Rather than thinking about your website as a standalone part of your sales team (constantly generating leads behind the scenes), it may be more beneficial to think about it in terms of sales enablement.
Such an approach will not only help your sales team connect with prospects at the right point in the funnel (sales funnel, that is) and have more meaningful conversations, it will also help web designers and marketers align their efforts with sales to create a consistent and accurate message for your brand and your products or services.
Depending on the number of members on your sales team, each individual may be producing or tweaking their own emails, presentations, decks, and collateral material for prospects. Is that content consistent in style and format from rep to rep? Does it reflect your key marketing messaging? Does it look professional? And, maybe most importantly, should your sales reps be spending their time on creating one-off content?
Probably not.
Remember, buyers (even B2B customers) are increasingly eager to do their own research online. They seek out information when it's convenient for them. Buyers also like being in control of the different types of content they consume as well as the quantity they take in before reaching out to a salesperson. By creating content focused on issues and pain points reps hear on a consistent basis, you can help your team avoid creating the same pieces over and over and ensure the materials are accurate and consistent. At the same time, you can focus on content marketing your sales reps will actually use.
An American Marketing Association study reports that 90% of marketing deliverables are not used by sales.
1. The content is not relevant.
This problem affects web design, content creation, and sales. If a piece of content or key messaging is based on a buyer persona and their journey to becoming a customer, you may need to update the persona using input from your reps. Listen in on sales conversations and meetings -- take a rep out for lunch. The point is to gain insights on prospects to improve your key messaging, blog posts, premium content offers, email marketing, and social media marketing.
2. The content is not easily accessible.
Are you using a shared drive for reps to gather appropriate content for prospects? Or, are you still emailing content back and forth with your team? How about using different areas of your website to deliver useful information? By positioning your website as a tool for sales enablement, your reps can point prospects (that aren't quite ready to purchase) back to the site for additional resources while continuing their path to purchase on their own terms.
We often say "your website is your best salesperson" to get businesses thinking about the performance of their current site. We can all agree that static, brochure sites have gone the way of the dodo. But, if you already have a website that is generating some leads for your business, is it fully optimized to continue the nurturing process and deliver more qualified leads to sales?
By looking at your website from a sales perspective -- how it can be used for sales enablement -- you can create a variety of content that is targeted, organized, accessible, linked, and measurable. All of which, will allow your sales team more time to focus on strategic conversations that end in new customers.
Learn more about aligning your teams with our FREE Sales and Marketing Alignment Checklist.