Book Review: eMarketing Strategies For The Complex Sale

Many manufacturers have capital goods that have long selling cycles. Most I think would welcome ways to pull buyers forward in the sales process via lead nurturing.

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I recently finished eMarketing Strategies for the Complex Sale by Ardath Albee that I would recommend you read. Her insights and strategies have been used by many major companies.

It’s an easy read and what I liked about it was it not only showed you what/how you need to do to engage the potential customer, but it also shows you a different way of looking at your company from the inside.

Even though prospects are more informed now than ever, so are their problems. They are looking for solutions not sales pitches. She shows you how to attract more prospects into your pipeline and then nurture them through the sales process (once you’ve figured it out). Instead of pushing what you have to sell, you need to be pushing the value you bring to the table. What you bring to the party must be relevant.

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Top 10 Tradesmen Insights Post of 2012

Top10

Yeah, I know I’m a little late out of the gate with these, but I think some of these are worth rereading and some of you might have missed them the first time around.

  1. 5 Ways to Improve Construction Productivity
  2. What is Augmented Reality?
  3. Market Overviews
  4. Trends in Distribution and What it Means to the Distributor/Supplier Relationship
  5. Why Aren’t Young People Considering Blue Collar Jobs?
  6. 2012 Trends in Smartphones and Tablets
  7. How to Make Social Media Marketing More Effective: 10 Do’s and Don’t Tips
  8. Reaching Contractors by Mobile. Still not a Believer? See What Grainger is Doing.
  9. Here’s an Example of a Small Manufacturer who’s Leveraging Social Media
  10. LinkedIn: What Are Your Business Objectives?
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What are You Doing to Ensure Your Content is Being Read?

You may have some of the best content in the world, but if no one reads it, what’s the point? I recently read a post by Heidi Cohen, 13 Ways to Maximize Content Marketing Effectiveness that got me to thinking about getting back to the basics and making the effort of writing posts to pay off.

Here are some thoughts:

  • Come up with a strong headline – we have less than 3 seconds to capture attention. Make your headline make the reader stop.
  • Use images – a picture or graphic is worth its weight in gold. We are a visual society and the right image will help keep the reader on the page.
  • Get to the point – now that you’ve captured their attention, dive into the meat of what you want to say at the beginning.
  • You don’t have to have all the answers – link to relevant content. It reinforces the point that others share your point of view.
  • Get them to react – we need to add a call-to-action or ask for comments to get the readers involved. If they share the same opinion on the subject, I’m sure they would have something to contribute to the conversation.

Those are my thoughts. I’d like to hear what you’re doing to get more readership.

If you like this post, you might like:

What Are You Doing to Ensure Your Content Marketing is Selling For You?

Is Content Marketing the New Branding?

How Are You Managing Your Content Marketing?

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Top 10 Content Marketing Ideas for 2013

Now that the holidays are behind us and we’re all getting back to reality, I thought I’d share some thoughts on what we’re going to do to create better content this year. I was inspired by a post my friend Joe Pulizzi wrote, 42 Content Marketing Ideas for 2013. Thanks Joe for the inspiration!

Top 10 things I’m going to try to do this year to have better content:

  1. Less content will mean more impact – make content more meaningful.
  2. Find at least 3 other thought leaders in your company – build them into your plan.
  3. Develop a list of the top 100 questions coming from your customers – then write to them.
  4. Sit down with every salesperson and ask them what their customers biggest pain points are – then address them.
  5. Define your most targeted audience and consider doing a targeted print publication.
  6. Assign someone to slide share to figure out how we can get the most out of it.
  7. Make sure every content marketing landing page has only one call to action.
  8. Develop a series of stories for your industry on an aspect no one has covered before – what better way of becoming a thought leader.
  9. Double the number of email subscribers to your blog.
  10. Commission a piece of research that is important to your audience.

Those are going to be my goals for 2013; what are yours?

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From a Marketing Perspective, What Keeps You Up at Night?

frustratedI know we’re all faced with many challenges in our daily grind, but if you had to name just one thing that keeps nagging at you from a marketing angle, what would it be?

One of my biggest challenges is to keep up with our social media activities. Even though I’ve been doing it now for almost 3 years, it’s labor intensive and I always seem to run out of time even after I’ve delegated some of the activities off to other associates.

Sometimes it’s better to slow down and remember some of the basics like talking face-to-face to your customers. You get so much more from a one-on-one conversation, but we normally don’t have time to do that.

So what’s keeping you up at night?

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What Are Your Thoughts on Buying Groups and Trade Associations?

I know there’s been lots of discussions on the pros and cons of buying groups over the years, and I’m not here to try to sway you one way or the other.

I recently came back from STAFDA, which for those who don’t know, is an association of construction distributors and the manufacturers that sell into that market. What struck me at the trade show part of the event was it was obvious which manufacturers didn’t belong to a group. You saw plenty of Evergreen, Sphere 1 and NetPlus badges there, but they were concentrating mostly on seeing the manufacturing members of their respective groups. (I’m using STAFDA as an example and I’m not trying to pick on them.)

So my question is for those who don’t belong to a group
(and don’t have a unique product), how do you justify going to one of these meetings? Should the association try to incentivize distributors to stop by new member booths? I feel sorry for those folks who ponied up the cash but not very many distributors stopped by.
Another interesting issue is that most of these buying groups have their own annual meetings and some are incorporating trade shows along with these get-togethers. From a manufacturing point of view, which shows do you go to? Obviously it’s the ones where you get the most bang for your buck.

Associations/buying groups may want to look at their model as things have changed over the past several years.
They need to ask about the value proposition of getting these distributors and manufacturers together. Instead of trade shows (whoever introduces a new product at one of these), maybe there should be a series of round table discussions on how to improve the supply chain for everyone involved.

There are some really smart people out there (on both sides), and I believe a lot more could come out of these kinds of meetings and they could include all members.

Any of you belong to other type groups that have changed the model? I’d like to hear from you.

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