At some point, every single one of your customers was totally oblivious to your existence and to the products and services your business provides. And I hope you will agree with me that your best customers are those who not only buy a lot from you, very often, but who are also active members of your 'surrogate sales team'. If you could get more of the 'oblivious' to become 'sales team', that would be good wouldn't it?
If only there was a clearly defined, well signposted route available to them, don't you think that many of them would get a long way down that path? By understanding the sections this route needs to have in its construction, you can make it easy for them to do so.
The first thing is to register on the prospective customer's senses, to achieve consciousness. You need to provide several means by which this first perception can happen, and you should be doing so in places where you know your ideal customers are likely to be. You can't expect them to come to you at this stage.
Next, the prospect has to have a better acquaintance with you and the things you can provide. This could be provided by the other 'consciousness' messages which they happened not to come across first. Equally it could be the repetition of a message. In either case, the prospect will not start to absorb your messages until they have this acquaintance with you.
Now, with prospects very aware that they know of you and are familiar with you, they are in a position to absorb what good they will get out of doing business with you and what sets you apart from your competition, your distinctiveness. If you try to ram your messages down their throats before they have arrived at this point, your efforts will have been wasted. And 'ramming' is unlikely to be productive at any point!
Now the prospect has an interest in possibly purchasing from you, and you need to make sure there is a simple and obvious means for them to communicate this interest back to you. All the previous effort will be wasted if the prospect has to 'jump through hoops' in order to indicate that they'd like to know more.
The fifth step is to convert their interest into an initial sale, and for now all I will say is that this is a subject of its own, and that yet again there is not one fixed 'one size fits all' mechanism for doing this.
Having bought from you once, you will be trying to get the customers to buy from you again, to gain repeat business from them. As before, there will not be just one single tactic that will work on every occasion.
Maybe after their first purchase, or maybe later, you would be hoping that your satisfied customers will be letting their contacts know how good you are and how pleased they were to have used you. To achieve this you must not neglect the need to provide the means and the encouragement for them to do so. In other words you need to recruit them into your sales team and then 'train' them.
Several things now become apparent from this route from 'oblivious' to 'sales team'. Firstly, that it is actually a circular path, because the activities of the 'sales team' will introduce previously 'oblivious' new people at the 'consciousness' level. Secondly, that enabling a prospect to journey through consciousness, acquaintance, distinctiveness and the cultivation of interest is Marketing; from interest to sale and to repeat business is Sales; and that through repeat business, sales team and full circle to new consciousness is Marketing once more.
Thirdly, the three 'mores' of growing a business can also be mapped onto these ideas. The first part of Marketing is getting more customers; the early part of sales can also focus on getting them to buy more; and the later overlap of Sales and Marketing to achieve repeat business can also encourage buying more often.
Out of all these thoughts is born your Sales and Marketing strategy!
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Showing posts with label customer journey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label customer journey. Show all posts
Thursday, 25 February 2010
Tuesday, 9 February 2010
Succeeding In Spite of Yourself
What does it mean to shoot yourself in the foot? Is it that you're not just aiming too low, you're aiming so dangerously low that your foot is in the sights as you pull the trigger? Or is it what the military call a 'negligent discharge'? Have you accidentally pulled the trigger while your gun is still in its holster, muzzle downwards?
Whichever you prefer, the common thread is carelessly, stupidly, naïvely doing something that causes you pain and delay, and does you more harm than good.
I have come across many examples of businesses shooting themselves in the foot, so I thought I'd list some pitfalls for you to recognise and avoid. You can imagine a (falsely) reasoned argument in favour of each of these. I believe the counter argument carries far more weight in each case.
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Whichever you prefer, the common thread is carelessly, stupidly, naïvely doing something that causes you pain and delay, and does you more harm than good.
I have come across many examples of businesses shooting themselves in the foot, so I thought I'd list some pitfalls for you to recognise and avoid. You can imagine a (falsely) reasoned argument in favour of each of these. I believe the counter argument carries far more weight in each case.
