Tuesday, July 26

B2B and the Sales Funnel

Today I was going to write about B2B Marketing Strategies.  But I couldn't really do that until I had dipped into the B2B Sales Funnel. 

The sales funnel demonstrates the sales process.  B2B marketing and sales team seek to fill their
sales funnel, and then to track and predict sales. These are critical functions and metrics given the
typically long and complex sales cycle for B2B relationships.

The funnel is shaped like a funnel (was that too obvious).  At the top of the funnel, there are
millions of prospective customers.  But, really there aren't many real prospective customers in
there.  So, as these people fall through this funnel, you find that there are fewer and fewer and
fewer real potential customers.  At the end of the of the sales process very few prospects become real
customers.

Depending on the funnel you look to, you will find different stages and different numbers of stages.  The Marketing team is responsible for the "top half" of the funnel - i.e. attracting qualified leads - while the sales team takes the relationship from there and closes the deal.  A good B2B organization tracks the funnel and customers at each stage to know how much potential business they have in their funnel.  This helps a business to accurately predict sales. 

A B2B sales organization uses Marketing Automation software like SalesForce.com to help track the funnel.

Next up ... a discussion of a more complex B2B sales funnel which shows some additional dynamics.

Friday, July 22

What is B2B and what makes it different?

Let's start by understanding what B2B is.  B2B describes commercial transactions between businesses.  In a B2B transaction the commodity being sold is typically an input - like a raw product or a machine - to help a business produce another product.  B2B transactions can include anything:
  • Services (like legal servcies, IT services, marketing services, accounting services, etc.),
  • Products (like chemicals, plastics, steel, concrete, wood, rubber, glass, and so on), or
  • Information (e.g. customer lists, demographic information, geological studies, weather reports, etc.).
B2B can be contrasted with two other major B2's.  The first is the B2C.  Those are transactions that are between a business and a consumer - and the transactions that most of us bump into daily: buying your groceries, buying some clothes, buying a new car.  This is also where the majority of advertising appears to take place.

The other B2 is B2G.  B2G is a bit like B2B and a bit like B2C.  It is Business to Government.  These sales are all about selling items to Governments.  Typically this requires participating in complex bidding processes and negotiations.  But, the payoff can be very high.  The goods and services that are purchased by governments are sometimes "B2B" in nature - for instance a government might buy a telephone system to run a call centre (e.g. an input to other deliverables).  Sometimes the government might be buying tourism brochures to mail out to their citizens (e.g. consumers).

Finally, there is also C2C.  This is rarely considered but is Consumer to Consumer sales.  Good examples of C2C are classified ads (like in a newspaper ... hey, what's a newspaper).  The modern and more effective equivalent is Kijiji, Craig's List or eBay.

(I wonder it C2B is when a consumer returns something to a business - effectively selling it back to the busines ... hmmm ... deep thoughts.)
 
According to Wikipedia -
The volume of B2B (Business-to-Business) transactions is much higher than the volume of B2C transactions. The primary reason for this is that in a typical supply chain there will be many B2B transactions involving sub components or raw materials, and only one B2C transaction, specifically sale of the finished product to the end customer. For example, an automobile manufacturer makes several B2B transactions such as buying tires, glass for windscreens, and rubber hoses for its vehicles. The final transaction, a finished vehicle sold to the consumer, is a single (B2C) transaction.
B2B and B2G are substantially more complex than your average "2C" marketing and sales transaction.  Major differences include:
  • Multiple Buyers - A B2B/B2G sale will often involve many people in the buying process - such as the user, the influencer, the decision maker, the evaluator, and a purchaser.
  • Sales Team - Due to the complex nature of many B2B sales there is often a sales team in place to handlea variety of specialized tasks that take place through a sales funnel - such as prospecting (marketing), sales lead, technical analyst, sales engineer, and so forth. 
  • Needs vs. Wants - A B2B transaction is precipitated by a NEED.  A Business needs a product, service, or information to achieve a goal.  They NEED steel-toed boots for their workers so that they can meet safety standards.  On the other hand, a consumer often may just want to have a new pair of shoes.  There's a bit of artistic license in that ... consider a business that builds a new building and has an architect design a unique and enormous tower.  They don't need that.  They WANT that.
  • Long cycles - Back in 1988 I became interested in B2B sales when I read an article about a Sales Executive with GE who had worked for 10 years on selling one set of generators to one client.  In the end he closed the deal.  As I recall that was something to do with the Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River.  I wonder what that commission was like?
  • Significant evaluations - It doesn't always happen, but the chances are that before a decision maker will commit to buy something, the B2B decision maker will demand substantial technical evaluation of the product and will have a "bake-off" among several competitors.  It is often a winner takes all contest.  Consider how long an airline will take to choose the purchase of a new plane and the due diligence they put into buying a $350 million jet that will carry 800 people more than half-way around the world.  Initial cost, operating cost, performance, longevity, comfort, efficiency, and safety (among other things) all get evaluated over many months or years.
Even with all of the scrutiny in a B2B transaction, it would be wrong to think that emotion doesn't enter the equation in a BIG way.  In head-to-head comparisons the scoring between products will often be pretty close.  The final decision may come down to the sales executive who has the best handshake, or the one that makes the least mistakes.  To that end, I worked for a company that was vieing for the IT Services of a very large credit card company.  The two companies that were in the final running for the work each took the client out for supper.  The company I worked for picked up the bill and paid with a credit card from the client's company.  The other contender took the client out on another night and also picked up the bill.  Unfortunately (for them), they used their corporate credit card.  It wasn't the client's brand.  The client saw.  Can you guess the emotion?  Can you guess who won the business?

