Tag Archive for: Sales Enablement

Lead Liaison Press Release

Broadleaf Commerce Chooses Lead Liaison to Execute Sales & Marketing Strategy

Dallas, TX – Broadleaf Commerce provides robust commerce solutions to support enterprise retail brands. They’ve recently been named in Inc. 5000’s List of Fastest-Growing Companies in America for the second year in a row. Their brand is rising to the top, and that’s no accident. The company practices effective and efficient strategies, both internally and externally, in order to compete.

Broadleaf has experience with marketing automation solutions outside of Lead Liaison. Prior to using Lead Liaison’s solutions, they used a competitor for email campaigns, website tracking, and social media. They started looking for an alternative solution that would enable them to do their wholistic prospecting and marketing automation within a single platform. They needed a solution that better aligned their sales and marketing team, with automation tools and the ability to personalize content.

After much research and consideration, Broadleaf Commerce chose Lead Liaison to replace their current marketing automation solution. In the video testimonial released this week, Broadleaf Commerce’s Chief Operating Officer, Brad Buhl, and his team speak to the reasoning behind that decision.

“Lead Liaison helps us have a single platform to look at visitor views into the website and their interaction with us, on a more passive basis,” says Buhl. “We’ve also gone through Sales Enablement with them, so now all of our emails are synced up with Lead Liaison from our sales team. We are able to get a full picture of when a customer comes in the door, what they click on, what they are interested in, and how we personally communicate with them.”

Lead Liaison’s Sales Enablement is one of two cutting-edge solutions the software provider brought to the table over the last year – the other being their innovative event lead management solution. Sales Enablement provides a suite of sales solutions designed to make salespeople’s lives easier.  It provides two-way email sync so reps never have to use Bcc addresses to get content into their CRM, a sales automation functionality called Rhythms to help reps book more meetings, and even more customization options.

From a sales velocity perspective, Lead Liaison’s solutions allow Broadleaf to see when their team starts working with a customer, how long it takes to close and what the steps are to get them closer to close. What’s more, they can zoom out even further and look at the leading indicators for how a lead originated, to getting to the point where the customer reaches out.

“When it comes to content creation and building emails,” says Cassandra Gaston, Marketing Specialist at Broadleaf Commerce, “I’m able to both use the editorial mode but also edit in HTML, which means that I can get as granular as I want to. When it comes to picking the right messaging for a campaign, you need to be able to get that granular.”

Broadleaf Commerce’s account executives also use Lead Liaison’s CRM and Sales Enablement functionality for organization and outreach purposes. Their marketing team uses Lead Liaison’s marketing automation and website visitor tracking solutions to create and distribute relevant and educational content, thus creating meaningful exchanges that build brand awareness. Their leadership team utilizes the reporting and analytics that come standard in Lead Liaison’s software.

“We have five people on our business development team,” say Nick Staargaard, Account Executive at Broadleaf Commerce. “We are competing against organizations that have thousands. By being able to use Lead Liaison in an effective manner, it allows us to compete with those bigger companies and really brings us to the forefront of that competition where we are being recognized by bigger companies now.”

The collaboration between departments gives Broadleaf a lot of insight into their prospects and the kind of information they should be leading with when they make contact.

“In order to do a lot, you have to spend a lot,” says Buhl. “But with Lead Liaison, you can do a lot without having to spend a lot. That’s not only in the price of the software, but it’s in the time that you have to consume in order to get there.”

This video testimonial, plus many more, are available here.

About Lead Liaison
Lead Liaison provides cloud-based sales and marketing automation solutions that helps businesses accelerate revenue by attracting, converting, closing and retaining more prospects. Filling a void in the small pool of marketing automation providers that focus on marketing-centric functionality, Lead Liaison gives equal focus to sales providing sophisticated visitor tracking and additional website engagement tools to boost sales effectiveness. Lead Liaison blends ease-of-use, a flexible business model, deep external integration, marketing across social, web, mobile, email and offline channels and powerful functionality, all specifically tailored for mid-sized businesses, into a single platform, called Revenue Generation Software®. Lead Liaison is headquartered in Dallas, Texas. For more information, visit http://www.leadliaison.com or call 1-800-89-LEADS (895-3237).

calendar sales

How to Book More Sales Meetings

Are you wondering how to book more sales meetings? If you’re reading this, then you’re likely a VP of Sales and having problems with the reps on your team or you’re an individual contributor and looking for the upperhand. In this article, we’ll expose some eye opening statistics and give you one of the key ways you can solve this very problem to start booking more sales meetings.

A few months back I traveled from Texas to Georgia. I was traveling to accompany one of our sales representatives in a meeting with a potential client. When I sat down with the prospect, I asked him what he was hoping to accomplish that day. He answered my question by saying he wanted to see anything and everything in our software. In my mind, I thought this meeting would drag on and on unless I took better control of it. Most sales reps would feel a jolt of electricity in their chair if they heard their prospect say this very same thing. They’d be ready to whip out their box of candy and start handing it out like it was Halloween. Instead of throwing him tootsie rolls and lifesavers (or a full candy bar like those wealthy neighborhoods like to do), I turned the question back around to him. I asked, what is it you’re trying to accomplish in your role. He said, “I want to have more conversations.” Now, that’s helpful. Instead of going off on another dog and pony show that could cover things that didn’t mean much to him, we narrowed down the focus.

This sales rep was no different than the 2.7 million other inside sales representatives in the U.S.  Their main goal is largely to generate interest and set up meetings. Unfortunately, most reps are inefficient at doing so and struggle with their approach. According to SalesWolf, Sales Development Reps (SDR) waste up to 40% of their time looking for someone to call. With the average SDR making 37.2 calls per day, that’s a lot of wasted time. There’s no secret sauce to booking more meetings; however, there’s one thing we wholeheartedly believe in. It’s quality over quantity and structure/process is not an option; it’s a necessity.

I recall a CEO of a company I used to work for saying to our inside sales team, “it’s a numbers game…just do more and it will happen.” While that could be true, sales leadership really never considers the burn out rate of an SDR after running them through the ringer. Bridge Group research sites there’s a minimum of 20% annual turnover in Sales, and up to 34% if you include voluntary and involuntary. To make matters worse, Deloitte found that Millennials are even more likely to leave their job sooner, as 25% said they’ll leave their current job within a year and 44% will leave within two years.

