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Archive for the ‘Guest Blog’

The Three P’s of Sales Crisis Management

September 08, 2009 By: Tim Category: Guest Blog, Managing the Hunt, Your Sales Team

By Tim Searcy

Ahh meetings—those wonderful illusions of productivity, collaboration and focus.  Meetings are the standard reaction to sales management crisis just as running an IV is the standard answer in an emergency room.

OK, you are going to have a meeting because you are in a crisis. What are you going to meet about?

Enthusiastic yelling, leading and hours of meetings will only create the illusion of problem solving.  Instead, you need information.  There are three types of information you have to get a stranglehold on right away in a sales crisis: pipeline, prospects and potential.

1. Pipeline. The pipeline is defined as the list of real opportunities for which you have credible, verifiable information including all of the following:

  • Dollars. How big is this, how soon can we see it, and how long will the opportunity continue to pay us and is there a bigger payout later?  But even more important than that is the rock solid assurance that a trigger event has occurred that will make certain this deal happens, and an unshakeable knowledge that a budget of sufficient size has been allocated to do the work. Without these, the dollars are dreams, not dollars.
  • Dates. When the deal is going to close is less relevant than when it will bill.  More importantly, what control do we have on moving the dates forward versus waiting for things to happen?  Sometimes a prospect will make accommodation or we can directly impact how quickly actions can take place by what we do.
  • Decision Making. You have to know the criteria upon which the awarding of the work will pivot.  If we don’t know how the fears that the deal will alleviate in the client’s mind, we don’t know enough to win.
  • Decision Makers. Is the economic buyer involved and have we personally engaged with them yet?   What do we know about these people as individuals, and what research do we have on them and their history in decision making?  Again, do we know what has triggered the choice to change providers or move outside?

The goal of the pipeline information analysis is to trim down the pipeline to a 30-60 day action cycle. Clean out everything that does not provide the information you need, set it aside for reconnaissance work and now focus on the remaining pipeline over which planning and energy can have impact.

2.
Prospects. What if your remaining pipeline is ‘thin’? The crisis may not be able to be addressed with the opportunities in the pipeline even if we close at a slightly higher rate than we have in the past.  We have to look above the pipeline to find out where we can hope to see more opportunities.

  • Source. Often a crisis is at least in part about our own expenses. As a sales leader, you will be asked to address things like trade shows, advertising, sponsorships, client gifts and T &E.  You need to have a great sense of where your best leads are coming from.  In a crisis, there is nothing you have to do.
  • Rate of flow. What is the pace of demand generation and does it have seasonality?  Trade show season is often touted as the best time to get new leads.  However, every marketing activity has a lifecycle, and someone needs to work through a calendar to give you an expected number of leads for each cycle.  Then you need to determine if the lead flow will be sufficient, and if not, what expense trade offs are you willing to make to gain a greater or different yield of leads.
  • Distribution. This is no time to play fair.  If you have been using a standard distribution of leads to sales people, you need to rethink this.  In a time of crisis, you need your best people chasing the best opportunities.  Crisis by its nature means you will have to sacrifice something, and unfortunately the feelings of your less productive salespeople may need to be ignored.

These steps are all valid if the pipeline is too small to overcome the gap that is creating the crisis. If you have a big enough pipeline, however, WORK THE PIPELINE and leave the fresh prospecting efforts until you have exhausted the pipeline.

3.    Potential from current clients. Often the place we go first is our current clients.  We know them, and they know us, and it is likely that we are not getting all the business from them that we should.

  • Current status. With which clients are we currently in good standing?  This is not the time to chase someone who is angry at us to ask for more business.  As a sales leader, it will require nerves of steel to face down an owner or boss and say “No, it is not time to ask for more business from this client, because they are already on the edge of firing us.”  I have seen many organizations in which the CEO is completely unaware of the current relationship challenges and the severity of those challenges.
  • State of Triggers. It is very difficult to pull a trigger that is not there.  We have to assess whether we have a good story other than our need for why we should be getting more business from a current client.  If the client does not have their own rationale for giving you more, you will need to take one with you.  Ask yourself, “What problem do I solve for my client or fear do I alleviate for them when they give me more business?”  Conversely, you need to assess what problems or fears you create when they give you more business.

With this information, you can begin to make the most important decision any leader can make: what not to focus on.  That’s right, this is a reductive process.  Get rid of the lower impact items and drive the things you can manage like a ten penny nail (That means really, really hard!)  Many times, the answers you get from your investigation will drop that pit in your stomach to depths you had not realized existed.  However, from real truth comes real change.  You need to design a plan that takes into account Pareto’s law, and focus on the 20% that can give you the 80% you have to have to get out of the crisis.

From the Mail Bag: More “Brain Food” for Strategic Planning

August 13, 2009 By: GiniDietrich Category: Growth Strategy, Guest Blog

Comments have been pouring in about your preferred “brain food.”  Gini Deitrich, one of our favorite guest bloggers, has chimed in with her two cents, as has my friend, Scott Collins, Present of SRA.  Take a look and share your own.

