How to choose measures you can act on
If you don't know what's working, how do you know what to change? So measure inputs (not outputs), measure buyer progression, and - don't measure what you're not prepared to change (or can't). To most ears, "Measuring Sales and Marketing effectiveness" sounds like a low priority. It may be on your B or C list, even on a good day. If you're feeling less generous, you might even call it an academic indulgence and not consider it a priority at all. But if you don't know what's working, how can you know what to change? If you don't know, then one idea is as good as the next. One person argues for their pet sales or marketing tactic and another argues for theirs. Who wins? Seniority, or the loudest voice. What happens next is that you head into implementation, without a factual basis for the choice. When this new tactic fails, you change - lurching from one great idea to the next, often never really giving the chosen tactic a chance to prove itself. Warren Jackson, CFO of Hardbits, puts it simply:
You can measure inputs:
If you measure how effectively these inputs progress buyers - you'll need a common definition of the buyer's journey - you can start testing changes to your tactics. A/B tests allow you to test possible changes. You might send the old letter to half of your list, and another letter with just one element changed to the other half. The results will tell you whether to change or not. There are some traps though, so discuss A/B testing with us before you try. Here are a few practical ideas we've learned about measuring the funnel, from more than 200 sales and marketing effectiveness projects:
With these basic measures, you are now in a position to make two major changes to the way you manage effectiveness today:
As a general rule, you should test only one change at a time. Split your universe of prospects in two and make the change for just half of these prospects and then use the other half as a "control". The result of this attention to detail will astonish you in terms of sales generated where you felt there were none. |
But how do you translate this into action in your own business? Over the past 10 years we have found that great ideas fail to get acted on because of what we call the “strategy to action gap”. It occurs when businesses lack a singular plan, and fail to translate good strategy into meaningful action.
In our years of work with B2B companies, we’ve uncovered 3 overriding reasons for this “strategy to action gap”, and – more importantly – we’ve identified 3 proven steps you can take to turn your strategy into action and results.
Would you like to:
- Make your selling strategy connect better with your buyers’ needs?
- Take what you already know and make it work harder and faster for you?
- Get the whole team on board?
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