Now, consider the time it takes to ramp up a sales rep. ClearSlide and CSO Insights report that 71% of companies take 6 months or longer to onboard new sales reps; and at all companies it takes 9 months or more. If you do the simple math here, and consider best case scenarios, there’s a window of a year or two when a rep is fully up to speed and still working for your company. Why is turnover so high? Forbes states that sales reps don’t have coaches and mentors, and lack the latest sales tools.

Stop reading this if your company is not willing to spend money on the right sales tools. And stop reading this if you’re not ready to capitalize on the window of opportunity when your rep is ready to go, and still working for you! Why? Because you’re really not ready to have your sales rep book more sales meetings and you’re not open to adopting technology to assist. Some sales rep can be true superstars, but they can only do so much. Insidesales.com finds the average company spends $2,103 per SDR per year ($175 per month) on sales technology (not including CRM). Insidesales.com found the top five adopted sales technologies are, along with their adoption rate:

  1. Social prospecting, 82.5%
  2. List services, 58.5%
  3. Email engagement, 55.3%
  4. Phone, 43.4%
  5. Sales cadences, 37%

Adopting these five core technologies into your sales team’s strategies will without a doubt help them book more meetings. It will also help them spend less time looking for things to do. All five of these approaches can be applied using a single software solution, that takes less than half of the sales technology budget ($175 per month in 2018 according to Insidesales.com). The solution also dramatically cuts down ramp up time so companies can maximize the window in which sales reps are ramped up and employed.

By using systems like Rhythms from Lead Liaison, Cadences from SalesLoft, or Sequences from Outreach.io, sales reps can build a blueprint of their sales plan. The blueprint can contain social touch points, drive email engagement, and schedule phone tasks all while ingesting a list of contacts that you source.

Reps use these systems by mixing offline and online communication over time to form their outreach process. The systems have both manual and automated tasks, working together to move the “suspect” through the prospecting cycle and into the top of the lifecycle funnel. The system keeps track of engagement and creates tasks that reps can work on in a systematic way each day – helping to keep them focused on the job at hand.

To learn more about Lead Liaison’s solution, called Rhythms, that help sales representatives book more sales meetings contact Lead Liaison today.

Sales Enablement

The Importance of Integration in Sales Enablement

Sales enablement – a strategic, collaborative discipline, designed to add value to customer interactions and improve predictable sales results – is a business function that has grown rapidly over the past few years. In fact, when CSO Insights began its annual Sales Enablement Optimization Study in 2013, just 19.3 percent of organisations had a dedicated enablement function or programme, and that figure reached 59.2 percent in 2017.

In the end, sales enablement is about ensuring that salespeople, marketing staff, customer service reps and business leaders all understand how they can help meet customer expectations and maximize the amount of revenue the organization generates. In this article, we look more closely at the role that integration plays in enablement and explain some of the steps organizations can take to align sales, marketing, and customer service.

Setting Shared Objectives

For an enablement strategy to work, it is important to understand that, while different departments will have different individual aims and objectives, the primary objective of the sales organization is to maximize sales effectiveness, help customers and improve sales results. Ultimately, for sales enablement to be successful, the individual departments need to share those objectives and understand the role that they play in helping to achieve them.

This means that sales reps need to be equipped with the skills and knowledge to maximize success, the customer service staff needs to adopt best practices to deal with problems quickly and keep customers happy, and the marketing department needs to generate interest in the organization and highlight the company’s merits. Enablement leaders must then ensure all of those things happen, but that departments never lose sight of the core objectives.

“One of the major reasons sales enablement is so challenging is due to interdepartmental misalignment and a lack of ownership for enablement initiatives,” says Alyssa Drury, writing for Seismic. “Marketing plays an integral role… but it is often thought of as a sales responsibility, causing tension between the two departments. This alignment is [also] impossible if marketers aren’t thinking about how they support the sales force.”

Connecting Sales Coaching

While it is far from the whole story, a significant part of sales enablement is sufficiently training and coaching sales staff, so that they can carry out their role to the best of their ability. However, this requires integration, because sales reps need to be taught how to make use of content created by the marketing department and how to make use of CRM software, which links with the customer service department.

For sales leaders to achieve this, it is best to formally align their sales coaching and sales training processes to their sales enablement framework, so that all aspects are covered.

Yet, according to the CSO Insights 2017 Sales Enablement Optimization Study, only 11.3 percent of organizations have a dynamic coaching process in place, where their sales coaching efforts are connected to their enablement framework. Nevertheless, when this does occur, average win rates stand at 66.1 percent, compared to the average win rate of 51.8 percent, representing a 27.6 percent improvement.

What this demonstrates quite neatly is that an integrated sales enablement strategy pays off in terms of enhancing sales effectiveness and improving business results. However, it requires leaders within the organization to take the time to connect coaching frameworks to enablement frameworks. Additionally, it is imperative that organisations take the time to equip sales managers with the skills to carry out that coaching.

In addition to coaching, the use of solutions to automate processes for sales staff, like Lead Liaison’s Sales Enablement solution for prospecting, free’s up Reps time to be focussed on the activities that they can really add value to.

Establishing Buyer Personas

Finally, one of the best ways to make sure different departments are integrated with one another and on the same page when it comes to sales enablement is to establish buying personas. Essentially, these are generalised representations of your sales organisation’s customers, and these can be used to teach staff about why customers choose to buy your products, services or solutions and what affects their decision throughout the customer journey.

These buyer personas should be based on real research and the actual customers you attract and want to attract. Once credible buyer personas have been drawn up, these should be shared with all departments, so they can all gain a deeper insight into the different stages of the customer journey and better understand the role that their particular department plays in bringing a customer closer to making the decision to purchase.

“Essentially, a company must establish a buyer persona and then share that persona with all key players in marketing and sales,” explains David Reimherr, a content marketing expert and the founder of Magnificent Marketing, in an article written for Social Media Explorer. “That allows people to understand the stages of where their customers go for answers, what influences them to buy, and so on.”

