.

Both things, work and play, are interactions on a 1:1 basis, and even though B2B is selling to a business not a consumer, you’re still selling to an individual, or more likely a collection of individuals, each with a degree of influence and power, but individuals nonetheless, with their own set of likes, dislikes, preferences, reasons for deciding one way or the other.

Perhaps it’s wrong of us as B2B marketers to even think about trying to emulate the kind of engagement that brands strive for with people when they’re out of business, away from work.

Then again, perhaps moving people as consumers and moving people in work is not so different after all.

If you’re a regular recent reader of this blog, you’ll know that I’ve concluded a series of posts on what I term the 15 steps of B2B marketing, a process that can be applied to pretty much any project, plan or period.

Having built up the 15 steps, I now want to break them up a little.

You may feel that your company, project or plan does not warrant such an exhaustive list of steps. You may also feel that it’s possible to get pretty immediate feedback on your tests and that you might even be able to get stuff out there sooner and iterate your offering while you’re already in the market. A sort of ready-fire-aim approach, if you like.

Indeed, lately, many marketers are starting to borrow from software development and start-up methodologies and talk about ‘agile marketing’, or ‘lean marketing’. Taking a lean approach is a bit like taking a slice of your marketing plan and seeing what it tastes like for customers. This early feedback arms you to improve the next few slices in a series of small improvements, rather than one big cascading marketing push at the end of what might be some untested assumptions and homework.

Lean marketing is not a fad, it’s more a response to the reality that the mechanism of the web makes it much easier for you to very quickly get a steer on whether what you’re doing resonates with those whom you want to relieve of some money. For more on this read here.