Revitalizing Stalled Sales

 

As the economy continues to bounce along, (some say showing signs of a small movement off its bottom while others disagree), business owners and managers are getting impatient to find ways to boost revenue.  Not only are we seeing evidence of this within our own client base, but also our “Insights” blog post on “Diagnosing Stalled Sales”, published in June of 2011, has re-surfaced recently as the top-read posting on the all time QMP blog popularity-list.  The second most popular blog on that list is “The Marketing and Sales Audit”.  Business leaders are looking for revenue answers.  Standing idly by and waiting for the economic recovery is no longer a reasonable option.

As I re-read that “Diagnosing Stalled Sales” post, I realized that it was too diagnostic and not prescriptive enough.  After all, what good is a diagnosis without a treatment? Apologies to those readers who came away from that post less than satisfied. This post makes up for that shortcoming. 

Deciding What to Do

The first thing to recognize is that all revenue increases must come from one or more of the following four sources: 1) introducing new products, 2) stealing market share from competitors (new account wins in your current markets), 3) the natural momentum of your current markets or 4) penetrating new markets.

New Products:

If you have a new product-development initiative in the works, good for you.  But pursuing this option for increased revenue typically takes time and money.  Both are in short supply these days for small to mid-size businesses, exacerbated as our clients currently relate, by the challenge of tightened banking requirements.

New product development initiatives typically fall into one of three categories: a) improving what you already offer, b) meeting some new customer requirement or c) launching a breakthrough.

Meaningful overnight revenue upsides are rare from new products as it takes time to develop, tool, test and introduce a new product.  It then takes time for the market to become aware of it, understand it, change their old ways of doing things (and who they may be buying from) and begin to adopt your new product.  There are ways of accelerating this adoption rate, but only if the product is a breakthrough – something that fundamentally turns the market on its ear.  Even in that case, time is the challenge.  Twenty-five years into its existence, I still meet educated people who don’t own a personal computer, and it took 50 years for the automobile to be completely adopted by consumers.

Don’t get me wrong, new products are strategically important for a firm. I strongly encourage new product development, particularly if the product fills some need the customer didn’t even know they had – a real breakthrough.  Breakthrough products typically bring sustainable growth, give customers a meaningful reason to change and provide higher margins.  (More on this subject in a future blog post on the subject of Innovation).

So, keep developing; keep considering new ideas; just don’t expect the heavens to open and revenue to come raining down quickly.

Stealing Market Share from Competitors:

One of the fundamental principles of military strategy is, “The hardest ground to capture is the ground that is occupied. It typically takes anywhere from 3 to 6 times superior resources to take over a position from an occupier.  Interestingly, most of the initiatives that small to mid-size companies attempt (unwisely) to increase sales fall into this, the most challenging category.

These days, there are a number of popular marketing initiatives that are all the rage – search engine optimization, the use of AdWords, re-branding, social media and database marketing – to name a few.  These are not inherently bad or good.  However, the key to achieving significant growth with any of them is to assure their use in a focused way combined with growth options #1 (Introducing New Products) or #4 (Penetrating New Markets).  Using them in a focused way assures maximum return for minimum investment.

Some of you may decide that this option, stealing share from competitors, is the only one available to you and that you don’t have time and money for new product development or to try to penetrate a completely new market.  If you do, the road will be difficult and certainly take more resources and time than you anticipated.  If you can’t be dissuaded, here are some tips to make it easier:

a) Try to fragment your competitor’s market: Find and target sub-sets of customers that have a common dissatisfaction with the competitors’ offerings.  The Japanese didn’t attack the US auto market all at once on all fronts.  They focused first on the most vulnerable and receptive set of customers with a quality small car offering.  After establishing this foothold they expanded based on their proven quality reputation.

b) Tailor a market-specific benefits story to the customers in the specific target market fragment you wish to penetrate.  You may even wish to set up a separate website for that specific market. At minimum you will need a focused sales presentation.

c) Focus your sales team on that segment and train them to tell that market-specific story.  Make a concentrated effort for 90 days with frequent feedback from the sales team to see if the story is gaining traction.  The test of traction is a growing sales pipeline.

d) Never lead the penetration effort with pricing reductions.  You’ll hurt yourself.

