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Selling before the client is ready to be sold
There is a tendency for many tasked with business development to “always be closing” wherever and whenever they have a chance to interact with a potential client. But today’s buyer of professional services has become increasingly self-directed, is research-savvy, due diligence-oriented and are generally averse to sales (or what the A/E/C industry calls business development). They are performing due-diligence online, researching potential partners and seeking to better understand the solutions to their needs, as well as the overall competitive landscape.
In fact, research has found that in many cases 70-80% of the “buyer’s journey” has been completed before a phone call or meeting ever takes place. In the A/E/C industry, that means that up until the time a client is ready to issue an RFP, ask for a bid, or discuss the scope of their project, they’re not all that interested in being sold. So during this portion of the journey, selling (at least in the traditional sense) should mostly off the table.
How marketing can help:
- Instill a “share don’t sell” mentality for all marketing and BD activities/communications
- Develop an account-based marketing (ABM) strategy to reach high priority targets instead of resorting to cold calls and emails
- Provide education-oriented print content for BD staff INSTEAD of typical company-centric brochures and boilerplate
- Create webinars and seminars for prospects to attend to educate while building trust