- Selling to the wrong people
Don't push your business on everyone you meet! Know how to identify your ideal customer. It's a waste of time trying to sell to people who simply don't need what you're offering. - Selling the wrong product
Don't assume all your ideal customers want what you are selling! Even if you believe they need it, they have to want it before you can sell it to them. It's a waste of time trying to sell to people who don't even need what you're offering. - Forgetting your Unique Selling Point(s) - USP(s)
You must offer more than just items of value to the ideal customers. You must give them good reasons to buy from you rather than your competitors. You must consistently tell them why you and your products are uniquely placed to help them. - Failing to focus on value creation
Customers only want to buy from you because the value they get from the purchase far outweighs the value of the money they have to part with to do so. If you don't create value for them, in their minds, they will see no need to purchase. - Haphazard Marketing
You need a Marketing strategy that covers all areas of the customers' long-term relationships with your business - From them first finding out you exist, to them telling all their friends how good you are! - Ignoring the only three ways to grow a business
Getting more people, to spend more, more often - These three 'mores' are the only three ways to grow a business. You must balance your efforts to increase each factor according to your market and the needs of your business. - Ignoring repeat business
The third 'more'! - You need to keep your customers aware of your existence, and have the 'more' there for them to buy - Ignoring Up-Selling
The second 'more'! - You need to offer products or services that are complementary to the things the customers initially wanted to buy - Only advertising when you need Customers
The first 'more'! - This is the one people usually focus on to the exclusion of the others. "We need more sales so how can we find more new customers?" Advertising isn't the only form of promotion, and promotion should be an on-going activity. - Not tracking results
Not even the 'experts' can accurately predict what will work for you and what won't. You have to test and measure each Marketing activity. You have to know what produced what. Then, if it doesn't work, drop it. But if it does work, do more of it! - Not following things through
If you're like most, you'll have many, many things you'd like to try. Don't waste time and money starting something that you can't follow through. - Running an advert only once
If you fix your 'haphazard Marketing', you'll be aware that people need to be given several opportunities to fully absorb your messages. If your promotional activity doesn't produce results first time, it's probably never been given the chance! - Copying the Competition
Do what you need to do because you know that you need to do it. Believe me, all your competitors could easily be making the same foolish mistake! Quite possibly because they all followed blindly! - Trying to save where it counts
Don't try to save money in places where it shows. When it comes to what your customers can see, you should spend whatever it takes to get everything looking right. - Spending too much money, unwisely
Your business should put cash into your pocket, so before you invest money into it, be clear on how you're going to pull that cash back out again - Spending too little money
Equally, don't be miserly and don't let frugality get in the way of efficiency. Take advantage of skilled outsiders who can do certain tasks more efficiently than you can. - Going against your intuition
While you might think that logic is the language of business, that's far from the truth. If you base all your business deals on hard logic and ignore your intuition, you'll get hurt! - Being too formal
Business is built on relationships and human beings don't want to build relationships with faceless corporations. They only want relationships with other human beings, so build rapport and relax formality as appropriate. - Failing to optimize
You can't simply focus on creating value, and imagine the rest will take care of itself. As a business owner, you need to find a way to deliver your value in a cost effective way. - Not collecting your money on time
Collecting money from people can be hard, so collect a substantial portion of the money first before you provide anything. When it comes to debt-collecting, if you act like you don't need the money, you'll never get paid!
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Tuesday, 26 January 2010
Recruit And Train Your Sales Team
One of your reasons for attending a Networking meeting should be to recruit and train members of your surrogate sales team. You are lucky if you can sell to someone in the room; you need to have them and their address books selling for you. Pretty obviously they'll have no idea how to do this and no motivation to try, until you have told them.
Coupled with another of your reasons for attending - the ability to meet and get to know strangers - this means that 'recruitment' will be on your agenda. Please be careful! Don't try to rush into 'induction training' too early, and don't neglect further training for existing team members. People who already know you, what you do and who you do it for, can be re-invigorated by some pertinent Continuing Professional Development (CPD).
Assuming you've broken the ice, established some rapport and are starting to enjoy each other's company, there is some pretty fundamental stuff you need to communicate, and then be sure has been received, understood and stored.
You can also use these same 'headings' when someone is recruiting and training you into their surrogate sales team. If you don't understand these things about them and their business, you won't be an effective member of their team, so don't be afraid of letting them know you haven't quite got the full picture. They will thank you for letting them help you be a better ambassador for their organisation, and they might just get better at explaining themselves in the future. You will need to know:
Neither of you is trying to get the other to sell their product or service for them! What what both of you want the other to do is gain permission to broker an introduction, and then do so.
The sales training you do with your team on these occasions can be similar to training a 'regular', employed sales team.