Moreover, the marketing department and customer service department need to consider how they can help reps to improve their sales effectiveness. This may mean creating higher quality content, which is more likely to appeal to customers, or sharing customer information through CRM software, which could be used to make sales more likely.

Author Bio:

Monika Götzmann is the EMEA Marketing Director of Miller Heiman Group, a global sales consulting firm, helping organizations to create effective sales enablement strategies. Culturally savvy, she has years of international experience in B2B marketing on behalf of dynamic, world-class enterprises. She likes to share her insights achieving sales effectiveness.

To learn more about Lead Liaison’s solution for Sales Enablement as a strategy, click here.

Lead Liaison Press Release

MarTech Up-and-Comer Lead Liaison Now Offers Standalone Solution for Sales Enablement

Dallas, TX – Sales and marketing solutions provider, Lead Liaison, announces they now offer their most recent add-on solution for sales enablement as a standalone license.

Lead Liaison’s sales enablement solution was launched in December 2017 as an add-on to their marketing automation suite. While its popularity has grown exponentially over the last 6 months, the solution was never offered independently until now.

“We saw the need to offer a software solution dedicated to salespeople,” says Chris Kipgen, Technical Communications Manager. “It’s our mission to be able to offer value across all aspects of sales and marketing. Sales Enablement is a core strategy that complements our existing offerings but also benefits companies as a standalone solution.”

Companies continue to seek to improve their sales teams’ productivity. In 2017, there was an increase of 81% in organizations that reported sales enablement functions, programs, and titles over 2016 (registration required). And it’s not just about sales teams – sales managers seek empowerment as well. Lead Liaison’s sales enablement solution offers the tools needed to build repeatable processes and gauge performance of team members, thus enabling sales managers as well as their teams.

Lead Liaison knew they had a winner on their hands after surveying the competitive landscape. Companies offering similar standalone solutions lack the additional pieces required for a complete solution. They don’t offer an ideal integration with a CRM or marketing automation system. All the cornerstone pieces of a sales and marketing stack are still very disparate solutions. Now, Lead Liaison is able to offer companies a standalone solution for sales teams with the option to upgrade their marketing stack with one partner.

Lead Liaison’s Sales Enablement solution is powered by Rhythms™, which can be succinctly described as sales automation. Reps can build out prospecting plans that help book more meetings and create more conversations.

Additional features of Lead Liaison’s Sales Enablement solution include task management, email automation and two-way email sync. Two-way email sync allows reps to see all of their emails sent from any device in the timeline of a contact’s record. It supports all major email providers including Exchange, Gmail, Office 365, and more. Lead Liaison hosts the industry’s only unique combination of online and offline sales capabilities, like postcards and handwritten letters, which can be included in prospecting plans alongside scheduled tasks, SMS communication, and more.

To learn more about Lead Liaison’s Sales Enablement solution, visit this webpage.

About Lead Liaison
Lead Liaison provides cloud-based sales and marketing automation solutions that helps businesses accelerate revenue by attracting, converting, closing and retaining more prospects. Filling a void in the small pool of marketing automation providers that focus on marketing-centric functionality, Lead Liaison gives equal focus to sales providing sophisticated visitor tracking and additional website engagement tools to boost sales effectiveness. Lead Liaison blends ease-of-use, a flexible business model, deep external integration, marketing across social, web, mobile, email and offline channels and powerful functionality, all specifically tailored for mid-sized businesses, into a single platform, called Revenue Generation Software®. Lead Liaison is headquartered in Allen, Texas, near Dallas. For more information, visit http://www.leadliaison.com or call 1-800-89-LEADS (895-3237).

Lead Liaison Makes Huge Leap in Sales Enablement with Rhythms™

Dallas, Texas – Sales and marketing software provider, Lead Liaison, expands their Sales Enablement solution this week with the addition of Rhythms™. This announcement comes at the heels of their Sales Enablement release late last year, which provides businesses with a platform to streamline top-of-the-funnel outreach.

“Sales Enablement has been huge for our clients,” says Jen Worsham, Director of Client Relations. “It was the missing piece of the puzzle. Our clients loved our other solutions, but craved the same sort of support for sales. So, we introduced Sales Enablement and now Rhythms™. With those two powerhouse solutions combined, sales teams have full control and visibility over their engagement with Prospects.”

Sales Enablement works by linking a business email account with Lead Liaison’s platform. At that point, all 1:1 communication with a Prospect is tracked alongside marketing communication and engagement activity. Businesses now have more insight into how Prospects are interacting with their business. With the addition of Rhythms™, sales teams can organize and execute their prospecting plans much more efficiently.

Rhythms™ allow for automated prioritization of tasks using Lead Liaison’s Task Manager. Users can place Rhythms™ into folders to keep organized, and build a plan for each Rhythm™ which acts as a playbook for all outreach.

Other features include multi-variant testing, out-of-office detection, automated bounce handling, remove on reply, manual or automatic email options, and comprehensive personalization with templates to further humanize communication. Direct mail and handwritten letters are also part of Rhythms, making this the first sales automation solution to include offline marketing – ideal for sales representatives doing Account Based Marketing (ABM). Users can easily see activity and engagement across all steps of a Rhythm™, and can set goals to measure performance and hit personal milestones. When using Rhythms™, sales representatives will find they book more meetings, close more deals, and increase efficiency with prioritized activities.

Rhythms™ are fully-integrated with other Lead Liaison services, such as marketing automation, event lead management, a CRM, and more.

About Lead Liaison
Lead Liaison provides cloud-based sales and marketing automation solutions that helps businesses accelerate revenue by attracting, converting, closing and retaining more prospects. Filling a void in the small pool of marketing automation providers that focus on marketing-centric functionality, Lead Liaison gives equal focus to sales providing sophisticated visitor tracking and additional website engagement tools to boost sales effectiveness. Lead Liaison blends ease-of-use, a flexible business model, deep external integration, marketing across social, web, mobile, email and offline channels and powerful functionality, all specifically tailored for mid-sized businesses, into a single platform, called Revenue Generation Software®. Lead Liaison is headquartered in Allen, Texas, near Dallas. For more information, visit http://www.leadliaison.com or call 1-800-89-LEADS (895-3237).

