Predictable Prospecting Summary

Predictable Prospecting

How to Radically Increase Your B2B Sales Pipeline
by Marylou Tyler 2016 256 pages
3.79
265 ratings

Key Takeaways

1. Develop a Competitive SWOT Analysis to Position Your Product

Sales training programs do a decent, if not an excellent, job of covering product and service knowledge, selling skills, sales technology platforms, and company policies. However, at the end of formal training, most sales professionals still lack the confidence and ability they need to hit the ground running because they haven't developed a strong sense of how to position the value of buying from their company rather than from the competition.

Understand your competitive position. A comprehensive SWOT analysis is crucial for sales professionals to confidently articulate their company's value proposition. This analysis should cover six key factors:

  • The 4 Ps: Product, Price, Promotion, and Place
  • Reputation factors
  • Internal resource factors
  • External forces
  • Trends
  • VUCA (Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, and Ambiguous) factors

By examining these elements, salespeople can identify their company's unique strengths and potential weaknesses, as well as market opportunities and threats. This knowledge allows them to position their offerings effectively against competitors and address customer needs more precisely.

2. Create Ideal Account and Prospect Profiles for Targeted Outreach

Skipping or spending too little time defining an IAP is one of the biggest mistakes salespeople make; they pay a dear cost in time wasted on accounts that may never buy.

Focus on high-value prospects. Developing Ideal Account Profiles (IAPs) and Ideal Prospect Personas (IPPs) is essential for efficient and effective prospecting. These profiles help salespeople target accounts with the highest likelihood of buying and the greatest lifetime value.

Key components of an IAP include:

  • Firmographic fit (industry, company size, geography)
  • Operational fit (current equipment, purchasing policies, buying decisions)
  • Situational fit (strategic initiatives, internal capabilities, financial health)

IPPs should focus on:

  • Job titles and functions
  • Professional objectives
  • Influence map (decision-makers, influencers, gatekeepers)
  • Core value propositions and primary objections

By creating detailed IAPs and IPPs, sales teams can concentrate their efforts on the most promising prospects, significantly improving their chances of success.

3. Craft Compelling Messages Aligned with Buyer's Journey Stages

Crafting the right message begins with recognizing that prospects exist at different stages of purchase intent in the customer buying cycle.

Tailor your approach to buyer readiness. Effective messaging should be customized to the prospect's stage in the buying cycle: unaware, aware, interested, evaluating, purchase, and post-purchase. This approach ensures that communications are relevant and valuable to the prospect at each step.

Key principles for crafting compelling messages:

  • Use the Compel with Content (CWC) framework: obstacle, outcome, opportunity
  • Personalize communications based on prospect research
  • Craft attention-grabbing subject lines
  • Provide value before asking for anything in return
  • Use social proof and case studies to build credibility
  • Include clear, single calls-to-action

By aligning messages with the buyer's journey, salespeople can more effectively move prospects through the sales funnel and increase their chances of securing meetings and closing deals.

4. Design Multi-Touch, Multi-Channel Prospecting Campaigns

While we want to avoid providing a universal prescription, we do want to set a recommended starting point that sales teams can confidently use to build multichannel, multitouch campaigns.

Persistence and variety are key. Successful prospecting campaigns utilize multiple touchpoints across various channels to increase the chances of engaging prospects. A typical campaign might include 8-12 touches over 20-22 business days, combining emails, phone calls, and potentially social media interactions.

Sample 9-touch, 20-business-day campaign structure:

  1. Day 1: Email (Call to Action: Internal Referral)
  2. Day 3: Email (CTA: Internal Referral)
  3. Day 6: Email (CTA: Unaware to Aware Asset Click)
  4. Day 8: Email (CTA: Secure a Meeting)
  5. Day 8: Phone Call (CTA: Secure a Meeting)
  6. Day 11: Email (CTA: Aware to Interested Asset Click)
  7. Day 13: Email (CTA: Interested to Evaluating Asset Click)
  8. Day 18: Email (CTA: Secure a Meeting)
  9. Day 20: Phone Call (CTA: Secure a Meeting)

This approach balances persistence with respect for the prospect's time, increasing the likelihood of a positive response.