The Natural Momentum of Your Markets:

This is the primary problem most small-to-midsized businesses are dealing with. It is true that all boats rise and fall with the tide.  That doesn’t mean that some boats don’t move around the bay faster than others, whatever the tide situation.  There are always segments of a market that trend opposite, or move faster than, the overall economy.  If the economic momentum of your primary target market has slowed, and doesn’t look like it will return quickly, then it’s time to consider growth option #4 – penetrating new markets.

Penetrating New Markets

The requirements for a successful penetration of a new market are: a) a good set of target market attractiveness assessment criteria, b) a high degree of focus in your attack on the market and c) rapid feedback and re-targeting process to use as required. You need not make a big, costly production of launching an initiative at a new target market.  Assessing attractiveness, focusing and gathering intelligence about receptivity (basically validating the market’s attractiveness) is not a big deal.

For each of the following questions, start with the phrase, “To what degree..” and score on a scale of 1 to 10.

… does this market exhibit sustainable economic, demographic or regulatory momentum?

… do customers in this market have a compelling problem that can be solved by our product?

… does our product offer a clear competitive advantage in solving that problem for the customer?

… does solving that problem reap a meaningful reward for the customer – economically, emotionally or physically

… is there a competitive leadership position available in the market?

… can we easily reach customers in this market?

… is there strong intra-market communication between peers in this market?

… can we sell into this market profitably?

These criteria will provide a starting point for a relative attractiveness assessment. You may wish to use more, or different, criteria.

Doing it:

It is common in slow economic times for sales teams to increase their activity in trying to sell to a wider range of prospects, try to penetrate large accounts that competitors own, campaign for price concessions to win new business and chase opportunities that are a marginal match for the firm’s capabilities.  As driven by the survival instinct as these activities may be and as resourceful as they may appear on the surface, they are typically non-productive.  In fact, they can be hugely counter-productive.  The results of such efforts are typically depressed profitability, unsustainable success and trapping the firm into businesses and/or products it cannot maintain.  Such activities can also dilute customer support resources, jerk around product development and operations resources, damage the firm’s quality reputation, start price-wars and cause a distraction of the business from what it does best.  It can take many years to recover from the negative consequences of impulsive sales actions taken in the fever and panic of an economic crisis.

I state the case in a dire scenario because the real key to success is focus and feedback.  Focus means staying focused on the target market you decided upon using the criteria above.  Feedback means monitoring progress, receptivity and success frequently and adjusting quickly.

The discipline of a limited number (one or two) highly focused initiatives targeted at specific new markets, followed by rapid sales feedback, has consistently produced good results.  When followed-through with discipline the results have been significant.  Our subject firms have won new clients, avoided price competition, found new ways to provide additional value to customers, increased selling prices, reduced the hysteria associated with trying to respond to every quote that comes within 100 yards of the door, achieved double-digit increases in win rates and made rapid strategic adjustments that saved them from economic disasters.

The approach we suggest requires the adoption of three basic process disciplines: 1) rapid market assessment, 2) rapid and focused launch initiatives and 3) disciplined and frequent field sales feedback.  While these disciplines may be different than what your organization has used in the past, they are easy to learn, cost-effective to deploy and yield a higher probability of success – in both challenging and healthy economic times.

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We invite you to read our related blog posts “Diagnosing Stalled Sales” and “Finding New Markets

Don’t Give Up on the Top Line (no matter how tough things get)

 

The Most Common Reaction to Economic Turmoil: Expense Reduction

There’s a line in the Willie Nelson tune “Nothing I can do about it now” that goes like this:

I’ve survived every situation
Knowin’ when to freeze and when to run.

Two years into the current economic downturn, there is plenty of evidence that companies are trying to do both. Firms continue to take aggressive steps in reaction to reduced demand. Cisco just announced layoffs of 6,500 employees. Other big name firms such as Merck, Lockheed and Boston Scientific also announced staff reductions.  Borders finally threw in the towel, closing its last 400+ stores.  It once had 1,200 outlets, employing more than 35,000.  And most recently, HSBC indicated it will let go between 25,000 and 30,000 employees.iStock_000009708062XSmall

Small to mid-sized company layoffs typically don’t make a lot of news. But a quick informal survey at the other end of the corporate spectrum, showed that smaller firms, particularly those without an international earnings contribution to their performance, have experienced a down-turn in revenues of anywhere from 25% to 40% from their peaks in 2007 and 2008. They’ve aggressively cut expenses and conducted layoffs as well.

