Engaging Each Audience in a Distributed Sales Environment
DUSTIN CLARK
Video Transcript
How do we approach strategy for companies that have multiple audiences? If youโre in any type of marketing organization, youโre probably thinking about your ideal customer profile. Youโre thinking about different types of buyers. Youโre thinking about influencers. You might even be segmenting that by product or service. But if youโre in a type of business that has a distributed sales model where some of your sales take place outside of your control or outside of your visibility. For instance, if you sell to a distributor and then that distributor sells to a contractor to an end consumer, like an end user, whoever that might be, youโre lacking a little bit of that visibility there.
And what that means is it really should be making you think, how do I address these audiences differently? Because as a marketing manager or someone thatโs running marketing for your company, you canโt just talk to the distributor and you canโt just talk to the end-user or the consumer. What happens if you were to do that? If youโre just selling to the distributor, and letโs be honest, that might be where youโre tracking your marketing ROI. Youโre saying, Oh, well, we sold X amount of product over here. Youโre doing a good job in getting your product to the place where it needs to go to your sales force. But are you still creating demand for the people that the distributor sells to?
In many of the B2B2X distributed sales model businesses that we work with, we commonly see that your dealers and your distributors expect you to be creating brand awareness and product or service demand for your product. They want your customer to come into their distributorship, to their dealership, to wherever that sales location is wanting to buy your product. They expect you to deliver them demand. If they donโt, what scenario does that create for you? Well, if your customer comes into a location and is willing to be sold anything, they donโt have a brand or product preference, then thatโs a potential for you to lose out on that sale.
So we talked about what that looks like if youโre only marketing to your distributors. Now, if youโre only marketing to your consumers, you might have a lot of people that have brand demand, that have product demand that are going to the sales location and they know that they want you. But if youโre not treating your distributors well, they may not be placing your product well. You may not have point-of-sale materials. There might be something that youโre missing out. Even if that consumer knows that they want your product. Youโve got to have a great relationship with your distributors or your dealers, too.
So why does this matter? If youโre failing to address the different audiences in your distributed sales pipeline, youโre likely leaving some visibility into your sales pipeline. Youโre leaving the control of your brand to somebody else. Youโre leaving potential sales opportunities because youโre not serving the brand in the demand channels that you need to serve in order to have everybody as part of that distributed sales network being aware of who you are and having a desire to have your products.
This is why when we look at marketing strategy for companies that have complex sales models, we want to dig into the specific audiences they have, not just who that end user is. Or not just who the sales partner is, but really anybody thatโs going to touch your product anywhere along that value chain. Whatโs a good example of this that we see in the real world? Pharma, right? Pharmaceutical companies do a great job of having different strategies and sales activities for consumers. Weโre watching videos on YouTube or weโre seeing ads in magazines that are selling directly to us. Come get the new wonder drug. Thatโs not how they sell to doctors. Thatโs not how they sell to hospitals. Theyโve got a dedicated sales rep that goes in and talks about the benefits of. So you can clearly see in a model like pharmaceuticals that thereโs an attack, thereโs a specific strategy on how theyโre going after consumers. And thereโs a very different and very specific strategy on how theyโre going after doctors or hospitals.
So I would encourage you, if youโre in some type of business that has distributed sales partners, to think that same way. It doesnโt mean that the activities have to be that stark. In contrast, like they are in pharma. But you should consider what the buying behavior is as well as the customer profile for those different places on the stage. Because they likely need very different types of communication and theyโre looking for different types of offers.
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