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The Invisible Sales Rep
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| Guest post by: Jeff Ogden |
Article Overview: Unfortunately, very few salespeople have the kind of online presence to be easily found. This is a real problem.
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Free Download - Marketing Made Simple TV is looking for a few good sponsors By Jeff Ogden |
The Invisible Sales Rep
I found this post at Miles Austin's great blog Fill the Funnel. To read the original post, please visit: The Invisible Sales Rep. We thank Miles for giving us permission to reuse his great post.
Jeff Ogden, of the B2B lead generation consultancy, Find New Customers.
While most salepeople have nothing, a select few have things like a blog, website, Linkedin Profile, YouTube channel, Slideshare Channel and more. As he pointed out, it takes far less time than most think. Yet Miles points out here most salespeople fail to embrace the online world. As a result, they are invisible.
Here's what Miles had to say: _________________________
Why would any sales rep make the decision to be invisible to customers and prospects?
Having weathered the turmoil over the past two years in reasonable shape, they are expecting 2011 to begin the uptick that we have all been hoping for. They are hoping that there is enough pent-up demand for their products that sales revenue will start coming in more quickly than in the past, and their sales cycle will shorten from that experienced in the past.
What I realized after digging into this project was that they were likely to fall short of their goal of shortening their sales cycle and increasing sales through new client acquisition, primarily for one glaring reason - The reps have virtually no presence online.
Here are some of the statistics from 66 of the sales reps in the study:
Average # of LinkedIn connections per Sales Rep: 92.6
Average # of LinkedIn connections per Sales Manager/leader: 307
Average # of LinkedIn recommendations per Sales Rep: .86 (less than 1 per rep)
Average # of Groups on LinkedIn: .6 (less than 1 per rep)
Largest # of LinkedIn connections: 832
Total # of Employees from this Company on LinkedIn: 165
# of Twitter users: 11
# of Blogs (suitable for business audience): 0
This is a seasoned sales team with several years of experience individually. They have been around the block and the industry. How do you compare?
MY OBSERVATION: THEY ARE INVISIBLE TO A MAJORITY OF THEIR PROSPECTS.
The social web is not a fad. It is not going away, but rather has fundamentally changed, and will continue to change the way business is done. That includes Business to Business direct selling. By not acknowledging these changes, and continuing to use excuses for not actively participating in this social web, you are becoming less relevant and less visible to your prospects and customers.
These were some of the "reasons" offered for the lack of involvement by this team:
"I don't want my competition to know what I am doing."
"I am too busy to spend time on this stuff."
" I value my privacy and don't want to expose it online."
" I don't have anything to offer."
" I have established customers, so it doesn't matter."
" I don't know how to do it."
Any of these sound familiar to you? Hopefully not, but the odds are that many of you reading this are using the same reasoning. You are making a big mistake.
Your customers are online, and they are active on the social sites. They are asking questions, sharing experiences and making recommendations. They are seeking help and knowledge. They are seeking providers for their needs. And they are not going to find you.
Your competition is visible, they are engaged and they are benefiting from your lack of involvement. They are answering questions that your customers are asking on Twitter or LinkedIn Groups. They are reading blogs that are providing the latest solutions and changes in their industry. They are following and interacting with each other on Q&A sites like Quora.comand Focus.com. They are garnering recommendations and sharing openly for others to see. They are building relationships and booking revenue while you are on the sideline. They are building their reputation as an expert in their field. They are building relationships. Why is that not driving you crazy?
If you want to shorten your sales cycle and improve your sales results, you need to put your excuses aside and get in the game. Your current success will be short-lived as your relationships run their course. Your current buyer will eventually go away and their replacement will not have any idea who you are.
Buyers are searching and reviewing your LinkedIn Profile every day. Look at your statistics on your LinkedIn home page-right hand side. It will tell you how many people have visited your profile. What are they seeing when they stop by? Based on the results referenced above, they will see someone with few connections, no recommendations, no interest or activity in their industry or yours, no photo and no real reason to buy from you. Especially if they are connected to others who are using these tools for what they are capable of - to help them buy what they need and not listen to a dozen sales pitches every day.
Example: If you are selling to healthcare, why are you not a member of the HIMSS Group on LinkedIn? This group enjoys a membership of almost 38,000 members, all interested in health-care. (Hint: there is a group of almost 300 that belong to a sub-group titled HIMSS Senior IT Executives.) Here is a question that has been posed within this group in the last week:
"At HIMSS Orlando, I'm curious if HC providers are trending more toward accepting cloud storage for medical imaging?"
If you are a provider of this solution to health care, wouldn't you want to weigh in with your thoughts on this?
If you want to take off your invisibility cloak, now's the time to engage. Invest in your future earning power now, before you become permanently erased from your industry.
David Brock wrote a thought provoking piece a few days ago about Sales People blogging ( he thinks it is a bad idea) and Koka Sexton, from The InsideView Blog responded with his own thoughts and a different perspective. It is worth the time to read both posts.
Am I off base? Am I blinded by my involvement in these services and in using these tools myself? Would you want to be competing against some of these sales reps? What do you think?
Related ArticlesWhile most salepeople have nothing, a select few have things like a blog, website, Linkedin Profile, YouTube channel, Slideshare Channel and more. As he pointed out, it takes far less time than most think. Yet Miles points out here most salespeople fail to embrace the online world. As a result, they are invisible.