Of course, there are exceptions. Companies with specialized innovations targeted at niche market problems are doing much better than firms depending only on their traditional products and markets. But by-and-large, corporate “economic adjustment” initiatives focus on operational expense reductions.

Instability in Europe continues, the DOW is down more than 1,500 points since July 1, unemployment and underemployment in the U.S. remain high, Asian demand for US exports will decline as a reflection of reduced US demand for their imports, and the US Congress is mired in finger-pointing politics vis-à-vis problem solving. Under these economic conditions, can you blame anyone for immediately reaching in the first aid kit for the expense reduction tourniquet?

Taking a Second Look at Revenue Upside Options:

Stemming the bleeding is crucial under these economic conditions. However, in the frenzy to cut expenses, the potential for revenue upsides gets short shrift. Why? Expense reductions can be swift and easily seen in reduced cash outlays. Revenue upside strategies, on the other hand, even in good times, carry with them risk. Financial executives and conservative CEOs will opt, almost every time, for the less risky, faster impact, sure thing. Revenue-upside options fall to the side of the road.

Nonetheless, there are a handful of strategies for realizing revenue upside in a down economy. Due diligence and responsible managerial behavior should compel managers in serious economic times like these to, at least consider the revenue-upside options that follow. An impulsive, headlong rush into any one of them would simply be unwise. Rather, we suggest a serious vetting exercise, followed by execution of the best.

Upside Potential #1: Market Focus

Focus is typically rejected, out of hand in tough times. When the business is hurting why would anyone in their right mind “narrow” their focus? Shouldn’t we be casting the net further?

Not necessarily.

Spending time to reconsider the market segmentation of your customer base and the unique conditions extant in each of those segments helps you identify areas that might benefit from additional focus and re-deployed resources.

Not all the market segments served by your business are affected equally by the economic winds. Not all market segments have adopted your products and services to the same degree. Not all market segments are afflicted with the same competitive infestation. And most importantly, not all segments of the market receive the same economic value from your product offering.

For example: Let’s say that, in general, customers in a particular market segment garner a 10X economic benefit from your product in a relatively short time frame. That is, the economic return on what they buy from you is 10 times more than they paid. In other segments, the return may be less. It is more likely that focusing additional effort in the market for which your product yields the highest return to the customer would have a higher probability of success than expenditures in other areas where that return is less.

In contrast, broad-brush marketing initiatives intended to expand a firm’s reach are less efficient because they: a) dilute resources, b) dilute the economic return differentiation of your brand, c) begin to encompass more competition in each new segment and d) don’t adequately leverage your greatest successes. Focus is likely to be more effective and profitable.

Upside Potential #2: Pricing

This alternative has two options: 1) holding prices and 2) increasing prices

Holding Prices: The competitive nature of tough economic times inevitably presents opportunities for price cutting, particularly as a means to close hotly-contested deals. The reasons for this are many. First, weak, undifferentiated competitors are starting price wars. Secondly it’s the easiest option for the sales person and requires the least amount of sales effort. Third, it typically doesn’t make much of an impact on sales commissions, unless the commission is tied directly to the profit margin of a deal. Fourth, sales people are not trained or disciplined enough to sell on value. Fifth, in tough times customers (particularly purchasing managers) know they can request price concessions and “work” one vendor against another. Finally, owners and managers frequently don’t have enough good first-hand information or a well-enough established relationship with the key customer decision-makers to mitigate price discussions.

The truth is, allowing price cutting, even in tough economic times, is really an admission of several foundational weaknesses. The product is may not be providing a differentiated economic value to the customer (wrong target customer). Management may be out of touch with customer decision makers. The strategic market segment focus is one that has too much competition. Or managers don’t understand how to direct their sales team on how to avoid price-based competition.

In a mini-workshop, I asked CEOs of small to mid-sized B2B firms to imagine their best product being purchased and used by their best customer. I then asked them to pencil out what they thought the 3 year economic impact would be on their customer – that impact being the amount of profit their product would drop to the customer’s bottom line. For example, if their product was of very high quality, what would the economic impact be to the customer for purchasing the high quality product vs. a lower quality product from one of their competitors?

In this 15-minute exercise, not one CEO was able to arrive at an answer. If the CEO can’t describe it, how can they expect their sales people to? If the sales people can’t explain it, how can price-based competition be avoided?

