Was talking with a CEO of a business this week and she said

"We have no pipeline, no visibility and no credibility"

And from looking at them on social media, it's clear why.  What we see, is business marketing like we did in the 1990s, which was all very well in the 1990s, but it's 2023.

What we also see is just more of the same.  I was told of a business that was trying to pull business from their Q3 to Q2 by discounting.  Here's a business that is will to give away $millions in margin, rather than implement digital sales processes.  Where you don't need to give away all this margin. 

By having a digital / social media strategy, your business will have

  • Visibility – recognition in the marketplace
  • Trusted advisor status
  • Recruit and retain the best talent
  • Employee engagement & shared sense of purpose
  • Pipeline, growth and new customers

One of our clients is getting a 10,000:1 ROI on their investment in social selling.  Just think, you give me $1 and I give you back $10,000.  Just think about the impact that would make on your pipeline, visibility and credibility.  Just think about the impact that would make on your growth agenda and revenues.  How that would turn your business around. 

But let's look at what people are actually doing currently in marketing.

Digital Advertising

You should check out this fascinating conversation with a Martin Lucas for my #TimTalk (my podcast) where he shares the following figures as engagement rates for digital advertising.

1.61% Facebook

1.91% Google

0.35% Programmatic (this is where ads follow you around when you browse)

That means that digital advertising has a 98.81% failure rate and based on the amount of money that is spent on digital advertising, that means that $265 Billion is wasted on digital advertising every year

None of us look at advertising or paid media anymore and we all know that if people are using paid media, they don't understand the world of social and digital. 

“Advertising is the tax you pay for being unremarkable.” Robert Stephens.

Email Marketing

According to Hubspot, the response rate to emails fell to a record low of 2.1% in April 2020. Said differently, 98% of our efforts to reach new prospects failed.  Check out more data to back this up here.

Let's not forget that Hubspot, sell email marketing systems so they have vested interest to talk these figures up. 

Website

Hubspot quote the average dwell time on a website is 2 to 4 minutes, see data here.  You know as well as I do that we go to a website to make sure a company exists, we know all websites say they same.  They all say they are the best, number one in the market and "buy my product because we are great" as we know it will say that and all their competitors say that, we just ignore it.  It's just noise. 

Cold calling

Data shows, see this Salesforce article, here, that cold calling has a 98% failure rate. 

Let's be honest

If you are doing any of this "interruption" techniques in marketing, this is not going to give you a growth agenda and in fact I don't it will give you the pipeline that you need to feed your company.  I certainly wasn't giving this CEO I was talking to, what she needed.

  • Pipeline
  • Visibility
  • and credibility

Nobody, yes nobody would ever go to the Board and tell them they are going to be using methods that have a 98% or a 99% failure rate, so why are we surprised when this does not create the pipeline the company wants.

Imagine ...

Tomorrow, you and I are going to meet at the lobby of your target customer. 

Imagine that I have a key card to get into the building, we wave to security and I let you through the security barriers.  Impressive eh!

We walk over to the elevators and I press the button to go up to the relevant floors where we can meet with the people you need to sell to.  Now you have never met these people before so i will introduce you.  That will mean you will get to meet the people you need to meet in this target customer of yours.

Pick whatever department you want, I will take you there and introduce you.  

For example, say you sell accounting systems, ERP systems, then I can take you and introduce you to the people in Finance.  Or maybe you sell human resources (HR) software and I take you to meet the HR people. Or maybe you sell CRM, customer experience (CX) and I can take you to meet all the people in marketing and sales.

Now if I walked you into finance, (or any of the other departments) and I started to introduce you to the people there one-by-one.  Now, you wouldn't hand everybody a brochure and walk away, would you? 

This is your chance to get into the business, meet the people, build relationships. Kinda cool!  

As I introduce you to the people in your target department, you would hand them your business card.  You might get people to scan the QR code on LinkedIn so you are connected.  

