Meetings are at the very core of sales and marketing integration. In fact, they are one of the most critical factors in orchestrating the type of cooperation that ultimately results in closed sales. In addition, they promote regular, meaningful communication between teams and departments, which helps to prevent disagreements and misalignments that can lead to conflict.
Well, that's how sales and marketing meetings are supposed to function. In the real world, many company sales meetings end up wasting everyone's time. Maybe they lack focus and structure; maybe they've become occasions for a team leader to dictate strategy behind a facade of "collaboration." Whatever the case may be, all too often meetings in the corporate world are counterproductive, frustrating, and exhausting. It doesn't have to be that way. You can develop, promote, and chair meetings that generate creative ideas, yield actionable results and promote genuine alignment and collaboration between your sales and marketing departments. But to hold an effective sales meeting, setting the appropriate tone must be at the top of your list of best practices. Approach Sales Meetings With a Spirit of "Teaming" The stereotypical corporate meeting involves a leader on one side who's rigidly following a series of bullet points, lecturing his or her audience about decisions that have already been made, and generally sucking all the air out of the room. Not surprisingly, on the other side you have disengaged, bored team members who clearly view the sales and marketing meeting as a hardship to be endured rather than an opportunity to be heard. If that describes your organizational sales meetings, even to a small degree, it's vital to initiate a company-wide mindset shift that will counter those bad habits. The shift should be toward "teaming" — in other words, cultivating a positive mindset and unifying around a shared goal. The most effective way to enter productive sales and marketing meetings is to remember that you are coming together to create results, not to dictate or be dictated to. Meetings should be spaces for team members to share observations and ideas, and even ask for support as they work to understand and fulfill their roles in the sales funnel. For instance, think of a marketing team that isn't sure of which direction to take a new piece of content. Perhaps in a meeting, one of the marketing managers asks the sales team for observations on what leads seem to be most interested in. That conversation could open up completely new angles for the marketing team to consider as they continue to develop and implement their content strategy. Key Tone-Setters for Effective Sales Meetings As you reflect on ways to prepare for effective sales and marketing meetings, there are some important principles you must keep in mind when it comes to setting the right tone. These include the following points: 1. Effective sales meetings must have structure. It's no secret that sales meetings without structure fail to accomplish their intended purpose — if, indeed, they have a clear purpose at all. Meetings, like sales and marketing initiatives, live and die by strategy, processes, and people. In other words: you need a strategy for how to run meetings in the first place; you need processes in place that make your meetings efficient and useful; and you need to make sure your people are contributing and receiving value at those meetings. 2. Sales and marketing meetings must have an agenda. Whatever form your sales meeting structure ends up taking, a clear agenda needs to be an integral part of it. It's crucial that whoever leads the meeting has an agenda already in place, and that any critical resources or key assignments are given to participating team members well in advance. When your team members have a few days to look at and think about the items on the agenda, they'll be in a much better position to share useful feedback and observations during the meeting itself. In fact, you may even want them to suggest additional items be included on the agenda — and if you ask them far enough in advance, you may be surprised at how much feedback you receive, and how valuable it is! 3. Successful sales meetings include logistical planning. The importance of creating a meeting environment that's conducive to collaboration and learning shouldn't be overlooked. Obviously, you'll want to hold your meeting at a time when everyone can pay attention, and at a location as free of distractions as possible. Moreover, for the sake of efficiency, it's helpful to have any meeting resources or hardware primed and ready to go. For example, you may want to ensure that whiteboards and markers are clean and new, or that any digital content you plan to share is preloaded and ready to play. 4. Effective sales meetings are selective (in terms of attendees). Don't just invite everyone to a meeting. Select your attendees according to who will really benefit from the information to be discussed, as well as who is in the best position to add value to the meeting. It's usually best to keep your meetings small: four to six people is typically a comfortable number. Additionally, you usually shouldn't invite more than eight people if you want full participation and engagement. 5. High value sales meetings encourage a collaborative headspace. A good meeting covers what the sales and marketing teams will co-create in the future — not the mistakes that one team or the other made in the past. Re-fighting past battles is useful to nobody. Make sure all meeting attendees understand that this is a time for forward-looking collaboration and construction, not for complaining or airing personal grievances. Everyone should approach the meeting ready to listen with genuine respect to the ideas presented by their fellow attendees. This is the only way meetings will become greater than the sum of their parts. If you incorporate these key "tone-setters" into your planning process, then you'll be in an excellent position to run an efficient, well-structured, valuable meeting. And even if your organization does require a significant mindset shift towards true collaboration, the effort to make that change is well worth the effort. Doing so can eventually result in sales and marketing meetings that yield actionable results — and in turn, those actionable results can lead to more closed sales and higher profits for your business. Look out for next month’s blog, which will focus on creating an effective meeting agenda. Learn More About Hosting Successful Sales Meetings A healthy relationship between sales and marketing is vital to an organization’s success. Dive deep into this effective strategy in a new book called Sales & Marketing Alignment. If you'd like more insights on how you can improve your sales leadership, contact us. Or sign up for our newsletter for more valuable resources. Comments are closed.
|
Meet Me
Archives
December 2024
Categories
All
|