Again the best could get even better. Modelling the best is just a starting point, a benchmark, a springboard, so accept ideas from anywhere.
Just as with a 'regular' team, you need to encourage communication within the team and with 'management'. Encourage discussion of difficulties and have systems in place for team members to debate specific issues amongst themselves as well as with you.
As well as understanding prospects' problems and circumstances, all the team must be able to access the information which allows them to understand your problems and your circumstances. By this I mean that they need to know the questions you (management) will ask as part of monitoring their performance, so they will have asked their own questions of the prospect and have answers ready for you. They will be able to monitor their own performance against these well-publicised and understood rules too. Bi-directional feedback will be of great help in resolving any bottlenecks.
For your surrogate team, out there prospecting on your behalf, processes and later developments of them will only work if the team 'buy into' them. Your surrogate team need to feel listened to, the processes need to make sense, and they need to be extremely simple to follow.
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Coupled with another of your reasons for attending - the ability to meet and get to know strangers - this means that 'recruitment' will be on your agenda. Please be careful! Don't try to rush into 'induction training' too early, and don't neglect further training for existing team members. People who already know you, what you do and who you do it for, can be re-invigorated by some pertinent Continuing Professional Development (CPD).
Assuming you've broken the ice, established some rapport and are starting to enjoy each other's company, there is some pretty fundamental stuff you need to communicate, and then be sure has been received, understood and stored.
You can also use these same 'headings' when someone is recruiting and training you into their surrogate sales team. If you don't understand these things about them and their business, you won't be an effective member of their team, so don't be afraid of letting them know you haven't quite got the full picture. They will thank you for letting them help you be a better ambassador for their organisation, and they might just get better at explaining themselves in the future. You will need to know:
- How to identify their Ideal Customers, using only public domain information - e.g. 10 to 40 person accountancy practices within 30 miles of Cambridge
- What 'symptoms' to look out for when you encounter one - e.g. Suffering from cash-flow problems
- How to check these really are symptoms of a 'disease' they can cure - e.g. They can only fix some of these personally: Low sales? Unprofitable sales? Excessive debtor days? High overheads? Inefficient staff and/or procedures?
- How to explain how wonderful life would be without these symptoms
- How to indirectly establish enough credibility for them, to allow contact
Neither of you is trying to get the other to sell their product or service for them! What what both of you want the other to do is gain permission to broker an introduction, and then do so.
The sales training you do with your team on these occasions can be similar to training a 'regular', employed sales team.
- Some members of the team will be performing better than others, so study and analyse what they do, and share the ideas with the rest of the team
- Make study and analysis a continual activity, not a one-off fait accompli
- Best practice has to constantly evolve - something new might make the best even better
- Best practice may need to adapt rapidly to sudden changes in the market
- Don't neglect the 'tried and tested' techniques that new recruits can adopt, without fear of your (management's) disapproval
- Ask the entire team for ideas - "What's working for you right now?"
Again the best could get even better. Modelling the best is just a starting point, a benchmark, a springboard, so accept ideas from anywhere.
Just as with a 'regular' team, you need to encourage communication within the team and with 'management'. Encourage discussion of difficulties and have systems in place for team members to debate specific issues amongst themselves as well as with you.
As well as understanding prospects' problems and circumstances, all the team must be able to access the information which allows them to understand your problems and your circumstances. By this I mean that they need to know the questions you (management) will ask as part of monitoring their performance, so they will have asked their own questions of the prospect and have answers ready for you. They will be able to monitor their own performance against these well-publicised and understood rules too. Bi-directional feedback will be of great help in resolving any bottlenecks.
For your surrogate team, out there prospecting on your behalf, processes and later developments of them will only work if the team 'buy into' them. Your surrogate team need to feel listened to, the processes need to make sense, and they need to be extremely simple to follow.
Calling all UK-based businesses. Discover how to get a FREE review of your Sales and Marketing activities.
Wednesday, 20 January 2010
Sales Presentations Are So Last Century
My advice to anyone asking about a sales presentation would be, don't do it! What purpose do you think it will achieve?
Why would you ever need to make a sales presentation? If you don't yet understand inside-out and upside-down the prospect's fundamental problems and the circumstances in which they exist, how can you possibly know what to present?
And if you do understand, it's not a sales presentation, is it! You will be presenting your suggestions, your proposal, won't you?