Either way you would also want to be remembered.  So you might ask them a question about themsleves, maybe you spot that Manchester United mug on their desk, the Nick Saban bobblehead (doll).  The photo of their family on their desk, you would start a conversation about them.  You might crack a joke.  You would start building trust.  Maybe you would ask them about the business, be curious about them and the company?

As I walk you around the department, and introduce you to more and more people, you would get to know more and more people and the department would get to know you.  In fact the whole department will know you, just think of the competitive advantage you now have.

We haven't needed to talk about product, we are connecting as humans, we are having conversations.  We are being social.  

Just through this simple way of showing you around and introducing you to people, you are front of mind and your competition is not. This is so powerful!

I've now walked you around the whole department, they know you, you know them.  It's time to see the big boss and I take you in and introduce you.  

You look around the office and see the photos of her fly fishing, you talk about when you had a fly fishing lesson in Scotland when you visited there last.  You connect, you have a conversation. 

One of the things we do in life is find commonality with each other, because when we do that we start to know, like and trust each other.   

You then ask her some of the business related issues you picked these pointers up from her staff you have been talking to.   

If it's finance you might ask her about how long it takes to close the month end books, if it's human resources it might be about sourcing internal talent, if it's CRM you might ask about onboarding sales people.

I could go on, but you should get the picture now.  

It does not matter if you know nobody in this company, they could even be using a competitive solution.  But by the time I've walked you around, they know you, they know you as a human, they are aware that you work for a company and you didn't even need to pitch to them.  Now it's time to start moving some of those conversations to commercial interaction.

This is social selling

Now you can stop imagining, what I've described to you is social selling.

This is so powerful, so natural and is the killer blow you need today. 

Here at DLA Ignite, teach and coach you, to digitally walk into companies, build influence and trust, across the whole team from the ground floor to the top floor.  From your ideal customers, to the stakeholders and the budget holders.

It could be new business, you could be trying to displace a competitor, it could be "landing and expanding" it could be part of an account-based marketing (ABM) strategy.  

Either way, using social selling and influence from DLA Ignite is the fastest way to success and we can get you there. 

On to the second story.

Now Imagine .....

How about if I said, I can take you to a place where all your prospects hang out, would you go?

I can pick you up in the car tomorrow and you can hang out there, having conversations with them.

When you arrived, what would you do?

Grab a coffee and go up to the first one and start a conversation?  Of course you would.

Or would you walk in and say "buy my stuff, because we are great".  Of course you wouldn't, as somebody would call security.

That's the difference.  Selling on social is ...... social.  You have conversations with people.

You don't go up to people and pitch to them as people will call security.

The great thing about social is that there is no "prime selling time (PST)", you can have as many conversations as you want.  One of my customers, does his prospecting between putting the kids to bed and when he goes to bed.

It's time to bring your demand generation into the second decade of the 21st century and it's time to "start fishing where the fish are" ...... on social. 

The third story is about how you can bring all this together

One of the benefits of getting all you team(s) to social sell is that you as a business will start getting what we call digital dominance.  So what on earth is that? 

Imagine this

You are at a conference and there are a drinks event that evening where all the people from the conference are invited.  

You have a conference call which makes you late for the drinks.

You arrive and everybody is there.

As you look around the room, you realise that the people in the room are your prospects and customers.  Which is great news.  Each of these prospects and customers are talking to somebody, they have a drink in hand and they are laughing and joking.

The question is this, these prospects and customers, are they talking to people from your business or are they talking to the competition?

If they are talking to your people, that's going to be great and make you feel great, if they are all talking to the competition, you are going to feel a sickness in the stomach. 

Now think about this in a digital landscape, LinkedIn, Twitter, all the research shows that your customers are hanging out on digital somewhere.  Where these prospects and customers hangout, are they talking to people from your business or a competitor? 

It's no different from the drinks event.

This is your challenge and also your opportunity.

It's time to stop hiding behind the phones and the brochures and be the business that is out there having conversations with your prospects and customers on digital.  

Your job is to do this, before the competition does it and owns the space.

Owning your market sector or vertical, is digital dominance. 

What is social selling?

