Green Selling.
A few years ago I was approached by a publishing agent who wanted to know if I'd consider pulling together a book based on some of what I've posted in The Drift over many years. As it was something I'd…
A few years ago I was approached by a publishing agent who wanted to know if I'd consider pulling together a book based on some of what I've posted in The Drift over many years. As it was something I'd…
The dawn of this decade pretty much marked the beginning of the programmatic era of digital advertising and marketing, and the promise of smaller staffs and easy money was all the rage. At its apex, publishers…
Iteration cripples and marginal thinking kills. But we still see too many examples of companies and teams who think only about being one feature ahead or one degree better than a perceived competitor.…
Two years ago in this space I posted some thoughts on how the media and advertising world was getting curiouser and curiouser ("Crossdressing," July 2014); how publishers were running creative studios,…
Looking through 15 years of Drift archives, and thought this would be a welcome re-post. Enjoy. Everyone who spends time in sales ends up hitting the wall eventually. Things feel stuck: prospects don't…
One of the most anticipated and important conversations we'll be having at the Seller Forum this week will feature marketers from three nationally prominent brands. (Since the Forum is a closed-door, no-press…
Last Thursday night I received a wonderful honor when 212NYC -- the New York digital advertising club -- presented me with one of their 2016 "Thought Leadership Awards" -- at least in part for the ideas…
In pursuit of brand marketers, most sellers start with the wrong story. And when they finally start to tell the right story, they tell it too big. Your narrative about the customer's struggle should be bigger than a broken air conditioner but smaller than global warming. There is always a story within the story. Pursue it. Get specific. Take a position.
Conventional wisdom says that prospects who test our products and services grow into great customers later on. But conventional wisdom is always conventional and not always wise. From my experience with sales teams, "test" customers often (a) spend just enough money to fail, (b) suck up a disproportionate share of internal resources, and (c) don't provide a clear path to future business. And even when there is follow on business, it's often tied to the low-low rates or miniscule deal size of the test. I've got an overly simple approach to stopping the madness: Sell the second deal first.
At the March 2nd Seller Forum we'll discuss the changing relationship between marketer and publisher. Chris Paul, VP of Media and Acquisition at Squarespace, will play a key role in that discussion. Here…
We all know the four P's of marketing - price, place, product and promotion. I'm suggesting the four P's of digital sales excellence: Process. Practice. Pathos. Point-of-View. Simple, elegant and critical.
Among the digital sellers I train and coach, one of the most common complaints is the lack of urgency and action by seemingly interested customers. The refrain goes like this: After an instructive, engaged sales call, the client gives all the right 'go' signals, saying how promising it all is, identifying team members who might be involved in follow up, speaking to next steps. Then the foot-dragging begins. There are other priorities for the tech team...the budget has gone from certain to questionable... or there are just long periods of non-communication or silence. So what the hell happened? It's possible that your client was feigning interest or peddling false hope. More likely you were selling vitamins when you should have been selling painkillers.