Yet many thousands of words continue to be written on the subject of sales presentations, by well respected people in their books and in well respected publications. Just looking recently at a small number of articles on this subject revealed some amazing things.
I find it frightening that this stuff is being broadcast to sales teams as state of the art, immutable fact, under the banner of professional bodies who claim to represent these teams' interests. Within the 'sales advice' community there seems to be this continued fixation with:
Authors identify the five situations where they feel you ought to want to give a sales presentation:
The advice seems to be grouped into four categories:
My own reactions to all the points raised can be summarised as one of:
Let me give you the detail on the first two.
General Advice
Detailed Advice
There is another way, a better way. If you recognise yourself or your organisation in any of these, please allow me the chance to talk to you and start to explain that there are other ways.
There's lots more advice like this in my regular bulletin. Get your FREE copy!
Why would you ever need to make a sales presentation? If you don't yet understand inside-out and upside-down the prospect's fundamental problems and the circumstances in which they exist, how can you possibly know what to present?
And if you do understand, it's not a sales presentation, is it! You will be presenting your suggestions, your proposal, won't you?
Yet many thousands of words continue to be written on the subject of sales presentations, by well respected people in their books and in well respected publications. Just looking recently at a small number of articles on this subject revealed some amazing things.
I find it frightening that this stuff is being broadcast to sales teams as state of the art, immutable fact, under the banner of professional bodies who claim to represent these teams' interests. Within the 'sales advice' community there seems to be this continued fixation with:
- Giving sales presentations - Generally involving PowerPoint or something similar
- Having a 'one size fits all' sales presentation, yet one that is flexible
- Letting specialist outside companies produce your sales presentations
Authors identify the five situations where they feel you ought to want to give a sales presentation:
- In meetings with buyers
- In corporate account presentations
- When helping your 'customer champion' to convince their colleagues
- At events where 'customers' gather
- As a response to a request for information!
The advice seems to be grouped into four categories:
- General Advice
- Detailed Advice
- Presentation Design
- Detailed Design Steps
My own reactions to all the points raised can be summarised as one of:
- Hear, hear! - because I agree
- Why? - because I don't believe they've justified their assertion
- Amazing! - said with huge irony
- Well, yes! - said with almost as much irony
- Expletive deleted! - said in genuine amazement that anyone could still think that way
Let me give you the detail on the first two.
General Advice
- Your presentation must be flexible - Repeated ad nauseam - Amazing. So why try to have a one size fits all?
- Cover your scope and capability - Why? Surely it should be about what the customer will get out, not what you can put in!
- Use a specialist presentation design company - Why? Apart maybe from graphic design and PowerPoint coding, shouldn't your sales and marketing team be well enough skilled and well enough trained to write the copy themselves?
Detailed Advice
- Keep it to 15 slides so you don't bore the audience - #ED! And 15 won't?
- Think from the buyer's point of view - Amazing! Is there any other way?
- Don't just blow your own trumpet - #ED! Words fail me!
- Start your presentation by describing the state of your marketplace - Why? What interest does the audience have in that, that they aren't aware of already?
- Get an early agreement on something, anything - Hear, hear!
- Use your smartness to create a pleasant surprise - #ED! And being a smart-arse is the way to build lasting, win-win relationships?
- Convince the audience by showing what you can deliver - Well, yes! But if, and only if, what you deliver is being described in 'value to the customer' terms - which is quite a different thing from benefits - and is pertinent.
- There is often too much focus on what the salesman wants to say rather than on what the buyer wants to hear - Amazing! And yet you're still trying to push the idea of a sales presentation!
- The salesman is trying to promote change and all change is risky - Hear, hear!
- Few sales presentations actually address the senior decision makers - Amazing! You could never guess they would be involved in the decision making, could you!
- You don't need to be the biggest or the best to win - #ED! You don't say.
- Linking content to customer outcomes gives you the ability to quote higher prices - Why? Linking content to outcomes allows the buyer to see the value, and thus see the return on their investment!
- Your audience is under time pressure and is inwardly focussed - Well, yes! So cut the crap and get them to admit the value outcomes to themselves!
- Only present when you've established a potential need - Amazing! Unless there is a full-bore want, why waste time on a presentation?
- Your presentation should turn 'need' into 'desire' - Amazing! And there was me thinking your 'conversation' should allow the 'prospect' to do this for themselves!
