Typical vertical company organization puts sales and marketing teams in different departments. And while both these teams don’t do the same job, separating them leads to more work, less satisfied clients, and team burnout.
Marketing teams focus on outbound marketing tactics to generate leads for their sales team. And the sales team may be focusing their time on in-person marketing and community awareness to identify qualified leads and trying to turn them into customers. Neither of these methods are problematic. But choosing to focus on them independently creates more work for both teams.
And while both teams work on identifying leads, it’s easy for customer satisfaction and follow up to fall through the cracks. Ultimately this creates a less stable client/company relationship.
Bottom line: silos are never good for companies or customers.
Have you set your company up for working across teams? If you’re using a traditional vertical structure by product lines, you’ll probably see less collaboration and fewer cross-team opportunities. At Primitive, we recently reorganized to create a more collaborative environment.
What we’re seeing with a horizontal structure, organized by role, is teams working across clients and projects. What this looks like for sales and marketing alignment is working across both teams to drive leads and revenue. This structure allows your marketing and sales to be on company-wide campaigns.
When recently redesigning client packages, having sales and marketing on teams meant that we considered both what clients ask for and need, consistent descriptions across packages, and using ideas from both groups to inform marketing efforts.
"We minimized the work to maximize the ROI."
Aligning both marketing and sales (a.k.a “smarketing”) within your business allows both teams to share the same goals and objectives. And those goals should come from knowing their ideal client and their client’s sales journey.
Sales may think they know ideal clients based on leads that have turned into clients. But, that’s not always the case. One of the keys of healthy business is knowing when to say no to a client. And if sales isn’t involved in daily client operations, they may be converting leads that aren’t a good fit for your company. And the same goes for marketing teams. You can hack the data, watch site visits, and look at client analytics all day, but if you’re not getting a full picture of the process, you may still be tracking data on clients that aren’t returning clients.
But, when sales and marketing collaborate, they’re able to take the time to look at how past projects have gone, speak with other team members, and create a dynamic and flexible strategy to capture the right leads.
And they’ll be able to use all that data to make sure packages or products deliver what clients need to succeed. An upsale is a bad experience if it
Why?
Aligned lead generation means less work, greater ROI, and fewer process frustrations across all teams.
With sales and marketing aligned you’ll see:
By aligning sales and marketing, opportunities for lead generation increase.
At Primitive, we’re nothing if not practical. So here’s our best advice on how to align your sales and marketing teams!
Just like any process change, expect pushback and the occasional failure. Know the end result will grow your company’s ROI and keep your team satisfied.
Digitally confident consumers expect transparency and consistency in their experience with your business. Collaborative teams vet leads, manage client expectations, and communicate throughout the process.
Aligning your sales and marketing departments leads to satisfied clients (and staff). Without it, your business will have a disjointed customer experience that negatively impacts clients and staff.