I hear this question a million times over, and I scratch my head in wonderment every time: "To achieve the growth we are targeting, do you think our company needs to focus on marketing or sales?"
The question perplexes me because it makes me wonder why so many otherwise smart businesspeople fail to see that marketing and sales are inexorably linked. You can't focus on one without the other; what's more, they must be tightly integrated and reinforced.
The question arises from the fact that most marketing people dislike salespeople. They don't understand selling and, even worse, have a disdain for it. They build "beautiful and creative" bridges to nowhere. They expend big budgets. They vie for the dubious honor of being named Agency of the Year. They compete to recruit hotshot creative directors. But increasing sales? That's not on their head-in-the-sand radar screens.
When I first cast the spotlight on this Madison Avenue version of the Wall Street credit default swap, the classic empty-suit ad men came down on me like a ton of bricks. They don't understand sales, they don't care about sales and they want to be free to engage in marketing without the accountability of achieving business growth.
That wastes time and money, and it leads businesspeople to believe that marketing doesn't work. And it doesn't when it's not designed to drive sales.
How can you successfully fuse sales and marketing in your business? Consider the following:
Well-orchestrated trade show participation can and should be the perfect example of the power of marketing and sales acting as one. Companies managing trade show exhibition effectively:
Sales and marketing. Marketing and sales. Each needs the other. Each must reinforce the other. And always keep in mind IBM founder Tom Watson's truism: "Nothing happens until a sale is made."
Mark Stevens is the CEO of MSCO, a results-driven management and marketing firm, and the bestselling author of Your Marketing Sucks and Your Management Sucks. He is also a popular media commentator on a host of business matters including marketing, branding, management and sales. His latest book is Rich Is a Religion.