- Research your audience and their business requirements - Hear, hear! But do use the best source for that information - Your audience!
- Address the concerns of each member of your audience individually - Well, yes!
- Hone your abilities at handling supplementary questions in the Q&A session at the end - Well, yes!
- Spread enthusiasm and take your time - Well, yes!
There is another way, a better way. If you recognise yourself or your organisation in any of these, please allow me the chance to talk to you and start to explain that there are other ways.
There's lots more advice like this in my regular bulletin. Get your FREE copy!
Thursday, 14 January 2010
You Can't Do Everything For Everybody
One of the crucial rules of marketing is that you're almost certain to fail if your strategy is to take a small slice of a large cake. The idea sounds so plausible, doesn't it! We must be able to take 1% and make a decent living for ourselves, mustn't we! The trouble is it just doesn't work like that.
You might still fail, but you'll have a greater likelihood of success if you change your plans and aim to take a dominant slice of a different cake.
Imagine you've decided to take 1% of the illegal drugs supply into London. Do you think you'll survive - and I mean that quite literally - your first day? Will you even still be alive to enjoy your first coffee break?
You need a different strategy. Either you and 10,000 heavily armed friends can go for 99% of London, or you aim to be the exclusive supplier to one addict. Either way you have to plan to dominate.
You have to focus on a specific, under-served market niche if you want to be really successful. Find a niche and carve out a reputation for yourself as the expert in that field. A common mistake is to develop the niche product before establishing whether the niche market exists, and whether it's buying.
In their book "The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing", Al Ries and Jack Trout list as their first two laws:
To find your own niche ideas, start by getting into the habit of writing down your ideas as you have them. Don't try to filter anything out at this stage. So, where to look for ideas?
Expanding on this last point, if you can marry two diverse ideas, 2 plus 2 can often equal 5! For example:
You can take an existing product and try to think of ridiculous ways to make it work. Trevor Bayliss combined the electronics of a radio receiver with the mechanism from a wind-up clock to create the clockwork radio.
You can make unlikely pairings of businesses or people and create the most superb results; an idea particularly used in music:- Stéphane Grapelli and Yehudi Menuhin, Freddie Mercury and Montserrat Caballé, Luciano Pavarotti and U2. Or in business, the car maker Mercedes Benz and watchmaker Swatch combined to create the Smartcar
You can take two everyday products and create a third which has a whole new market:- A trolley and a dustbin make a wheelie bin; a copier and a telephone make a fax machine.
It isn't always easy to create a new category. In the field of human endeavour, we're all different, so you'd think that would be simple, but after a while it starts to get ridiculous. I can't imagine the Guiness Book of Records having a category for the first left-handed pilot with red hair to fly solo across the Atlantic!
The irony is that when someone else finds a new niche, we all say, "Why didn't I think of that?"
Discover how to get your FREE review of your Sales and Marketing activities.
You might still fail, but you'll have a greater likelihood of success if you change your plans and aim to take a dominant slice of a different cake.
Imagine you've decided to take 1% of the illegal drugs supply into London. Do you think you'll survive - and I mean that quite literally - your first day? Will you even still be alive to enjoy your first coffee break?
You need a different strategy. Either you and 10,000 heavily armed friends can go for 99% of London, or you aim to be the exclusive supplier to one addict. Either way you have to plan to dominate.
You have to focus on a specific, under-served market niche if you want to be really successful. Find a niche and carve out a reputation for yourself as the expert in that field. A common mistake is to develop the niche product before establishing whether the niche market exists, and whether it's buying.
In their book "The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing", Al Ries and Jack Trout list as their first two laws:
- It's better to be first than it is to be better
- If you can't be first in a category, set up a new category you can be first in
To find your own niche ideas, start by getting into the habit of writing down your ideas as you have them. Don't try to filter anything out at this stage. So, where to look for ideas?
- Solve an existing problem
- Use freely available, public domain information
- Ask your current customers and website visitors
- Combine products into new packages
- Sell 'own label' products
- Improve an existing product
- Adapt an existing product for a different market
- Exploit today's "must have"
- Look at your own hobbies and interests
- Combine ideas and improve on them
Expanding on this last point, if you can marry two diverse ideas, 2 plus 2 can often equal 5! For example:
- Gutenberg combined a coin stamp with a wine press and invented printing with moveable type
- Long ago, someone combined two soft metals, iron and tin, and produced a strong alloy, bronze
- A French chemist launched a hair colouring product but soon branched out into cleansing and beauty products. The modern name of his company is L'Oréal.