5. Qualify Leads Effectively Using AWAF and BANT Frameworks

To avoid either of these traps, every sales team must have a set of (no more than five) must-have criteria that is based, unsurprisingly, on the known characteristics of "bad prospects" and "bad customers."

Efficient qualification saves time and resources. The Predictable Prospecting method employs two waves of qualification: Are We A Fit? (AWAF) and Budget, Authority, Need, and Timing (BANT). This approach helps salespeople quickly identify high-value prospects and avoid wasting time on unqualified leads.

AWAF criteria may include:

  • Physical or technology infrastructure compatibility
  • Regulatory requirements alignment
  • Cultural compatibility

BANT qualification focuses on:

  • Need: Uncovering explicit needs and opportunities
  • Timing: Assessing urgency and decision timelines
  • Authority: Identifying key decision-makers and influencers
  • Budget: Understanding funding processes and availability

By applying these frameworks, sales teams can focus their efforts on prospects with the highest likelihood of becoming valuable customers.

6. Optimize Your Sales Pipeline with Key Metrics and Lean Processes

Prospecting is not a set-it-and-forget-it process. Sales teams must vigilantly measure and optimize their pipeline to achieve the maximum return on sales investment.

Measure, analyze, and improve continuously. Successful sales organizations use lean optimization techniques and key performance indicators (KPIs) to continuously improve their pipeline performance. This involves tracking metrics at each stage of the sales process and making data-driven decisions to enhance efficiency.

Key metrics to monitor include:

  • New Queue: Lead volume by source, time to engage, disposition rates
  • Working Queue: Appointments set per day, touches per day, email open and click rates
  • Qualifying Queue: Lead disposition rates, cycle time
  • Closing Queue: Win rates, cycle time, pipeline value

By regularly reviewing these metrics and applying lean optimization principles, sales teams can identify bottlenecks, refine processes, and maximize their return on sales investment.

7. Leverage Technology and Tools to Enhance Sales Development

Sales tools must be viewed as a means to an end; they should support sales processes that help sales professionals close more deals at a faster rate.

Choose tools that amplify effectiveness. The right technology can significantly enhance sales development efforts by streamlining processes, providing valuable insights, and enabling more personalized outreach. Key categories of tools to consider include:

  • Contact discovery and management
  • Sales enablement and content management
  • Predictive analytics for lead scoring
  • Marketing automation platforms
  • Sales workflow automation
  • Email tracking and management
  • Web conferencing and document sharing
  • CRM systems

When selecting tools, focus on those that integrate well with existing systems, support your specific sales processes, and provide measurable improvements in efficiency and effectiveness.

8. Build and Manage High-Performing Sales Development Teams

To that end, start by looking within the sales development organization for talent. However, beware of simply promoting the top performing SDR to manager. Often, high performers are ruthlessly independent.

Cultivate a strong sales development culture. Building an effective sales development team requires careful consideration of organizational structure, hiring practices, training programs, and management approaches. Key strategies include:

  • Insourcing sales development for better control and talent development
  • Hiring smart, conscientious, and articulate early-career individuals
  • Providing comprehensive training on products, processes, and skills
  • Structuring teams with dedicated sales development managers
  • Enabling SDRs with effective processes and technology
  • Rewarding results rather than activity

By focusing on these elements, organizations can create a high-performing sales development function that consistently generates quality leads and drives revenue growth.

9. Cultivate Essential Habits of Successful Sales Development Representatives

As a result of the many books the two of us have read on selling, we have come to the conclusion that there is little new under the sun concerning the habits of highly successful salespeople.

Develop winning behaviors and mindsets. Successful SDRs cultivate habits that enhance their productivity, communication skills, and professional effectiveness. These habits fall into three main categories:

Time Management:

  • Focus on high-impact activities
  • Schedule tasks in dedicated time blocks
  • Plan and break down goals into manageable pieces
  • Delegate non-essential tasks

Communication:

  • Project a positive attitude
  • Ask insightful questions and listen actively
  • Respond promptly to inquiries and requests

Professional Effectiveness:

  • Maintain accurate CRM records
  • Persist with personalized follow-ups
  • Continuously expand your network and knowledge
  • Protect your professional reputation
  • Commit to ongoing learning and skill development

By consistently practicing these habits, SDRs can improve their performance, build stronger relationships with prospects, and advance their careers in sales.

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