So many B2B legends are coming to the summit: |
To say things have changed is an understatement |
Leslie Douglas, Head of Sales Programming & Thought Leadership at Sell Better, describes the current landscape of B2B sales in our recent article, The State of Sales:
The market has changed a lot, but so have roles like sales.
We’ve exited a really cushy period of time where a seller was sitting with a nice stream of inbound leads. A lot of companies had some sort of PLG, they had marketing, they had an SDR, a BDR—all of these things that were feeding their pipeline.
Now, sales has become more about relationships and conversations. It has completely shifted its focus to full-cycle selling.
Everything’s slowing to a trickle. We have to set salespeople up for success in a different way. We are having to learn how to walk again.
Before, the mindset around quota attainment was that it came from many different sources. Now, those sources are decreasing or have been cut altogether and we’re forced to look for other ways to come up with the same number.
Outbound is more challenging today because it’s noisy. There are a lot of people. There are a lot of players at the table. There’s a lot more information at our fingertips and our buyers are more knowledgeable. They’re going to look in different places than they did 5, 10, 15 years ago.
We see a ton of information around intent data, and the positive impact of having an introduction or utilizing your network in a different way. Whereas before, you could just push to the masses. You could throw out that net and somebody was going to get caught in it and be interested.
But there’s just too much noise for that these days. You have to be different—and not in a cheesy way, but different in your process, the way that you approach things, and your strategy. |
Read more from Leslie and other top sales leaders in The State of Sales. |
Impact > personal brand |
Building a network is bigger than vanity metrics like followers and clicks. It’s about situating yourself in the conversation your buyers are having with people they already trust.
In The State of Sales, Scott Leese, CEO & Founder of Scott Leese Consulting, breaks down the importance of building a network and how it can help you rise above the noise: But then there were tech solutions out there that wrote better emails and faster email sequences, so we caught up on all that.
These are the motions that sales leaders know. A lot of those sales leaders have not—in the last 10 years—spent time building their own networks. They rely on what’s familiar to them.
So, they actually can’t demonstrate this motion. These are the people who are like, “Some of us are really good at our jobs and don’t build a brand or need connections on LinkedIn.”
But, it’s not about building your brand. It’s about you becoming irrelevant because you have 700 connections on LinkedIn and you can’t teach people how to do this networking motion, this referral motion, because you have no network.
You can’t just get a network overnight. It takes a long time. So, if I were a 46-year-old sales leader who grew up cold calling and cold emailing and had no network, would I be preaching a go-to network strategy? Probably not, because I can’t execute it.
Scott is speaking at the Nearbound Summit! Get your spot today. |
HubSpot’s masterstroke |
HubSpot recently announced the integration of ChatSpot—not with a new product, but with their own HubSpot Academy. |
You’re a wizard, Harry!Teams aligned on nearbound might be causing a stir, but they’re saving the day in the process. |
Thanks for sharing, Ketan Pandit! |
Stuff you don’t want to miss!
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The future of a nearbound tech stack Join Simon Bouchez, CEO & Co-founder of Reveal (and the man who invented nearbound!) at the Nearbound Summit.He will explore the nearbound tech stack and the future of connected solutions and shared data. Get your spot today! |