
The Sales and Marketing Professionals




Marketing Getting Stale? Where's the
Beef?
By Clare G. Ross CMC
Remember the old ad for Wendy's hamburgers where Clara Peller
would lift the bun, squint at what she saw, and then bellow,
"Where's the beef?"
Great ad. Good question. It's one that senior executives often ask
themselves when they see canned presentations or boilerplate
proposals from AEC sales people. But unlike Clara, they typically
react by dismissing the sales person or tuning out of the
presentation.
So here it is: A definition of the exact kind of content you need to
provide to make a senior executive feel they're getting some
substance.
Where's the Content?
Studies of hundreds of CEOs, Presidents, and General Managers to
find out what it takes for them to give a sales person a hearing.
The most common answer: "Demonstrate an in-depth knowledge of my
business."
This matches well with the advice Clare Ross gave to professional
sales people more than a decade ago. Ross, one of the earliest
proponents of selling solutions instead of services , said that to
gain your client’s trust, their long-term loyalty, and a willingness
on their part to pay you a higher fee than your competitors ask for,
you must demonstrate three kinds of knowledge:
First, you have to know all about your own stuff. You need to come
across as an expert in the things you're selling. That makes sense,
of course. People don't want to listen to somebody who's unprepared
or ill informed.
Second, you have to know a lot about the client's business, what
they make or provide, how they operate, what their goals and
objectives are, what they value, how they are approaching the
market, and anything else you can uncover.
The third thing you need to know? How your clients interact with
their customers. The relationship between your client and their
customers is the nexus of value. That's where profits are generated.
If you can pinpoint ways to improve that interaction, you're
delivering content that can translate directly to the bottom line.
"People don't want to listen to somebody who's unprepared or ill
informed.” So that's what content is all about. It's not enough to
just provide information about your products and services. You
really have to leverage that information into "working
knowledge"--insight that creates value.