You can take an existing product and try to think of ridiculous ways to make it work. Trevor Bayliss combined the electronics of a radio receiver with the mechanism from a wind-up clock to create the clockwork radio.
You can make unlikely pairings of businesses or people and create the most superb results; an idea particularly used in music:- Stéphane Grapelli and Yehudi Menuhin, Freddie Mercury and Montserrat Caballé, Luciano Pavarotti and U2. Or in business, the car maker Mercedes Benz and watchmaker Swatch combined to create the Smartcar
You can take two everyday products and create a third which has a whole new market:- A trolley and a dustbin make a wheelie bin; a copier and a telephone make a fax machine.
It isn't always easy to create a new category. In the field of human endeavour, we're all different, so you'd think that would be simple, but after a while it starts to get ridiculous. I can't imagine the Guiness Book of Records having a category for the first left-handed pilot with red hair to fly solo across the Atlantic!
The irony is that when someone else finds a new niche, we all say, "Why didn't I think of that?"
Discover how to get your FREE review of your Sales and Marketing activities.
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Thursday, 7 January 2010
Whatever Happened To Joined Up Thinking - Part 2
The title implies that joined up thinking used to be widespread but recently we've lost the skill. Not necessarily true; maybe we never had it! But even ancient Greek generals debated the unpredictably far reaching effects of ripples on a lake when you lobbed in a stone.
People who can foresee the unintended ought to get a more than fair hearing, but often the opposite is the case. They get labelled as negative, or resistant to change, or not being team players.
Even the most reasoned arguments don't guarantee that the foresight will be listened to, let alone accepted. By 2001 scientists at the University of New Orleans were already publishing papers on the risks of having built a city near the sea, protected by levees that cause the ground behind them to sink below sea-level, as it was no longer being topped up by soil deposits from the tidal waters.
In the 1930s, sociologist Robert K Merton listed five causes of 'unanticipated consequences'. The first two were Ignorance and Error, but the fifth is the one I find most fascinating. The fifth cause is the Self-Defeating Prophecy, in other words the fear of a foreseen consequence drives people to find solutions before the problems happen. The prediction then becomes false because it itself changes history. Think of warnings of the future depth of horse manure on the streets of London, made in the 19th century!
Incidentally, it was only sometime later that Merton turned his original phrase on its head and coined the more well-known expression, the Self-Fulfilling Prophesy.
Whilst unintended consequences can hinder progress for the common good, I believe the real criticism should be levelled at the scale of the 'unintentionality', which is sometimes vast.
Popularly known today as a 'lack of joined up thinking', the possession of Critical Strategic Foresight is far from universal. As noted in an earlier post, it seems extremely thinly spread amongst politicians of all persuasions! Maybe President Obama can break the mould.
Merton's third cause was 'imperious immediacy of interest', that is to say a vested interest coupled to a short-term action. Here longer-term consequences are often deliberately ignored - totally different to the genuine ignorance of the first cause. As an example, consider the enforced adoption of spreadsheets, where the user has to enter the formulae themselves.
If you are ignorant of the appropriate algorithms and their purpose, the spreadsheet will just help you to arrive at the wrong answer more rapidly. The time spent performing manual additions and long multiplications might well have allowed greater insight into the problem, and so resulted in you arriving at the correct answer.
Many corporations lack the infrastructure to help gather Critical Strategic Foresight, or fail to use their infrastructure correctly. Similarly individuals need the mental 'infrastructure' to consider these, "OK. What if ...?" questions before getting their sleeves rolled up and starting the task.
Critical Strategic Foresight is unlikely to arrive conveniently, just when you're looking for it. Murphy's law says it will be after strategies and tactical plans have been formulated and signed off! Because the pressure is now off, and the understanding is a lot more complete, the mind can wander laterally and those, "Oh my goodness!" moments start to happen.
One answer is to create a list of testing questions by which individuals and organisations can challenge and judge new ideas and the resulting Critical Strategic Foresight. These question may well be of the "If, then how?" variety, or with 'how' replaced by any of the other five ways of starting an open question. Without such an infrastructure, someone who is Critical Strategic Foresight savvy will more likely be seen as a Luddite than as an innovator.