Hi Tom,

There’s so much to read out there that it’s important to home in on what really serves your needs.  Here are the blogs and reporters that I read daily:

I also subscribe to SmartBrief leadership, and daily entrepreneur and social media newsletters for new ideas and articles.

And, of course, I read YOU!

Gini

And from Scott:

Hi Tom,

Here are some of my favorite information sources to share with your readers.

Vistage: I utilize a pretty wide variety of their speaking resources to enhance what we are doing.  Sometimes I read additional information from them, sign up for their newsletters, etc.

New strategic facilitator: We are going to engage the services of Harry Kangis (developer of the “One Page Strategic Plan”) to facilitate a completely redesigned strategic planning process.  I felt like we needed to do something very different to “shake things up” given our desire to accelerate our transformation…now was the right time.

LinkedIn: I have gotten some very good ideas through various LinkedIn groups as well as introductions to additional thought leaders.

Get Abstract: I can’t tell you how great a resource this has been.  New content every week in small, digestible chunks on a very wide variety of topics. You can always buy the book if the preview sparks deeper interest

Blue Ocean: I use this as a broad term to define bringing together a wide array of thought leaders from very unrelated industries to help us think about the future of SRA.  This has done so much to help us redefine the model and our target markets resulting in a much shorter timeline for us to complete our transformation (frequency – once or twice a year)

Building our business from the outside in: Coordinating our customers, vendors, and unrelated business visionaries in an “Advisory Board” capacity to help us think about and refine various parts of our business and product offerings.  We are now doing this with our redeveloped SRA University initiative and it is already paying dividends.  (Frequency is almost monthly as an ongoing part of the tactics that help us achieve our strategic objectives)

Six Thinking Hats by Edward deBono: Great resource to help improve the thinking and decision making process in your business.

Enjoy!

Scott

Who Knew? LinkedIn Is An Amazing Lead Generation Tool

June 25, 2009 By: Gretel Going Category: Guest Blog, Lead Generation, Social Media

By Gretel Going

When I asked Tom if he thought his audience would benefit from an article on b-to-b lead generation, his answer was an obvious “yes,” so here I am. I do a ton of web, social media and content work with Tom, and he tells me that people ask him all the time to share some of his savvy trade secrets. Against his better judgment, I’m going to do exactly that in this post. Enjoy…

Most people think of LinkedIn as a great place for networking, researching contacts and searching the job market, but it’s true value as a lead generation tool has yet to be fully realized.

With a highly-engaged community, quality discussions and the ability to generate an incredible amount of traffic and leads, LinkedIn can be an incredible sales tool for b-to-b companies when used strategically. I only wish it hadn’t taken me three years of using it to figure it out.

Before I go into my tips for using LinkedIn, let me clarify: I don’t believe that “So and so sent me a message on LinkedIn and now we’re talkin’ business” qualifies as a case study on using LinkedIn for lead generation. The event must be uniquely limited to the platform at hand, whereas in that example, the same thing could have easily happened over email (or Facebook, or Twitter, or…you get it). Now, if the person got a hold of you on LinkedIn because they happened to see your contribution to a discussion in a group there, or arrived as one of your shared connections, well, that’s another story altogether.

Anyway, I’ll cut to the chase and tell you a few ways we’ve used LinkedIn to generate leads and other business opportunities for ourselves and for clients…

(more…)

A poem on RFPs by a reader! It is great!

June 01, 2009 By: Tom Searcy Category: Guest Blog, RFP Process

You know you’ve done something right when one of your readers starts writing poetry about your work. Check out the fantastic poem about RFPs below! No, really.

Tom,

The other day I spontaneously started writing a poem triggered by your observations on the RFP process. Enjoy and feel free to share with your readers.

To all the people at Hunt Big Sales, thanks for the inspiration, motivation and information!

Thorsten Hoins
The Pollack PR Marketing Group

He ate and drank the precious Words,
And got our Team excited;
“A Big Consumer Brand” He said,
“And we have been invited!”
“Oh, this is great,” the Team rejoiced
“We’d love to work on that…”
Needless to say, all jumped aboard
In 15 Seconds flat!

Four weeks of Research, Toil and Thought,
Went into our Response;
We made our Deck look really good,
We pitched our Pros, (we cloaked our cons);
We answered every Question whole,
Obeying each Decree;
We even gave some great Ideas
Away to use – for free!

Alas, a teensy-weensy Fact,
Omitted in their Doc;
The Reason why we were invited
Was not because: We Rock!
Nor for the Breadth of our past Work
Our History transcends;
Neither our matching Expertise,
Or even ‘cause we’re Friends.
No, our Proposal’s Heft and Strength
Served very different Ends…

First Copy went to Paul and Mike
Messrs. Sarbanes and Oxley
(Methinks in Times of Bailout Boons
‘Tis an outmoded Proxy)
Next: Round up good Ideas for free
Not one – a whole Buffet!
Transcribe — then off to current Chums
Who’ll use them to make Hay…
But not before Chum(p)s’ Fees and Costs
Were re-negotiated,
…because those great – and new – Ideas,
Had been “in-house” created ;-)

Our Chance to win that Business?
In Percent: Four, nay Three.
So this is why we kindly ask:
“Don’t send that RFP.”