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Generally, I have found
that there are three types of inquiry management programs. From
fulfill and forget to deep nurturing. Let’s look at the three types.
Fulfill and Forget: Low
Touch
Fulfill and forget
inquiries are just that. Usually these are B2C but also low-cost B2B
products. Products are sold through retailers or distributors and
resellers. The manufacturer advertises and typically drives
inquirers to a Web site, a toll-free number, and/or most likely a
retail establishment. The manufacturers products are usually less
than a few hundred dollars, the margins are small and they don’t
control the sales channel. They advertise for name recognition
(brand awareness) and to drive immediate need buyers into the retail
store. Fulfillment is usually not done or is minimal, inquiries are
not sent to the sales channel, and in some cases a database of
inquirers are not kept (not recommended).
The percentage of
people who buy (anyone’s product) is often more than 45%, and the
time frame for a group of inquirers to buy is much less than a year
and more likely a few weeks or a few months. The goal for these
manufacturers is to create interest and drive the suspect into the
reseller or retail store.
Salespeople dealing
with this type of inquirer are closers. They sell on the spot on
price and delivery. They repeatedly ask for the sale and are loathe
to see the buyers walk away because they know that if they don’t
sell the person then and there, the sales will most likely and
quickly go to someone else.
These types of
inquiries have the following common:
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Low cost products, less than $1000.
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Multiple channels of distribution with little control over
follow-up.
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Cost of fulfillment is factor. A dollar is often too much for
these manufacturers.
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Usually a high volume of inquiries: usually many thousands per
month.
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Follow-up is less important unless it is automated via email.
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Product information is available on the Web.
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Commodity sale.
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Perhaps the most important: The end user must know where to buy.
Response management for
companies with these types of sales process and channels means being
sure that the potential buyer knows where to buy the product.
Capturing names and contact information for these inquirers has
become an increasingly important goal for companies. The contact
information can be vital for marketing managers trying to make quota
in market places where lists of potential buyers are difficult to
find. Marketing ROI reports that tie marketing to sales are measured
through special promotions or marketing research, such as
Did-You-Buy Studies that sample inquirers from different media.
Considered Purchase:
Continuous Touches, Some Nurturing
This are mostly B2B but
includes some B2C considered purchasers. Considered purchase buyers
are for products over $1,000 or products that are bought and
frequently replaced so that the lifetime value (LTV) of a buyer is
high. Inquirers in this group feel compelled to contact the company,
get information, and eventually speak with a salesperson that can
educate them and help them make a decision.
These are not commodity
products. It requires a salesperson who will answer more than simple
price and delivery questions. The touches (steps) required to make
the sale are a few as two or three but could be eight to twelve or
more touches. The CMO (Chief Marketing Officer) Council in its 2004
survey says, “57 percent of survey respondents said that it takes
six months or less to close an average deal, but 48 percent said it
takes from six months to one year or longer to close a typical
deal.”
Touches include initial
fulfillment, calls to qualify the inquirer’s need, visits to discuss
the inquirers need or pain, proposals, presentations to a large
staff, building prototypes, negotiations with the buyer and with
purchasing, and the final delivery. In these instances, the inquiry
request is fulfilled by marketing: The inquirer may be called for
answers to additional qualification questions and then given to
salespeople for resolution. The Rule of 45 very much applies to
these inquiries.
Salespeople in these
situations take control of the sale, provide the necessary
education, and expect to close an average sale in three to six
months. They consult and give advice. While the products are not
commodities, the average salesperson doesn’t necessarily need an
engineering degree or highly specialized formal training to be
successful. They build up expertise in their product area and will
ask for the sale less often than the commodity salesperson.
The common characters
for these inquiries are:
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Products $1,000 +.
- Direct sales forces or loyal
distribution
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Cost of fulfillment
not a factor, $3 to $14.
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Volume of inquiries:
300 to many thousands per month.
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Follow-up is very
important.
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Fulfillment of mailed
literature is common.
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Not a commodity
product, but not quite a consultant sale.
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eMarketing is an
option here to help in touches.
Many marketers believe
that qualification is important for these inquiries and that no one
who is not sales-ready should be sent to a salesperson. The argument
is often solved by the company’s method of distribution. The more
direct you sell, the more likely you will nurture inquirers. If you
sell through distribution, you will most likely send all inquiries
the good, the bad and the ugly to your resellers. Think about it
before you send unqualified inquiries to resellers. Send them some
trash with the good inquiries and they will consider everything you
give them to be trash.
Nurture Processing:
Inquires for Long, Technical Sales Cycles
The last group has a
purchase price of $25,000 to millions of dollars and is almost
exclusively in the domain of B2B. The sales inquiries fall into
products sold by a consultative sales force. The sales cycle is long
on these sales, typically 6-8 months or more. The Rule of 45 applies
here, as it does for the Considered Purchase Inquirers. A
salesperson in this instance is truly consultative and probably has
a technical degree or an advanced degree or equivalent work
experience. The salesperson may be a part of or a leader of a team
of people that will satisfy this prospect.
Inquiries in this
instance are “nurtured” by inside sales or a vendor and progress
from initial literature fulfillment or qualification to a natural
hand-off to the salesperson when the “time is right.” The time may
be right when a buyer says, “Now is the time to send in your sales
person or systems consultant.” This is when a salesperson begins to
form a team of experts that he or she will need to satisfy this
buyer.
The common
characteristics for these inquiries are:
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Moderate to very
expensive products: $25,000+.
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Great for a
controlled direct sales force but resellers can play a role here.
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Fulfillment and
pursuit could cost $50 to $100 per inquiry.
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Volume is usually on
the lower end: 300 to several thousand inquirers a month.
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Follow-up is a
continuous, close-contact program. There are many, many touches
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Fulfillment of mailed
hard-copy literature is still common.
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This is very much a
consultative sale.
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Marketing will often,
but not always, assume pursuit duties until the inquirer is ready
to buy: telemarketing, mail and email.
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eMarketing is an
option to help in the touches.
Regardless of the
situation you are in, you must address the requests of your
prospects in a timely manner while moving the inquiry asset from the
potential side of the ledger to the permanent customer side. |