This was noted by Merton as the fourth cause of 'unanticipated consequences', the Basic Values; in other words the very culture within which change is being sought risks stifling that change, or else its implementation will destroy the culture.
So how can Critical Strategic Foresight be cultivated? Both individuals and organisations can adopt creative thinking methods like negative brainstorming and devil's advocacy, based on seeking out counter arguments and not shying away from, "What could go wrong if ...?" questions. Such a culture implies that inconvenient and challenging questions will be welcomed at any time, and will be given fair consideration; an important thought when, as was noted earlier, Critical Strategic Foresight doesn't always arrive just when you ask for it. The understanding needed for Critical Strategic Foresight to flourish can take time and experience.
New strategies and technologies can usually be explained in broad terms when required, but unintended consequences often arise from the detail. Therefore strategies should be defined in detail, prior to their implementation, and the detail not left to be created as the project goes along. Views of consequential outcomes should be sought from those with an in-depth understanding and years of experience - the sort of 'nit-picking Luddites' who actually welcome progress, but not change for change's sake.
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People who can foresee the unintended ought to get a more than fair hearing, but often the opposite is the case. They get labelled as negative, or resistant to change, or not being team players.
Even the most reasoned arguments don't guarantee that the foresight will be listened to, let alone accepted. By 2001 scientists at the University of New Orleans were already publishing papers on the risks of having built a city near the sea, protected by levees that cause the ground behind them to sink below sea-level, as it was no longer being topped up by soil deposits from the tidal waters.
In the 1930s, sociologist Robert K Merton listed five causes of 'unanticipated consequences'. The first two were Ignorance and Error, but the fifth is the one I find most fascinating. The fifth cause is the Self-Defeating Prophecy, in other words the fear of a foreseen consequence drives people to find solutions before the problems happen. The prediction then becomes false because it itself changes history. Think of warnings of the future depth of horse manure on the streets of London, made in the 19th century!
Incidentally, it was only sometime later that Merton turned his original phrase on its head and coined the more well-known expression, the Self-Fulfilling Prophesy.
Whilst unintended consequences can hinder progress for the common good, I believe the real criticism should be levelled at the scale of the 'unintentionality', which is sometimes vast.
Popularly known today as a 'lack of joined up thinking', the possession of Critical Strategic Foresight is far from universal. As noted in an earlier post, it seems extremely thinly spread amongst politicians of all persuasions! Maybe President Obama can break the mould.
Merton's third cause was 'imperious immediacy of interest', that is to say a vested interest coupled to a short-term action. Here longer-term consequences are often deliberately ignored - totally different to the genuine ignorance of the first cause. As an example, consider the enforced adoption of spreadsheets, where the user has to enter the formulae themselves.
If you are ignorant of the appropriate algorithms and their purpose, the spreadsheet will just help you to arrive at the wrong answer more rapidly. The time spent performing manual additions and long multiplications might well have allowed greater insight into the problem, and so resulted in you arriving at the correct answer.
Many corporations lack the infrastructure to help gather Critical Strategic Foresight, or fail to use their infrastructure correctly. Similarly individuals need the mental 'infrastructure' to consider these, "OK. What if ...?" questions before getting their sleeves rolled up and starting the task.
Critical Strategic Foresight is unlikely to arrive conveniently, just when you're looking for it. Murphy's law says it will be after strategies and tactical plans have been formulated and signed off! Because the pressure is now off, and the understanding is a lot more complete, the mind can wander laterally and those, "Oh my goodness!" moments start to happen.
One answer is to create a list of testing questions by which individuals and organisations can challenge and judge new ideas and the resulting Critical Strategic Foresight. These question may well be of the "If, then how?" variety, or with 'how' replaced by any of the other five ways of starting an open question. Without such an infrastructure, someone who is Critical Strategic Foresight savvy will more likely be seen as a Luddite than as an innovator.
This was noted by Merton as the fourth cause of 'unanticipated consequences', the Basic Values; in other words the very culture within which change is being sought risks stifling that change, or else its implementation will destroy the culture.
So how can Critical Strategic Foresight be cultivated? Both individuals and organisations can adopt creative thinking methods like negative brainstorming and devil's advocacy, based on seeking out counter arguments and not shying away from, "What could go wrong if ...?" questions. Such a culture implies that inconvenient and challenging questions will be welcomed at any time, and will be given fair consideration; an important thought when, as was noted earlier, Critical Strategic Foresight doesn't always arrive just when you ask for it. The understanding needed for Critical Strategic Foresight to flourish can take time and experience.