Lead Liaison Webinar

An Introduction to Sales Enablement – Webinar Transcription

To watch “An Introduction to Sales Enablement” in its entirety, click here.

Summary

Lead Liaison provides an introduction to sales enablement. Learn the definition of sales enablement, why companies use it, and how it can help your business. We also compare and contrast sales enablement vs. marketing automation and break down how these two technologies complement one another.

Presenter

Ryan Schefke, Lead Liaison

Transcription

*Please note that this content was presented live and then transcribed. It will read exactly as presented in the webinar. Welcome message and company introductions have been removed.

Slide #2

So let me cover three buckets.  Bucket number one would be your company might be using email marketing.  So maybe you’re using MailChimp or constant contact, or your even using marketing automation, which in a way it’s like version 2.0 of email marketing.  But with number one, you might be sending out a bunch of emails. We just talked to client the other day, and they’re shooting a bunch of emails out through Mailchimp, and their sales team is hoping for people to respond and email them back, and their sales team is even following up on people that have just click links.  That’s how they’re measuring engagement, just a link quick and taking action on that. So we like to say that those kinds of company, they’re just sending out email blasts. They’re doing very basic marketing around email but they’re blasting their database. But sending a generic message to your entire database, you’re not segmenting people.  Bucket two is really companies that are using marketing automation for both sales and marketing purposes. Definitely sales can benefit from using marketing automation. A good philosophy there is that marketers are producers and sales people are consumers. But what you don’t want if you are falling on bucket number two, you don’t want to be using marketing automation to do your prospecting and do your sales outreach.  You don’t want to be running your cold contacts through your marketing automation system. Bucket number three is where you carve out marketing automation and you dedicate that for marketers, and then you have a sales enablement suite, and your sales people use that. So ideally you want to be in bucket number three, and in that way, sales and marketing can kind of work in harmony.

Slide #3

What is killed enablement? Again 24%, 1 out of every 4 people here don’t really know what it is.  So I’m going to throw a definition out there to everybody. Sales enablement means continually increasing efficiency of your sales ecosystem through the use of strategies, tools and process.  What does it mean to be continually increasing? Well the main thing is that you can’t stop improvement, you can’t stop changing, You know, if I look at our own company, Lead Liaison, as an example of that, we introduced marketing automation in 2014.  So four years ago, we rolled that out. Obviously, we want to be using our own software that’s how we’re growing our business so rapidly. So we like to say we drink our own champagne. We never say we eat our own dog food. I don’t like to eat dog food or be blasted, like I mentioned earlier.  So the key is always continually improve. We’re using our own software, but we’re always making changes, we’re changing our qualified lead flow, we’re changing our messaging, we’re always refreshing the content, for tweaking how we do prospecting. Never rest on your laurels. Never be complacent because if you get complacent, I think that will lead to failure very quickly.  So you’re continually going to make changes. Efficiency, well what does that mean? You got to really be using automation at the core to be efficient. You got to be really organize. So that again, you can scale your business. And in these last three words, I’m going to touch on the next slide about strategy tools and concepts, I’ll explain that. And by the way, sales enablement, you gave a lot of definitions out there today.  You may have heard of sales enablement as sales automation, sales intelligence. It’s really all the same thing in our crew. It’s a bit subjective but it does have different means.

Slide #4

So you’ve got to have a strategy.  You got to figure out, are you going to target certain accounts?  Are you going to focus on specific industries or regions, and you really got to know who your ideal buyers are, that’s very important.  Lead Liaison actually offers a particular document, it’s on our website under our resource library. We call it an SOA, Service Level Agreement.  It’s a really good tool to use between your sales and marketing teams. It’s treated down those. You can get that again from our website. But here, just have an agreement or a template, define your buyers, define your sales plan, know who you’re going after, identify, you know, what is a qualified lead, what is the lead, define those things, make sure both teams really agree there on what that is.  But, again, you’ve got to have a strategy. The tools, right, so again sales enablement is a bit subjective, but remember in the definition, I talked about providing solutions for that failed ecosystem, helping sales with everything they do, everything they touch. You got to have a CRM. It’s great if you have meeting automation. Send out a link, schedule a meeting, you could use solution bud call away.  We’re also working on something to help automate the scheduling of meetings. But instead of going back and forth and working out availability for parties, send the link, they can click it, see their availability schedule. You really need stuff like visitor tracking that’s a great sales enablement tool to help identify businesses and people that come to your website, and give you key sales intelligence. And again sales automation engagement, sales intelligence, whatever you might refer to it, that’s kind of part of the suite, which I’ll go over in more detail.  And then you got have a process. You got to document what you want your sales team to do. It could be in Google Docs. Within Lead Liaison we use a solution from atlasin, it’s called Complements, its kind of a Wiki. We use that for our public documentation and internal documentation. And then you got to train your sales team. So all of our demos, our client meetings, on boarding, we record everything. So we use notes, we use GoToMeeting, record everything, upload it into YouTube, make it unlisted, so that you can just pass out links to people as needed. But use that material to give back to your sales people to train them, to make them more efficient.  And then the last thing is measure. It doesn’t get measured. It doesn’t get docked. So you have to have these strategies, tools and process to really do a good job at sales.

Slide #6

What you’re looking at is what I would call a super graphic, right, not just an infographic but a super graphic.  Taking sales enablement tools is really difficult. By the way, the super graphic is provided by Scott HYPERLINK “mailto:Brinker@chiefMarktax.com” Brinker@chiefMarktax.com, want to give the proper attribution there.  There are 5,381 solutions on the super graphic from 5,000 companies that is a lot. Can you imagine if, you had to pick from this 5,000 different companies. It’s impossible. And there’s several hundred just in sales automation which you see in that red box right there.  In the blue box, on the bottom left, you see marketing automation. Lead Liaison fits into both of those buckets, we deliver solutions in both areas. The key is you want two things to be working together. You don’t want these to be dispersed solutions. Now, what you see here, this is from 2017.  In 2016, there were less. So you know, so 2017, there were 39% more solution. So the sales and marketing ecosystem is just getting more and more complex. The good news is that I’m going to simplify that for everybody in our discussion here.