Here's what Miles had to say: _________________________
Why would any sales rep make the decision to be invisible to customers and prospects?
- To intentionally block a company from learning of you and your capabilities?
- Are you waiting for your company to provide training for you?
- Have you adapted the "see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil" approach toward your online presence and your use of social tools?
Having weathered the turmoil over the past two years in reasonable shape, they are expecting 2011 to begin the uptick that we have all been hoping for. They are hoping that there is enough pent-up demand for their products that sales revenue will start coming in more quickly than in the past, and their sales cycle will shorten from that experienced in the past.
What I realized after digging into this project was that they were likely to fall short of their goal of shortening their sales cycle and increasing sales through new client acquisition, primarily for one glaring reason - The reps have virtually no presence online.
Here are some of the statistics from 66 of the sales reps in the study:
Average # of LinkedIn connections per Sales Rep: 92.6
Average # of LinkedIn connections per Sales Manager/leader: 307
Average # of LinkedIn recommendations per Sales Rep: .86 (less than 1 per rep)
Average # of Groups on LinkedIn: .6 (less than 1 per rep)
Largest # of LinkedIn connections: 832
Total # of Employees from this Company on LinkedIn: 165
# of Twitter users: 11
# of Blogs (suitable for business audience): 0
This is a seasoned sales team with several years of experience individually. They have been around the block and the industry. How do you compare?
MY OBSERVATION: THEY ARE INVISIBLE TO A MAJORITY OF THEIR PROSPECTS.
The social web is not a fad. It is not going away, but rather has fundamentally changed, and will continue to change the way business is done. That includes Business to Business direct selling. By not acknowledging these changes, and continuing to use excuses for not actively participating in this social web, you are becoming less relevant and less visible to your prospects and customers.
These were some of the "reasons" offered for the lack of involvement by this team:
"I don't want my competition to know what I am doing."
"I am too busy to spend time on this stuff."
" I value my privacy and don't want to expose it online."
" I don't have anything to offer."
" I have established customers, so it doesn't matter."
" I don't know how to do it."
Any of these sound familiar to you? Hopefully not, but the odds are that many of you reading this are using the same reasoning. You are making a big mistake.
Your customers are online, and they are active on the social sites. They are asking questions, sharing experiences and making recommendations. They are seeking help and knowledge. They are seeking providers for their needs. And they are not going to find you.
Your competition is visible, they are engaged and they are benefiting from your lack of involvement. They are answering questions that your customers are asking on Twitter or LinkedIn Groups. They are reading blogs that are providing the latest solutions and changes in their industry. They are following and interacting with each other on Q&A sites like Quora.comand Focus.com. They are garnering recommendations and sharing openly for others to see. They are building relationships and booking revenue while you are on the sideline. They are building their reputation as an expert in their field. They are building relationships. Why is that not driving you crazy?
If you want to shorten your sales cycle and improve your sales results, you need to put your excuses aside and get in the game. Your current success will be short-lived as your relationships run their course. Your current buyer will eventually go away and their replacement will not have any idea who you are.
Buyers are searching and reviewing your LinkedIn Profile every day. Look at your statistics on your LinkedIn home page-right hand side. It will tell you how many people have visited your profile. What are they seeing when they stop by? Based on the results referenced above, they will see someone with few connections, no recommendations, no interest or activity in their industry or yours, no photo and no real reason to buy from you. Especially if they are connected to others who are using these tools for what they are capable of - to help them buy what they need and not listen to a dozen sales pitches every day.
Example: If you are selling to healthcare, why are you not a member of the HIMSS Group on LinkedIn? This group enjoys a membership of almost 38,000 members, all interested in health-care. (Hint: there is a group of almost 300 that belong to a sub-group titled HIMSS Senior IT Executives.) Here is a question that has been posed within this group in the last week:
"At HIMSS Orlando, I'm curious if HC providers are trending more toward accepting cloud storage for medical imaging?"
If you are a provider of this solution to health care, wouldn't you want to weigh in with your thoughts on this?
If you want to take off your invisibility cloak, now's the time to engage. Invest in your future earning power now, before you become permanently erased from your industry.
David Brock wrote a thought provoking piece a few days ago about Sales People blogging ( he thinks it is a bad idea) and Koka Sexton, from The InsideView Blog responded with his own thoughts and a different perspective. It is worth the time to read both posts.
Am I off base? Am I blinded by my involvement in these services and in using these tools myself? Would you want to be competing against some of these sales reps? What do you think?
Article Tags: b2b lead generation, b2b lead generation strategies, lead generation, lead generation companies, sales lead generation
|
About the Author: Jeff Ogden RSS for Jeff's articles - Visit Jeff's website President of the B2B lead generation company Find New Customers. Also the host of the B2B marketing show, Mad Marketing TV. We help companies rapidly grow revenue by transforming the ways they attract, engage and win new customers. With 8 out of 10 companies saying the lack of quality sales leads is their biggest problem, they need help. SiriusDecisions also found that fewer than 1 out of 10 companies that implement lead management software went beyond the basics. They need help. We help companies implement world class lead generation programs. Companies need quality sales leads, so they need sales lead generation programs including social media marketing. They need to implement lead nurturing programs. We are considered one of the best leads generation companies in business today. Click here to visit Jeff's website Definitive Guide Making Quota How to Find New Customers 7 Keys to Lead Nurturing 7 Keys to B2B Marketing Succes |
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