New strategies and technologies can usually be explained in broad terms when required, but unintended consequences often arise from the detail. Therefore strategies should be defined in detail, prior to their implementation, and the detail not left to be created as the project goes along. Views of consequential outcomes should be sought from those with an in-depth understanding and years of experience - the sort of 'nit-picking Luddites' who actually welcome progress, but not change for change's sake.
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Monday, 17 November 2008
21st Century Sales and Marketing
We'll start with the word Marketing.
What does the word Marketing mean to you?
My preferred definition is that:-
Marketing is the entire process of gaining and keeping customers who pay you, so you make a profit
This therefore means that Sales is part of Marketing, that Product Choice is part of Marketing, that Business Development, Account Management and Customer Relationship Management are all parts of Marketing. Far, far wider than the correct, yet incomplete, idea that Marketing is Advertising, or Web Sites, or Mail Shots.
Whether your business is large or small, B2B or B2C, product or service oriented, all your customers need to take a journey, and they can only take that journey if you have made the path available and obvious.
All prospective customers start by being totally oblivious to your existence. Hopefully most end up being so enthusiastic about the good you've done them that they want to scream your praises from the roof-tops. So how can we help them get there?
You can think of the customer journey as being like a series of stepping stones across a river. If the stones are too small, or too slippery or too low in the water, or too far apart then the prospect will fall in the water and not reach the other side. So we need to put the right stepping stones in the right places.
The first stepping stone on the customer journey is Consciousness - They need to hear about you for the first time.
The next is Acquaintance - They need to hear about you several times, and quite likely in several ways.
Third is Distinctiveness - Only once they are Conscious of you and Acquainted with your existence, can they start absorbing what is good about you in particular.
Even at this stage they need have no particular inclination ever to buy from you. It is merely that if they did ever have a problem, they know whether you are likely to be able to help them solve it, and how to get in touch with you to talk about the possibility of providing help.
It follows then, that the fourth stepping stone is Interest - Not necessarily a strong interest, and not yet a commitment to purchase either. A Sales enquiry is an Interest in buying.
Like all sets of stepping stones, it is highly unlikely that you can miss any out and still not fall in the water! It is important to realise that even if a prospect appears to instantly jump from Consciousness to Interest, or any other leap for that matter, they have still hopped and skipped across the intervening steps, even if they spent precious little time on them.
To be continued ....
What does the word Marketing mean to you?
My preferred definition is that:-
Marketing is the entire process of gaining and keeping customers who pay you, so you make a profit
This therefore means that Sales is part of Marketing, that Product Choice is part of Marketing, that Business Development, Account Management and Customer Relationship Management are all parts of Marketing. Far, far wider than the correct, yet incomplete, idea that Marketing is Advertising, or Web Sites, or Mail Shots.
Whether your business is large or small, B2B or B2C, product or service oriented, all your customers need to take a journey, and they can only take that journey if you have made the path available and obvious.
All prospective customers start by being totally oblivious to your existence. Hopefully most end up being so enthusiastic about the good you've done them that they want to scream your praises from the roof-tops. So how can we help them get there?
You can think of the customer journey as being like a series of stepping stones across a river. If the stones are too small, or too slippery or too low in the water, or too far apart then the prospect will fall in the water and not reach the other side. So we need to put the right stepping stones in the right places.
The first stepping stone on the customer journey is Consciousness - They need to hear about you for the first time.
The next is Acquaintance - They need to hear about you several times, and quite likely in several ways.
Third is Distinctiveness - Only once they are Conscious of you and Acquainted with your existence, can they start absorbing what is good about you in particular.
Even at this stage they need have no particular inclination ever to buy from you. It is merely that if they did ever have a problem, they know whether you are likely to be able to help them solve it, and how to get in touch with you to talk about the possibility of providing help.
It follows then, that the fourth stepping stone is Interest - Not necessarily a strong interest, and not yet a commitment to purchase either. A Sales enquiry is an Interest in buying.
Like all sets of stepping stones, it is highly unlikely that you can miss any out and still not fall in the water! It is important to realise that even if a prospect appears to instantly jump from Consciousness to Interest, or any other leap for that matter, they have still hopped and skipped across the intervening steps, even if they spent precious little time on them.
To be continued ....
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