Every year, businesses lose $1 trillion of potential revenue due to decreased sales productivity and wasted marketing efforts caused by sales and marketing misalignment! That's a trillion with a "T." Let that sink in for a second. Wow!
Despite their common goal of driving sales, marketing and sales teams often don't get along. This can be due to differences in thinking on strategies, tactics, and overall objectives. As a result, organizations can miss out on all the benefits of aligning their teams, including increased ROI and increased agility when responding to market changes. In this blog post, we will:
By the end of the article, you will understand why sales and marketing alignment is crucial in today's highly competitive marketplace and how you can fix it.
Because a potential customer (from their point of view) interacts with a single company rather than with individuals from separate departments, they expect to have a seamless, consistent, and pleasant experience. Achieving this has a tremendous impact on your close rates, revenue, and even customer loyalty.
In summary, the benefits are more high-quality leads, shorter sales cycles, higher close rates, increased revenue, and happier customers.
Despite the tangible business value of aligning both departments, most sales and marketing teams can't see eye to eye. The ten most common reasons for this are as follows:
Fixing such deep organizational friction won't happen overnight and requires strong leadership, a mutually agreed-upon goal to rally behind, and an organizational structure that makes it all come together. That's where the revenue team comes in.
The idea of a revenue team is very simple:
Definition: The revenue team consists of representatives from sales and marketing who collaborate consistently and regularly to create helpful, educational content that can be used across the sales process aimed to educate the buyer proactively.
There are two other important terms you should know in the context of revenue teams:
Definition: Sales Enablement Content can be defined as content specifically created to answer all generic questions buyers usually have, making them more educated and faster to close. It also frees up the sales team to home in on specific questions to add value.
Definition: Assignment Selling is the skillful process of the salesperson assigning sales enablement content at strategic points in the buyer's journey with the goal of proactively educating the buyer. This can consist of educational content (video, text, or audio) at different points in the sales process to proactively answer questions and address concerns buyers have.
Did you know that 88% of sales pros who use sales enablement content feel that it moderately to extremely contributes to making a sale, resulting in higher sales performance than their peers? Yet, 76% of content marketers forget about sales enablement in their marketing efforts. This is a great way to jump-start your sales and marketing alignment as it results in immediate ROI, incentivizing both teams to collaborate more closely.
Your revenue team hosts regular revenue content brainstorming sessions — usually every two weeks, but you can also find a cadence that works better for your team. One to two days before the next brainstorming session, your in-house content manager sends out bi-weekly revenue content updates (via email, Basecamp, or however else you communicate) covering the following three points in detail:
In the meeting, you will go over these points briefly to highlight specific achievements or shine the light on someone's contribution, but the meat of the bi-weekly revenue team meeting is to hold a brainstorming session to come up with new revenue content ideas. For this, you will discuss the following question: What questions are buyers currently asking that we have not addressed in a piece of content but should?
To get to the bottom of it, try digging deeper by asking follow-up questions:
Lastly, your in-house content manager should have 30-minute 1:1 meetings with every single sales team member every 90 days to have an opportunity to get further insights. It helps to ask questions like:
Aligning sales and marketing teams has clear benefits for businesses. Sales cycles can be shortened, more deals can be closed, and customer satisfaction with the buying process increases. To take advantage of these benefits, organizations must ensure that both teams are aligned in their strategies and objectives.
One way of achieving this is by creating a revenue team that meets regularly to brainstorm and report on the success of sales enablement content. This ensures that sales heavily influences marketing's editorial calendar, actively contributes to content creation, and uses the produced content to educate buyers proactively. When sales and marketing are working together effectively, there is a greater chance of success for any business venture.