Benjamin Franklin famously said: “By failing to prepare you are preparing to fail.”
Our clients have confided in us that it can be really hard to know where to begin with developing a sales and marketing strategy. They’re bombarded with new technologies, shiny ideas coming from their bosses, a swirl of performance metrics, and of course, good ole self-doubt.
It’s a lot of pressure, because what you plan today, you’ll have to show ROI on tomorrow. You can plan for success by following these 9 steps for putting together a sales and marketing strategy plan.
How to Develop Your Sales and Marketing Strategy
1) Budget for Success
Make sure you’ve allocated enough resources (people and money) to accomplish your company’s goals for the year. The size of your marketing budget will also depend on how much you have available to invest in your sales and marketing strategy, and how quickly you will see results. If you have caviar dreams and a tuna fish budget, you’ll be disappointed by your lack of results, and your team will be frustrated by their inability to meet your expectations.
We’ve just completed a detailed series on developing a successful marketing budget. Use those articles as a starting point for establishing your annual marketing budget.
2) Review and Update Your Ideal Customer Profile and Personas
Look back at your best customers and identify the characteristics that make them profitable and enjoyable to work with. Make sure your ideal customer profile and buyer personas are accurate and update them as necessary to reflect the kinds of customers who will help you reach your growth goals.
3) Document Your Buyer’s Journey
Once your personas are updated, document the journey each persona will take toward becoming a customer. Your contacts take lots of tiny steps along the way to becoming a buyer. Plot out every interaction point your personas will have with your content or your company. This is your buyer’s journey—and each persona has their own.
Start at the end—what will they do immediately before signing a contract with you? What’s the step before that? The one before that? At each point along the way, identify the persona’s main questions, motivations, and potential objections. Then identify the kinds of content you’ll need to create to meet them at each point along the buyer’s journey.
Don’t forget about the influencers in the process. Feed your main contact the content they need to help educate and sell you internally.
You should also determine what CTAs to include in order to lead them to the next step.
4) Confirm Your Differentiators
Make sure you’re clear on what makes you different from your competitors. Talk to some of your customers and find out why they chose to buy from you—and what could make them switch teams and buy from your competitors instead.
5) Review and Organize Your Marketing Collateral
Make sure that your printed and digital marketing materials are written and designed to attract your ideal customers and communicate your company’s unique qualities to prospects and customers. Verify that copyright dates are updated, that your style guidelines are being followed, and that everyone on your sales team is using the right version!
6) Review Your Website and Online Marketing
Take a look at your website and social media channels to make sure they’re designed to attract and educate your personas. Is your branding and messaging consistent? Are you engaging with the right target audience? Is your content compelling and educational?
Tip: If you’d like to see how your website is performing, check out HubSpot’s website grader.
7) Review and Document Your Sales Process
Is your sales process set up to close the quality and quantity of customers you need to reach your company’s growth goals? Does everyone on your sales team follow the same process for qualifying and nurturing prospects? Is your process documented? Is your CRM (customer relationship management) system set up to support your process efficiently and effectively? Could you be using any automated tools to make your process more efficient?
Document any issues you uncover while you’re reviewing your collateral, processes, and templates. Look for “dark pools”—areas of your process where prospects or customers get lost or ignored due to lack of time/energy/resources.
Pro tip: Get your sales and marketing teams on the same page with an SLA.
8) Document Your Sales and Marketing Plan
Prioritize the issues you’ve identified and develop a phased approach to tackling them over the next four quarters. Depending on the issues you’ve identified, you may need to develop tactical plans for content/inbound marketing, social media, lead generation, lead nurturing, or account development.
9) Track Your Progress and Evolve Your Tactics
Make sure you have defined metrics for measuring success, and have assigned individual team members to be accountable for solving each issue. Set up regular meetings to review progress, identify and solve issues, and align activities across teams. Learn from your mistakes and victories, and evolve your tactics as needed to maintain your traction!
Next Steps
There’s a lot of work to do here, and it can be tough to be objective about your own company when you’re so close to it. Learn even more in our Ultimate Guide to Digital Marketing for Manufacturers. Then, still have questions about how to prioritize, how to get it all done, or how much it will cost? Let’s chat about how we can help with your sales and marketing strategy.
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