Here at DLA Ignite, we define social selling as

"Using your presence and behavior on Social Media to build influence,
make connections, grow relationships and trust, which leads to
conversation and commercial interaction."

It's not witchcraft, it's enabling your salespeople to work from home, (or the office) and create conversations with prospects and customers.  Conversations on social media and conversations that convert. 

The problem with the name "social selling" is that people think that this is selling on social.  All these pitches that you get on social are not social selling, they are spam.

The other thing you need to know about social selling is that this isn't about "putting out some videos" or "putting flowers on your profile" or "going viral".  Here at DLA Ignite, engagement is important but we are about driving revenueEBITDA, for your business using social media.  This is about you winning business from the competition and having a competitive advantage. 

Social is about having a strategy and there are two key drivers

With anything you do on social there are two questions you need to ask

1. How many leads / meetings / conversations will I get from this post / blog / activity?

2. How much revenue / EBITDA am I getting as a business?

Posting and hoping or posting random stuff is not a strategy, in fact I doubt it's driving anything for your business. 

So who's social selling?

In case you missed it, the Bank of America’s Merrill Lynch have banned cold calling and have moved all their people to social selling. This isn't some trendy tech company that might have decided to do this on a whim, this is a very conservative financial services company that has made a decision based on data.

But surely cold calling has a better ROI than social selling?  Not according to Merrill Lynch.

"They will also be encouraged to contact prospects over LinkedIn, which has a higher hit rate than cold calling"

The CRO (chief revenue officer), Richard Eltham of Namos Solutions, of one of clients posted a comment on LinkedIn about social selling. See here.

“Social selling is not an option now it is the way of the world and you either learn and execute it or fear getting left behind” 

Kevin Murray who is the Head of Sales at MacArtney Underwater Technology recently posted about his success with social selling here and wrote an article about the transformation that has happened in sales here.

Andrew Ferrier who is the CEO of Display Technology Ltd and in this article it talks about why Display Technology have adopted social selling.  His team have also created a social media strategy with help from our partner, Crux.

Their social media mission statement is

“We want to position ourselves as a forward-thinking, knowledgeable team of individuals who are all experts in our own right, therefore, collectively awesome!”

Andrew also says in that post

"Adopting this (social selling) strategy has taken all of us well outside of our comfort zones but the rewards we have seen in a short period of time have created an excitement within the business development team (new term for sales team).

Because of the nature of social media, quite often you can get instant results. Even if that is just a comment left on your post, or a like, or someone taking the time to want to connect with you.

The excitement around the sales team is infectious, it’s no longer a chore to reach out to the market place because the results can be instant and are there, right in front of you."

What sort of results can you expect?

If you check out this video of Chris Mason CEO at Oracle reseller Namos, and DLA Ignite customer, fast forward to 19 minutes 55 seconds. Chris talks about a $2.6 million win from being on social, after completing the DLA Ignite social selling and influence course. 

What happened?  They buyer was on social media looking for a solution to their problem, spotted one of the Namos salespeople, who had a buyer-centric profile and asked if the salesperson could help them.  That turned into a $2.6 million deal. 

Contact any of the DLA Ignite team, Eric, Adam, Vanessa, Lorena, Priscilla, Lenwood, Alex, Tracy, Terra, Matt, or Will.

and they will be more than happy to help.

Go and look at their LinkedIn profiles .... look how they can have digital conversations, create insightful content.  This could be your company! 

We are the only social selling and influence company in the world to offer a certificate in social selling sponsored by the Institute of Sales Professionals (ISP).

Want to know more about social selling, check out my new book

"social selling techniques to influence buyers and changemakers - 2nd edition".

In this brand new edition, I have updated all the text, I have also got 15 practitioners, so people who are doing this already to explain how they are get (practical) business benefit. From the CEO that has been running a digital business for over 18 months to sales leaders who use social selling every day.  

Articles on how these business have and are implementing digital, from Mercer, Telstra Purple, Ring Central, Cyberhawk, Namos, Ericsson, Crux Consulting, DLA Ignite and more.

It's available on Amazon worldwide.  Link to Amazon.com here and Amazon.co.uk here.