Slide #7

I’m really going to focus on sales automation and marketing automation.  So just the automation piece. Number one, I’m going to give you again five differences, number one is really the obvious, which is the people, you know, marketing people should be using marketing automation, salespeople should be using sales enablement.

Slide#8

The second difference is where should these solutions be used.  Now, what you’re looking at here is a very primitive funnel, suspects, leads, opportunities, clients.  Your funnel could be more detailed, which is fine, but at the highest level, you have what we call suspects.  What that really is, is basically just a person. They have no idea who you are. You got them from a list, you pull them out of the phonebook, it doesn’t matter.  They are suspect. A lead is somebody where you may be engaged them, you’ve generated interest. They now know who you are. The difference here is in that minty color, sales enablement is at the top of the funnel.  And by the way, this is not just the sales funnel. The world is moving to sales and marketing funnel. So you got both groups within a company contributing to your funnel. But sales enablement is at the top of the funnel.  It’s really geared around booking more meetings, filling the top of the funnel. That’s the goal of sales enablement. On the other hand, marketing automation is, you can see, as you, in more areas of the funnel, it’s used to help nurture your lead.  It’s used around opportunities, upsell, cross sell, things like that. And a lot of people just forget that marketing automation is really, really applicable to clients. It’s not a lead gen tool. Marketing automation’s purpose is to help you shorten the sales cycle, to drive bigger deals, and you do that for building strong relationships by communicating in a very relevant way.  That’s what marketing automation can do is help you segment and communicate and have conversations, not blasting people. The key takeaway from this slide is that they need to complement one another. Again, earlier in the poll, we heard 5% of the attendees used marketing automation so they feel they don’t need sales enablement. It’s a little bit of the wrong approach there.

Slide #9

The third difference is in email. So again, I’m largely speaking about automation.  The third difference is in how emails are delivered. Marketing automation is going to send your email through the provider’s network.  Those emails must have an unsubscribed link, because you want to be can spam compliant, etc. Those emails will not show up in your sent box.  The difference is that when you’re using sales enablement or sales automation, those emails are going to go through your own service provider.  So it could Gmail, could be Exchange, Office 365. It’s basically just like going into Outlook or Google mail and sending an email from your email client.  You’re going to see then your sent box. You don’t have to put in unsubscribe link in there, and you’d probably do get better deliverability of your emails.  So the way that emails are sent are very, very different.

Slide #10

The fourth difference is in reply management.  So your sales enablement tools are going to automatically manage replies.  Again, it’s sales automation, it’s for sale people. So we really want to keep it very simple.  If somebody engages or replies, you want to remove them from your flow, whereas marketing automation is more manual.  You’re going to have to pull them out or set up some automated processes to remove them

Slide #11

And then the last thing is you know, simplicity right.  We got to keep sales automation, sales enablement, very, very simple.  We can’t make it complex.

Slide #12

Going back a little bit marketing automation.  It is going to be more, I think difficult to use, right, because you just, you’ve got more options.  So it can be confusing for some people. Those technical marketers I think really get it. But again, you got additional business logic.  You can wrap around things. And so again, it’s more complex, more actions.

Slide #13

So why do sales reps need automation?  Well I’m throwing some very quick stats  out at you, and these stats by the way are furnished by the TAS group or Task Group Marketing doughnut and brain shark.  So 67% of reps don’t hit their quotas, 2 out of every 3 reps miss their quota. Half of all sales teams don’t have a playbook.  You got to have a playbook. The third point here is to take an average of 8 cold call attempts to reach a prospect. My take away there is cold calling really doesn’t work these days.  You know, for me, I really don’t answer my phone. I do screen and I see the caller ID, I don’t answer. You got to try different approaches. The last point here is it’s very tough to on-board people.  It takes about 10 months for new reps to really be productive and get up to speed. So that the key takeaways here are reps are increasingly unsuccessful, especially if they do not have a plan, and it’s very hard to reach people and ramping up new reps is difficult.

Slide #14

So what’s the solution?  It doesn’t matter what your sales role is.  Now you probably fall into one of these two buckets– account manager, business development reps.  Now, some companies call them account managers, some companies call them major account managers or outside sales reps.  The bottom line is you’re the person that probably build the relationship a little bit more. You might be traveling. You might be focusing on your 50 or 100 top-tier accounts for your business.  You might be doing what they call ABM or Account Based Marketing, just focusing on specific accounts. You might be in that bucket or you might fall into the business development rep bucket, where again, you could be called a biz Dev rep, a sales development rep or an inside sales rep.  There’s many names but you you’re typically in one of those two buckets. The key thing is you got to have a plan. You can’t just be calling. You got to have unique, multiple touch points, and you really have to create messaging across your organization that’s consistent so that you can, what we call plug-and-play with your reps.  So if your reps leave, which that happens in sales, you get a lot of turnover. You want to pull in your new reps, you want to be able to plug-and-play and have them pick up where your reps left off, and have all that messaging be consistent. So Lead Liaison, to tell a real quick story here, we evaluated a number of sales enablement solutions.  You know, we looked at various players out there, but we really found three problems. Number one, nothing was integrated with marketing automation. That’s kind of our history, we started visitor tracking and marketing automation, but we found sales enablement was really disconnected. You have to copy and paste data from one system into your marketing platform, and they just weren’t integrated.  They were also a little complicated. Again, you want to keep them simple. And they were not multichannel, everything is just email only.