(With thanks to Steve Woods for his blog that provided me some additional direction and information for my post.)

Next up ... B2B Marketing Strategies.

Wednesday, July 20

B2B Marketing

Over the next several days I'm going to dig into the strategies and trends in B2B Marketing.  I'm also going to poke away at "what makes a good B2B product demo", and B2B sales close techniques.

As I write this it will be interesting to see where the topics lead and how close I'm able to stay to my outline. 

Check back over the next days and weeks for the details.

Tuesday, July 12

Make sure you check TripAdvisor.com

If you are in the travel industry, be sure to check TripAdvisor for reviews on your business.  This week my family was planning a side-trip to the Dells in Wisconsin.  This is an area famous for amusement parks and especially water slides.  We were going to go to the Mt. Olympus Water Park and Hotel.  That was until my wife read through the reviews on TripAdvisor.  Maybe we could have stayed and played somewhere else.  But this review turned us off the entire area. 

Lessons for Hotels and Attractions - Check and respond to reviews on TripAdvisor and other similar reviews.

Lessons for Destination Marketing Boards - Do the same for everyone you look after.

Monday, July 11

Google vs Bing vs Yahoo (Update for July 2011)

Over a year ago I wrote a blog looking at how the top search engines were doing.  I thought it was time for an update.  An article on Search Engine Watch, called "May 2011 Search Engine Market Share from comScore, Compete, Hitwise" by Danny Goodwin, (June 19, 2011), gave me the input for that.

Back in April 2010, Experian Hitwise reported that Google had 71.4% of share, Yahoo was at 14.96% and bing was hovering at 9.43%. 

Now?

According to  comScore, in May of 2011 that looks like: Google is at 65.5%, Yahoo is at 15.9%, and Bing has grown to 14.1%.  (You probably aren't asking, but in case you are curious, Ask.com is continuting to linger way, way down in the rankings.) 

So, year over year Google has dropped somewhere around 6%-8% in search rankings (depending on the web analytics company's stats you look at).  At the same time, Bing is enjoying growth!

Thursday, July 7

I kick butt on a First Beer

A long time ago I wrote a blog called "Bad Buzz ... Yeah I remember my first beer".  This blog was part of a series talking about how to respond to social media that goes bad. 

What I get a kick out of is that that page is my most popular blog page BY FAR. 

I suspect that people are finding my marketing-focused blog based on searching for information about really having their first beer.  It does make you see the potential for stuffing a page with top hot words to build traffic to your page. 

How do you find hot words?  Have a look at the Google Hot Trends in the left column of this blog and similar stats like Trending Now on Yahoo.ca, or Trending Topics on Twitter.  But stuffing a page with hot words is something Google really frowns on.  So I won't and you shouldn't either. 

Focus on relevant and interesting content, and your audience will follow.  At least, that's the theory I'm working on.

Wednesday, July 6

Advertise, Advertise, Advertise

An economic downturn brings opportunity for those who are willing to take a leap of faith and who have a cash cow they can use to buy advertising when times get tough.  When you go looking for success stories - or survival stories - from the Great Depression, you read that there are a number of examples of brands becoming successful through the trying times. 
The most widely quoted are Chevrolet cars, Camel cigarettes and Procter & Gamble.  Each of these relied heavily on advertising because they realized that they needed advertising to create and maintain brand loyalty.

In 2008, Dave Chase wrote "How brands thrived during the Great Depression", and provided a good rundown on these three:
  • Procter & Gamble. To this day, P&G maintains a philosophy of not reducing advertising budgets during times of recession, and the company certainly did not make any such reduction during the Depression. It's not a coincidence that P&G has made progress during every one of the major recessions. While competitors cut ad budgets, P&G increased its spending. While the Depression caused problems for many, P&G came out of it unscathed. Radio took P&G's message into more homes than ever, and P&G became a pioneer in effective use of that medium, including its role in creating the notion of soap operas.
  • Chevrolet. During the 1920s, Fords were outselling Chevrolets by 10 to 1. In spite of the Depression, Chevrolet continued to expand its advertising budget and, by 1931, Chevrolet took the lead in its field. It is believed that Ford's weaker balance sheet entering the Depression rendered it unable to respond to Chevrolet.
  • Camel Cigarettes. In 1920, Camel was the top-selling tobacco product. American Tobacco Co. then struck back with the Lucky Strike brand, and by 1929 Lucky had overtaken Camel as the No. 1 brand. Two years later, in the heart of the Depression, Chesterfield also overtook Camel. Camel countered with a dramatic increase in ad spend and, by doing so, demonstrated the power of advertising during depressed times. By 1935, it was back on top.
Advertising Lesson #5 from the Great Depression: Advertise ... Hard.

This is my final installment on Depression Marketing.  Hope you enjoyed it, and found it uplifting.