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4 Reasons Why You Should Use a Business Management Consultant

4 Reasons Why You Should Use a Business Management Consultant

Even though your business is considered successful, you still feel like there’s more that can happen; you’re just not sure how or what. You’ve thought about hiring a business consultant but don’t really think that it’s worth the expense because you’re not sure how they can help you.

Being so close to your business, it’s hard to see how an outsider could really understand what’s needed and how to do it without being a part of the business. The ability to see your business objectively and provide you with active, viable solutions is part of the process of working with a business consulting professional.

Working with a management consultant means you’re ready to do what’s necessary to help your business thrive. The first step is finding the right fit.

Learn New Skills

Chances are your business marketing strategy may not be bringing the best results. Business consultants will put your strategy under the microscope and work with stakeholders in your business to implement techniques that optimize opportunities, and bring qualified leads through the door. Skills like project management, resource utilization and problem identification can make a big difference in your business. The more you learn about how to implement these skills in your business, the better prepared you’ll be to implement the necessary steps to succeed.

Create Business Systems

Creating a business system forces you to address the specific steps you need to take to succeed. When you’re that focused, you’re forced to think things through and make better decisions. Being a business manager means that you’re wearing a lot of hats and probably judging competing priorities. A business management consultant can provide the experience, objectivity and focus that will help you improve your business and make it more adaptable.

Change Behaviors

We know the old adage,  “You can’t teach an old dog new tricks”,  but when you change behavior, you can often change consequences. Most business managers are focused on things that prompt behavior, such as managing expectations or adhering to company norms, instead of things that can have a significant impact on future behavior, like trying new ideas or embracing culture change. Working with a business management consultant helps to create an environment where positive consequences can be encouraged, and new ideas can be tested.

Discover New Opportunities

Business consultants spend their time working with a variety of organizations, which helps to build extensive networks, strategic partnerships and joint ventures. Whether you’re building a new business or entity, growing a line of business, or maintaining a steady stream of business, a business management consultant can work with you to identify ways to expand your business in ways that minimize costs and maximize exposure.

Understanding Buyer Personas: The Key to Effective Marketing and Sales Alignment

Understanding Buyer Personas: The Key to Effective Marketing and Sales Alignment

In my first post on sales and marketing alignment, I shared a demand generation alignment checklist I’ve created and have continually refined over many years of marketing with many high-growth software companies.

Here, I’ll dive into the first two items of the checklist:

  1. Get marketing ready by understanding the buyer persona, the buying cycle, and the competitive landscape. And make sure you know the differences by region and distribution channel. Interviewing the sales team (sales reps, SEs, etc.) and answering sales calls helps greatly. Also, interview partners and customers, including ones who have just bought. This process can take months and be quite formal, but you can get started quick ‘n dirty in days. The bottom line is this: marketing can’t play an effective alignment role unless they understand and help create a structure for the buying process.
  2. Create a Marketing Qualified LEAD (MQL) definition. Not all leads are the same. Marketing creates leads in many ways –email campaigns, the website, webinars, trade shows, etc. An MQL is a lead that marketing has qualified and is passing to sales as having a high probability of converting to a Sales Opportunity. But, defining an MQL may not be nearly as simple as it seems. It requires understanding the maturity stage for each of your products and then educating and getting the revenue team’s agreement on the type of lead that best maps to that product stage. It also requires mapping leads to target geographic regions, company size, prospect job roles, etc.

You’ll need some patience here – both in understanding the MQL concept and getting agreement. The lead definition concepts are new to most people, and they’ll need time and education to overcome historical biases.

Check out Sirius Decisions’ research on Demand Types. They’ve been thought leaders in this area for years and have excellent reports. I’ve successfully used their research and analysts to help educate and select the proper lead definitions for my company’s products.

Historically, sales teams want BANT (Budget – Authority – Need – Timeframe) leads. And what salesperson wouldn’t? However, BANT leads work best in replacement markets (think toner, paper, office furniture, and other commodity-like products), where buyers already have the product, have the budget to buy more, and often buy on price or convenience. However, the replacement market is a tough one, and most companies don’t want their products in this category.

Fortunately, most software products fall into the New Paradigm category, where the product performs a function differently and hopefully better than previous solutions. But, because it’s a new approach, waiting until the buyer has BANT is not a good idea. Wait that long, and competitors have likely guided them to that point, and you’re just sales fodder. New Paradigm leads map better to prospects with Need and Interest. Sales reps may resist, but Sirius Decisions research shows that in this market, you’ll get more leads if you focus on Need and Interest, and that opportunities will close at a higher rate and for more money than waiting for BANT leads.

The third type of software product market is the New Concept. New Concept products address a problem that most buyers must be aware of. Wait around for BANT or even Need and Interest in this market, and your sales team will have lots of free time. You want to find people in specific target markets who can sponsor change for New Concept products.

If you’re unsure of what category a product falls under, take a quick survey of sales reps and other members of the revenue team to clarify key questions in the buying process.

A note of caution: if you have multiple product lines, they could fall into different market categories. Training teams to qualify one product on BANT and another on Interest and Need, for example, is difficult, but it’s necessary.

Once you identify the correct lead definition, you must educate and convince the sales team. Marketing can carry most of the education load, but sales management must take ownership of the convincing. It will take group and individual discussions and then monitoring to ensure compliance.

About the authorJeff Whitney is a B2B software marketing executive with extensive experience  –  from early-stage start-ups to achieving marketing equity. Jeff has a passion for building a world-class marketing function, starting with the organization, demand generation programs, sales enablement tools, and aligning sales and marketing.

Building An Inbound Business

Building An Inbound Business

For inbound marketing to succeed, companies must adopt the mindset of an inbound business. In other words, they need to align their inbound marketing efforts with the goals and processes of sales, product, IT, and other departments. For example, when inbound marketing yields more and different types of inbound leads, then sales need to be ready for a different conversation with a prospect. That requires changes to the sales process, and more training, and possibly another look at the company’s revenue model. Easier said than done, of course.

BLUE SAGE Consulting can help. Our inbound business consultants have worked with companies of all sizes and industries to make inbound marketing a key component of their overall business strategy, with a strong focus on:

  • Implementation: Inbound marketing involves many moving parts and requires much effort, so where to start? We’ll work closely with your in-house teams as they design their inbound marketing programs to ensure you understand the company-wide impact of the inbound approach.
  • Adoption: To ensure your entire organization is prepared for inbound marketing, BLUE SAGE provides various training/consulting services to get your team up and running quickly, from skills development workshops to live in-person coaching. We’ll ensure that your entire business is ready to meet the needs of the inbound approach.
  • Measurement: Which inbound marketing metrics hold significance for your business?  BLUE SAGE will help you analyze a wide range of metrics to ensure that your business is making critical decisions based on accurate, relevant, and meaningful data.
  • Growth: Inbound marketing is never complete; it is always a work in progress, and improvements are always needed. We’ll help you determine what’s working and what isn’t and identify key growth areas for your inbound marketing programs.