Slide #15

So I’m going to show you on our app what some these things look like, but I’m going to give you some screenshots.  This is from LeadLiaison. Now, what this is sales automation. Other providers in the market, they might call what you’re looking at a sequence.  They might call it a cadence. They might call it a flow. It doesn’t matter what the name is. For us, Lead Liaison, we call it a rhythm. We chose that name because sales is about getting into a rhythm.  It’s establishing your momentum, your flow but diving and getting into that rhythm, getting used to things, that’s what it’s all about. You want to have that rhythm to really be your second thing. A few key things, you see on the left, when we designed this, we said, “Man, we got to make it multichannel.”  What I mean by multichannel is not just email, right, but have the ability to send a handwritten letter. Have the ability to send a postcard, to schedule a unique task in the time. That’s really important. Make it multichannel. The next thing that’s really important is give the reps options. You want to have some multi-variant testing, not AB testing the ABCD all the way up, multi-variant, try different things but don’t make it too complex, if then, logic and things like that.  We also want to be able to very easily add people into your rhythm. That’s important. We are working on, and integration with zoom info, we’ve partnered up with them. So that’s the key thing, you know, you want to be able to find and kind of target certain people, and then add them into your flow to then create that rhythm.

Slide #16

One more thing you really want is you want to make sure you’re organize, right, and as part of your process.  So the most efficient reps these days, they stay organize. So you got to have a really good task manager. You want your reps coming in and not say, “What should I work on today?”  You want them to click a button and “Hey, these are overdue. I got to make these phone calls or here’s what’s due this week.” So you want to have a really good task manager. We built that into Lead Liaison.

Slide #17

And then also, you want to make sure you can measure.  If you remember what I said earlier, if it’s not measured, it’s not done.  So in this case, how many people were added, finished, and how many people are engaged in your particular sales automation or your outreach.

Slide #18

So that that’s really about, again, those flows, those rhythms, those sequences, again, whatever you want to call them, but there’s really more to sales enablement.

Slide #19

Here I’m showing you on my screen, on your screen, sending an email from an iPhone, from an android device, from Outlook, from Google mail.  You know what you really want is you don’t want to have to use an email address and put that in your BCC field so that it gets stored in your CRM.  About six, seven months ago, Lead Liaison released a free CRM. It’s called OneFocus. The essentials are there to create deals and tasks and so on so forth.  But one thing we realized is let’s not make it difficult for reps. We just want to make sure that no matter where they’re sending an email, they’re on the road, and God forbid, sending an email from their phone while they’re driving, they’re at their desk, wherever, it doesn’t matter.  We want to make sure that email goes into the CRM. So that all that information can be shared in a central area.

Slide #20

This is what we call a prospect profile for us, but it doesn’t matter where those emails are sent, you want them all to be threaded, and in line, so that if another rep checks out this page, or the marketing person, everybody knows what is going on.

Slide #21

Here is sending an email from the application itself.  So this is just native email. There is a bunch of different capabilities in there to help make reps more efficient.  

Slide #23

This is the interface, you know, you can build out these different actions, I’ve mentioned these actions here on the left.  Again, you want to make sure you’ve got different versions, if you will. You can add that. So either you’re different variants here.  You want to make sure, again, that you can measure things again– added, finished, engaged.

Slide #24

Ryan Schefke:  So here we can see, you know, how many individual prospects you are putting in, what’s the stag, or what steps are they at, and your overall flow.

Slide #25

Looking at your emails only, so you want to be able to take all your different action types and just may be drill down a little bit, and see how things are performing.

Slide #26

You also want to know what tasks have you set up for yourself.  So you can see a tasks tab over here.

Slide #27

And then you got different settings.  So again, when people reply, you want to remove them.  These are called suspect statuses, but based on what happens, what you want to set their status to be, you want to set some goals, things like that.

Slide #29

It’s giving you a preview of what we’re doing here with zoom info.  So you might want to pick from your own account, inside Lead Liaison, certain companies, certain named accounts that you might have or maybe do a general search, you want to find those people, put in your criteria, and then once you find them, add them into your rhythm.  So making it easy to insert people in there to fill the top of the funnel.

Slide #30

I just want to quickly compare and contrast here, marketing automation.  This is an example of marketing automation from us. So you can see these individual actions, you got way more actions, changing data values.  You don’t just have sending an email or sending a handwritten letter, things like that. You’re tagging, your moving things around inside the system, you’re adding different conditions around your actions.  You are creating your business logic. So it’s much more complex with these kinds of system. And you’ve got different pipes typically. So you can see here, we offer, four different variations. So much more complexity, if you will, but with the complexity comes more power, more options in things that you can do.  

Slide #31

This is the task manager. So if you’re a rep, you come in, you want to make sure, “Hey, I got my path.  I know what I’m working on.” Maybe you get an email reminder that you got overdue task. But the key is, pick your task, pick the start button—

Slide#32

–begin working on your tasks, you can see one through four, and this is your task manager, that entire timeline right in here of what’s going on all the leads or the prospects engagement here and the actions—

Slide #33

–the ability to take quick action—

Slide #34

–you want all that your sales enablement system.

Slide #35

Also to keep it simple, you know, depending on again, if you’re an account manager or if you’re an inside sales rep, you know, maybe you want to build your rhythms or your sequences, whatever you want call them, and then keep them in a certain folder.

Slide #36

You might have like an industry folder, whatever that might be or your top 50 accounts—

Slide #37

And you want to put your rhythms and keep them organized and put them in certain folder.  I do want to highlight again the two-way sneaking stuff that I talked about. Here’s an example of a profile inside Lead Liaison.  You can see that in the timeline here, this is a two-way email thing. It doesn’t matter where these messages are sent from, you know. We want to basically take all that communication automatically put it into the system, inside the profile, and that way you can see the entire contents of your message.  And that can be shared with your team. And then also, you can take direct action that you could reply, and do something on that message, if you needed to. So let’s say I’m in the profile, to give you a quick example, you got different options when you’re sending email. And again these are built to help the salespeople.  So maybe you talk, in this case, I talked to Mike, we have a great conversation and he says, “You know what, let’s just touch based in about two months.” Well, probably I’m going to forget or I’m going to get busy and I won’t come back to it. So the key is, right after I get off the phone, I can write my message, I can schedule sort of a certain day, in a certain time, and then I can set it and forget it.  I can send it out. So I don’t have to worry about that. So let’s just send later future. By the way, there’s also an undo. So maybe I sent something and I go, “Oh oops, I shouldn’t have said that or I should have added something,” There’s the ability to undo. You might have those plug-ins inside your email, client that we build out, they can write into Lead Liaison. You can add a reminder. So maybe if the person doesn’t reply after a certain number of days or after a certain time, have your system send an email or create a tasks for you, again, that you could manage in your task manager.  You want to be able to create sales template in the platform. You know, create your messaging ahead of time, and then insert those easily, put in snippets. For example, if I wanted to insert a little snippet about your company, now that’s a great used case to be able to insert that so that everybody is consistent. And then you got option two, you know, have dynamic signatures, put those in, so you have merged fields to track your open, track your clicks. That’s all sales enablement here, again, having the ability to send email from a profile and then having these different options to make things efficient for you.