Raising Prices: A number of years ago we were working with a client whose new product adoption was stalled, gaining virtually no traction in the marketplace no matter their continuing effort to increase distribution agreements. It was priced 3X higher than the most popular competitive approach. Of course, the sales people thought their job was futile and continually pleaded for significant price reductions.

A brief assessment showed that a certain portion of the tiny installed base went to a segment of the market whose needs were unique. Only this product could meet those needs, for a myriad of reasons. (Interestingly, initially the market had found my client, not the other way around.)

Rather than reduce prices we suggested the business refocus their efforts to this one segment, highlighting to potential customers the unique fit and match of the product to their unique needs. After focus and redeployment of time, money and energy (no increases), adoption took off, with no accompanying price reduction.

Now some people would call this just another version of Revenue-Upside, Option #1 – Market Focus. That’s largely true. However, the rest of the story is that while focused and penetrating this particular segment, customers began to request additional features and functions – which in turn led to increased selling prices. In the end, the average price point rose to 4X its original. (Remember, the original was 3X the competitive approach).

At no time was there a need for a price reduction and the business turned completely around, growing much faster than anyone had anticipated. By focusing on market segments where the economic value and unique characteristics of your products are understood, the opportunity exists for improved performance products at increased prices.

Upside Potential #3: Fragmenting Offerings

Sometimes fragmenting your offering into more affordable pieces makes it more digestible for clients. Increased revenue accrues when decisions that otherwise would have been delayed can be made with smaller financial commitment by the customer. This provides your firm at least a small amount of revenue vs. none. It also sets the groundwork for follow-on purchases.

When fragmenting your offering, selling prices of the fragmented pieces need to be set so that the sum of all the pieces of the fragmented offering sum up to more than what would be charged were the product/service sold all at once. Is this “sum-of-the-parts pricing” gouging? No. The costs of doing business associated with the planning, coordination, administrative management and handling of multiple orders justifies the increased pricing – and you can be honest with customers about that price penalty. They understand that it costs more to do business that way and might even be encouraged to buy larger chunks to avoid paying that premium.

Depending on the type of product or service, fragments or phases might be identified as any on the following list: planning, design, testing, tooling, manufacturing, test, integration, set-up, training, service and/or recycling. The bottom line is that fragmenting your offerings should make it easier for customers to buy something rather than not buying a more costly nothing.

Upside Potential #4: Adding Services to Product Lines

Have you noticed that, these days, nearly every durable-good purchase comes with an offer to buy a replacement or service contract? Last week I bought a 16GB PC thumb-drive for $27.99. The checkout clerk asked if I wanted to buy the replacement warranty. I declined, but certain types of renewable service warranties can be very profitable add-ons.

Upside Potential #5: Acquisition or Licensing

Opportunity to acquire businesses and intellectual property during major economic downturns increase as companies struggle and values are depressed. However, as with any acquisition at any time, there is reason to be cautious.

Buying a competitor’s business to capture their customer base (barring SEC denial) is not necessarily a coup, even at a bargain price. Your competitor’s customers may be receiving a technologically obsolete, poor quality or functionally inferior solution. In such a circumstance, you would be wiser to boost investment in your own product development effort vis-à-vis buying your competitor.

Opportunities for acquiring intellectual property may arise more frequently in tough economic times as well, as challenged companies look to find sources of cash. Turning IP (purchased or licensed) into products and then into cash, however, doesn’t typically happen quickly. A better way to ensure a speedy IP-to-cash transition is to acquire IP that can be integrated quickly into your current product offerings, increasing their functionality, their value to the customer and their selling price.

Just Don’t Do Something, Sit There! Think!

In most businesses the ratio of execution-driven people to strategic-thinking people is low. Of the two roads to survival in a downturn, expense reduction and top-line, the expense reduction road is best travelled by the tactically driven, the top-line by the strategy-minded.

The strategy-minded are often those at the top of the organizational pyramid. So, it’s only self-discipline and personal values that will compel people at the top to consider revenue upside.

George C Scott in the movie Patton said this to his troops.

I don’t ever want to hear we’re holding anything. We are advancing all the time.”

Be brave. Seriously consider the revenue-upside options in the face of adversity.

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Learn more about the QMP Marketing and Sales Engine and how it can revitalize both top and bottom-line growth