In his new book To Sell is Human, Daniel Pink talks about information asymmetry in the sales process. He points out that the reason people have historically distrusted salespeople is because salespeople had all the information and the buyer had none. Thus the term caveat emptor (let the buyer beware). 

Mr. Pink contends that we are now in the age of information symmetry. The buyer and seller both have a balance of information. However, I contend that we are currently in a state of information asymmetry where the buyer now has more information than the seller. In fact the asymmetry has become so significant that the ability of the sales rep to do their job is greatly at risk.

This is why I argue that social selling is required to succeed. And when I talk about social selling, I’m talking in much broader terms than making sure that you’re connected to someone on LinkedIn, or are following someone on Twitter.

I am talking about arming the sales rep with the same or better information than the buyer. And I contend that the responsibility of arming the sales rep falls in marketing’s lap. It’s the CMO that owns the responsibility for providing the sales reps with better information than the buyer.

We understand that the buyer gathers information from a wide variety of sources (usually online). We can even find out where the buyer gets their information and how they perceive that information. Historically, marketing has been working on influencing the perceptions of buyers via engagement (often on various social media channels).

The new imperative for marketing is to share with the sales organization the same information that the buyer is gathering. In other words, marketing needs to take all the tools they are using to collect information about the company’s products and services, and the perceptions buyers and customers have about the company’s products and services, and the provide that information to sales.

How Marketing Must Help

What I’m really talking about here is having the marketing organization enable the sales team to have a deep understanding and empathy for the buyer as they proceed through the customer journey. Sales should fully understand what information the buyer is being exposed to and how they’re reacting to it. The sales rep now has an opportunity to meet the buyer exactly where they are in the customer journey with a full understanding of what they think and feel about the company’s products and services.

Armed with that information, with the ability to empathize with that buyer, the sales rep can now play the role of a valued advisor to the buyer. The best news of all, is that this is the role the buyer wants the sales rep to play.

In fact, the sales rep who achieves a deep level of empathy with the buyer can move from a valued advisor to a trusted advisor. This can be accomplished when the sales rep acknowledges the issues and concerns that the sales rep know have been uncovered and discussed by other buyers who have shared those issues and concerns with his buyer.

The sales rep who treats the buyer as a highly informed person, will earn the trust of that buyer. But the only way to treat the buyer is a highly informed person is for the sales rep themselves to be highly informed.

Marketing already has the data collection and reporting tools at the brand level, now they just need to aim those tools in a way that collects the information that is most meaningful for the sales team.

When marketing proactively brings these insights to the sales team we will eliminate information asymmetry in the buyer’s favor, increase the value of the sales rep in the buyer’s eyes, and enable the sales rep to have the impact we are paying them to have.

 

We recently ran across this awesome cheat sheet of image sizing for social media that is sure to make your life– or at least your graphic designer’s life much easier.  LunaMetrics has compiled this handy guide of specs to optimize your images from the top social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and YouTube.  This is a keeper for sure!

View the cheat sheet/infographic here

 

With 2013 well underway, are you staying ontrack with your online presence?  

We recently ran across this good reminder list from Marketing Profs of do’s and don’ts for your online marketing activities.  Here are just a few:

Don’t: Substitute a social media page for a website.
Do: Get a professional website

Don’t: Build a “flashy” mobile website.
Do: Invest in a mobile-friendly website and skip heavy  design elements, like banners or videos in Flash, which might slow down the load  time, or not load at all for some mobile users

Don’t: Forget that happy customers are your best  advocates.
Do: Ask some of your best customers to share their positive  reviews, whether written or via video, to use on your social media pages,  company blog, and website to establish credibility for your business.

Read the full article here

 

I recently came across an article that offers a good quick overview of social selling.  While it is aimed at individual reps and not companies, these 3 key elements are important:

  1. Mining
  2. Connecting
  3. Engaging

Check out the full article here

 

We recently ran across this Huffington Post article  featuring a great compilation of stats from 2012 that are worth taking a look at, especially as you plan for your 2013 social media campaigns.

Here is just a sampling:

  1. Websites using the +1 button generate 3.5x the Google+ visits than sites without the button.
  2. 625,000 new users on Google+ every day
  3. Facebook monthly active users now total nearly 850 million 
  4.  56 percent of customer tweets to companies are being ignored

Check out all 100 facinating statistics here.

Five Social Media mistakes to avoid in the New Year—or any time of year!   

  1. Take advantage of others misfortune
  2. Ignore or delete customer service issues
  3. Use a hashtags without thinking about potential risks
  4. Promote your brand shamelessly
  5. Be boring

To learn more about lessons learned from these mistakes, check out this CMO.com article

How can content marketing organizations remain search-friendly while adhering to best practices in social media?
Not long ago creating content that humans want to read and creating content pleasing to search engines were mutually exclusive.  Today, this is no longer the case.  According to Rand Fishkin at SEOmoz, the 5 best practices of content marketing while maximizing SEO search in an ethical way are:

  1. Create content that people will have an incentive to share.
  2. Do keyword research, so you don’t waste effort writing about things people don’t care about.
  3. Put all your content on the same domain/subdomain. (e.g. don’t use blog.mysite.com, use mysite.com/blog)
  4. Stand for something, and write about it.
  5. Don’t separate your brand from your content.

“People don’t buy what you do, they buy why you do it.”

Read the article in it’s entirety here.

 

We recently came across this SocialMedia Examiner article with an interesting tip on increasing your YouTube marketing efforts.  The thought is that by integrating video into your Facebook posts you can increase your YouTube video views by three-fold.  Helpful step-by-step pointers using meta tags as well.

We think it’s good stuff, how about you?

 

 

The trends in mobile and social that this TechCrunch article explores match what we’re seeing with our clients. Excellent infographics found in this study by Nielsen and NM Incite. Good quote includes “Social networking is all about mobile” (with data to support it).

Read the full article, Mobile Drives Adoption Of Social Media In 2012: Apps & Mobile Web Account For Majority Of Growth; Nearly Half Of Social Media Users Access Sites On Smartphones, here

 

According to a recent study, customers who interact with a brand via social media spend 20-40% more with that company than other customers.  With the right marketing strategies in place, you can actually drive direct sales from social media.

Remember, both social broadcasting and social listening are key components of any solid social media campaign.  This recent article from Marketing Profs expands on this and offers an overview of how to deploy a social media sales mechanism in your company.

What are you doing to drive direct sales via social media?

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