Slide #38 and 39

How do these systems need to work together?  So what you’re looking at here is what Lead Liaison calls a lifecycle funnel.  These are the different lifecycle stages right. I mentioned earlier, sales enablement, kind of on the top, you know, marketing automation towards the bottom.  We have these fixed lifecycle stages. You see suspect on the very top. If we were to take the suspect stage, and we were to expand it, and sort of blow it up a little bit-

Slide #40

Then you might have these different status.  New suspect statuses. So as you’re working with your sales automation system, you know, you’re putting people into those rhythms that I talked about, depending on what happens, if they reply, if it bounces, you want to automatically update their suspect status.

Slide #41

One of the keys here is that you are managing everybody you know all your prospect in your town pace marketing, that’s happening in that suspect stage.  But when somebody engages, they move automatically to engage. And that’s where your marketing automation system can kick in, and maybe nurture those people for the long run. That’s really again where the two systems complement one another.

Slide #42

Once you have that again, you got harmony between marketing and sales, sort of bringing everything together.

Slide #43

I do want to give you a couple of references here.  Number one, we do have some training which is open to everybody on sales enablement.  So you can access that training by going to salesandmarketinguniversity.com. You can learn more.  There are three particular lessons in this training course, and you can apply. So just click, once you go to salesmarketinguniversity.com, click that apply for course, one of our trainers will accept it, and then you can go ahead and watch some of those capabilities to reinforce the learning here today.

Slide #44

Ryan Schefke:  The other thing I mentioned is I’m starting—we start a service level agreement.  So you can get that from the resource section on our website.

Slide #45

Ryan Schefke:  Here I am on our website.  And here if you go into resources, resource library-

Slide #46

And free tools, you’ll see the SLA over here.  And then again, here’s the courses here in sales enablement.  You just want to click on that, and then click

Slide #48

This is our pricing.  I figured this was just easy to show to this to everybody, not trying to push Lead Liaison here, just trying to help you understand how we group things.  The last two columns, these are really the sales enablement solutions. We do have sales pro-user seats. You see the rhythms that I talked about. Those rhythms are not available yet.  They will be released at the end of March at the current plan. But you know, we do have all those other capabilities, that two-way email think, scheduling emails later, the undo, all of those things in that particular package.  Inbound is really about visitor tracking and picking up more sales intelligence for your team. But again both of those solutions are sales enablement.

Q&A

Q: When is the Lead Liaison search email available?  

A: We do have sales enablement today, again, you’re going to get a lot of those features, which will be that two-way email think, again, no matter where you’re sending emails, they’re going to show up in that timeline and be shared with everybody else.  You can send later, you can undo, you can use sales templates, you can use the snippets, there’s going to be tracking of all those emails—all of that is available today, right now, from us, and again, end of March is when we expect to be GA, which is general availability, with our rhythms.

Q: Sales enablement really for business development managers or account managers?

A: Yeah, it’s really for both.  If you’re doing business development, you’re probably targeting more people.  Now, you know, the important thing is, even though all of those emails are sent through your exchange server or through Google, or Gmail, you still need, there are limits right.  So you can trip thresholds and you got to be careful. We’re actually building in some throttling capabilities to throttle that. But again, if you’re more of a biz that person, you might be dealing with a larger volume of leads wherever you got those.  But I think it’s still important to really not focus on quantity but to focus on quality. So our rhythm feature is really meant to allow reps to be very hyper-focus in a certain area. It’s typically a best practice to be jamming contact through the system.  You know, I would say the smaller the better, the more targeted, it’s definitely quality over quantity there. You know, if you’re an account manager, you are probably dealing with major accounts. Like I mentioned earlier, you might have 50 accounts, 100 accounts, but this is perfect because with the rhythms, you know, keeping an account manager, is like I mentioned earlier, not just making those phone calls because it can take eight phone calls before you can reach somebody. I’ve actually seen stats that have better double that.  So 15, 16 phone calls. You know, for me, the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and over. So we don’t want to just be doing phone calls. You know, your reps are going to get tired. They’re going to want to quit. So you got to have some variation. You got to have that multi-channel. You got to sprinkle in some personalized communication. You got to sprinkle in postcards and handwritten letters. If you’re an account manager, you’re probably focusing on bigger size deals, high value, tens of thousands of dollars, perhaps.  And why not spend $6, $7 on a handwritten letter to really make your attempt at penetrating an account very effective. So there is the difference. It’s really, they’re intended for both account managers and business development reps.

Q: How does sales enablement work with Salesforce.

A: We also have that for Microsoft dynamics.  We do in integrate with I’d say another half a dozen CRMs.  Of course I mentioned we have our own essential CRM, some of the basic things in there, and we’ve got back, you know, that had allowed us to integrate with a bunch of other CRMs.  But going back to the question, really sales enablement should be focused, you know, in the platform itself right. As I mentioned earlier, the two systems do complement one another because sales enablement is filling the top of the funnel.  We really don’t want to do is you don’t want to, you know, load a bunch of stuff into salesforce and just, you know, muddy the water and have a bunch of contact data. You just want to be working these individuals through your sales enablement system.  I do understand that, you know, that requires a rep to you know not use salesforce but to use a system like ours or something else, but you know, uses the sales automation system because it offers all those capabilities. When somebody becomes engaged, at that point, that’s when marketing automation takes over and marketing automation can help automate that process of pushing people, you know, into your CRM, like salesforce.com and then kicking in nurturing and things like that.  So I’d say really, they work together very well, but it’s really about just making sure that you put qualified, interested people, people that engaged into the CRM.

Q: Can I use sales enablement on its own, so without using other like marketing automation?

A:  So at the moment we do not provide sales enablement standalone.  You do need to be using marketing automation from us, at this moment or some of our other solution.  So at the moment, we do not offer sales enablement standalone. We might be changing that in the future.  If we do, we probably will require a minimum number of users, you know four or five, something like that to get rolling.  Those are the things that we definitely are considering, just because we’ve had a lot of demand it in terms of what we’re doing so far.

 

The Value of a Qualified Lead

As salespeople we are all excited about what we do, that’s why we do it. We are passionate about our products, services or solutions and will talk to anyone anytime about it if they show the least bit of interest. That’s what makes us great at what we do, but I also feel like maybe we’re giving the cookies away for free. It’s in our nature to “sell, sell, sell” anytime we can, but I’ve found that’s not always the best approach. You know you’ve got a great product, so don’t give it away the first time you talk to everyone. Make sure you have a truly qualified lead, before dedicating more valuable time. 

There’s a system of selling called the SPIN method that, if you’re not familiar with, you should take a look at. The method can be broken down into a few basic parts. SPIN stands for: Situation, Problem, Implication, Need/Payoff. This is how to qualify your leads: ask questions! Find out what their current situation is. Do they use a competitor? Do they have events or marketing goals they need to scale up to meet?

Then ask questions to identify the problems they are having. Is it lack of communication between sales and marketing? Are they filling their pipeline and losing customers in the mix? The implication is as simple as “What would your team do with…?” or “If I can solve that for you would you…?”.

These steps are all you should be doing to find a qualified lead. Once you get to that point you’ll know; if it’s a good fit and what pain points they have that you can solve. Hopefully, a bit of additional qualifying info such as: do they have a budget, are you talking to someone with the authority to make this purchase, and what is their time-frame for the need (classic “BANT” criteria).

From there you can decide if it’s worth YOUR time to spend more time with them, or nurture them and move on. Hopefully that 15 minute call got them excited to move to the next step: filling their need. Go ahead and set up that next meeting! Now you’re spending more time with qualified, interested leads and not giving the cookies away for free to every person you talk to.

Interested in seeing other ways Lead Liaison can help your sales process? Check out our Sales Enablement solution here!

What’s the difference between marketing automation and sales enablement?

What’s the difference between marketing automation and sales enablement? On the surface, the two solutions seem very similar; however, they serve different purposes. In this article we’ll compare and contrast marketing automation with sales enablement.

Primary User

The first difference is with the primary user. Sales enablement is used by sales people whereas marketing automation is used by marketers. Now, don’t get me wrong – sales enablement can be used by people in roles outside of sales, but we’re talking about the primary user here. Marketing automation is more advanced than sales enablement and is designed to meet the demands of different types of sophisticated marketing campaigns. For example, marketing automation actions can have different business logic (rules) wrapped around the actions while sales enablement actions have no additional criteria. Marketing automation also has a number of different action types, such as the ability to change field values, delete records, sync records to a CRM, distribute leads, and more. On the other hand, sales enablement has only a handful of actions commonly used by sales people when doing outreach, such as emails, handwritten letters, text messages, and postcards.

Where Do the Emails Come From?

The second difference between marketing automation and sales enablement is the way that email messages are sent. With marketing automation, emails are sent through the marketing automation provider’s network. Emails sent through sales enablement are sent through the company’s email server. This is typically an Exchange server, Google, Office 365, etc. With sales enablement businesses have more control over their messages, typically better deliverability, and optional unsubscribe text in the emails.

Email Tracking Differences

The third major difference between sales enablement and marketing automation is the level of email tracking. Marketing automation solutions typically track opens and clicks; however, they do not typically detect when someone replies to an email. On the contrary, sales enablement solutions can detect replies, out of office notifications, forwards, and more – making it easy to automatically take action based on this outcome. With sales enablement, people can be automatically removed from the flow when they reply to a message or the conversation can be paused for a defined period when an out of office occurs. With marketing automation, prospects need to be manually removed, or removed with an automated action, if they need to be pulled out of a workflow. Ideally, your marketing automation platform is used for building an already established relationship; whereas sales enablement is ideal for creating brand new relationships. As a result, the need to manually remove people from a marketing automation workflow is much lower if the focus is on building an existing relationship.

Who You’re Targeting

This is a great segue into the last difference between the two systems, which is who the solution targets and where the solution is used in the overall buyer’s journey. Because of its simplicity and sales-friendly setup, sales enablement is ideally suited to fill the top of the funnel. Relationships are usually not forged yet at this stage, and sales enablement can help build those connections. Companies with an inside sales team, business development reps, or reps focusing on major accounts will benefit from using sales enablement. Marketing automation is ideal for people in the middle or bottom of the funnel, when a relationship already exists. Since communication is sent out through the providers network its important to follow the providers rules and sending policies, and send to only prospects with whom you have a relationship with who want to get your email. With sales enablement, emails go through your company’s servers. How you send messages and to whom is up to you.

In Summary

Feel free to use the below summary to forward to your friends and colleagues to help them better understand the differences between marketing automation and sales enablement.

For a demonstration of Lead Liaison’s solution to sales enablement and/or marketing automation click here. Also, learn more about marketing automation strategies here and learn more about sales enablement strategies here. If you care about account based marketing, this strategy will be helpful to beef up on too!

Hope this helps!

Marketing automation:

  • is used by marketers
  • is intended for middle to bottom of the funnel people
  • is perfect for nurturing warm prospects, building stronger relationships, onboarding/upselling customers
  • delivers emails through Lead Liaison’s network
  • requires a process to be setup to remove people from an automation
  • emails require an unsubscribe link

Sales enablement :

  • is used by sales
  • is intended for top of the funnel sales activities
  • is perfect for Account Based Marketing (ABM) and prospecting
  • sends emails through your company’s email server
  • automatically removes people that reply from any automated communication stream (Lead Liaison Rhythms™)
  • emails do not require an unsubscribe link
  • is a platform to set sales goals