Apr 5, 2019
We all know the internet and social networks are changing the sales process. Buyers now have access to more information and are doing more for themselves.
90% of customer buying decisions start online while 75% of B2B buyers use social media to research vendors.
As a result, sales teams need to think and act differently to engage with and influence prospects.
A huge part of this is through providing helpful online content and information, to build trust and credibility and identify and engage with potential customers through social networks in an approach known as social selling.
One of the most critical tools in any sales professionals arsenal when it comes to selling online is content.
After all, 67% of top-performing sales organizations support their sales enablement efforts with content while 65% of buyers claim it has influenced their final decision to purchase.
This means that organizations need to provide timely, targeted and relevant to buyers and prospects. This can include blogs, guides/eBooks, infographics and video to share across social networks and measure the response.
Your content strategy should be designed around providing content that will engage buyers and prospects.
That may sound obvious but it’s regularly overlooked in developing a content strategy. What you think is interesting (e.g. information about your product, service and company) may not be remotely interesting to your prospects and neworks. So, structure your content strategy around their needs.
As Lee Odden says, be the “best answer” to the questions they have, and share this content with them at point of need in the channels they’re most likely to find it - that’s the essence of social selling.
With a needs-based content strategy, you move towards being a consultant and advisor to your prospects and clients. This means playing a longer game, and putting their needs for useful insights ahead of your needs to win business.
It will pay off it you put effort into this strategy.
This strategy requires two forms of content: created content that’s unique to you, and carefully curated content from other sources. Let’s look at both.
Who should create unique content to support you social selling strategy? It may be the sales team, or the marketing team, or a combination of both.
In order to share and promote the right type of unique content, the sales team needs to work closely with marketing. After all, they are the department charged with creating content for lead generation and brand awareness.
However, the sales team are closer to the customer, and will have key insights on the type of content that will most engage them and help them (and by extension build trust and develop the relationship).
Aligning with the marketing team and setting up regular meetings and a sustainable content process can help to inform all sellers of both content coming down the line that they can share and existing content that may provide valuable to prospecting activity.
For example, if one of your sellers is in the early stages of discussion with a pharma company, then any blogs or guides that highlight or provide insight into that sector can be used to promote discussion and help a seller provide solutions to a customer’s pain points in a more natural and less salesy way.
However content creation isn’t the only way to engage and influence a prospect.
Curation plays a huge role in how knowledgeable a seller is. Sharing content from reputable sources that can provide insight or solutions to customers problems can build trust between a salesperson and prospect which will go a long way to closing a deal down the line.
It’s a simple fact that today’s customers (B2C and B2B) are inundated with content in a phenomenon coined as ‘Content Shock’.
Due to this information overload, many customers struggle to get the information they want, when they want it. This means that they struggle to find solutions to their issues (particularly in a B2B space) easily and quickly.
The content shock phenomenon presents an opportunity for sales professionals to be effective content curators. Using social selling techniques a seller can cut through the noise, share relevant content and provide insights that prospects and customers are struggling to find.
For curated content to be effective the 5:3:2 rule is a handy guide. This means that 50% of your content should be curated from third party sources, 30% from your own organization’s content and 20% that is fun, inspirational or has a human interest element to it.
Keep that in mind - if you’re sharing more than 30% of your own promotional content, you are probably talking too much about yourself and that is off putting to buyers.
There are a range of social media platforms to choose from to engage and influence customers.
From the B2B orientated platform LinkedIn to real-time networks like Twitter to visual platforms such as Instagram and Vero the key to social selling is to know which channels provide the best opportunity to target your audience.
The most effective types of content will depend on your audience, your sector and where you are sharing it, but some to consider are:
Selling is changing. Smart sellers now realise that to build relationships with prospects, they need to build engagement on social networks.
But you need to add value - cold connecting on LinkedIn won’t work any better than cold calling on the phone . Content is the key to powering your social selling.
Work with your marketing team to build a content strategy that will help your customers and prospects with the issues they care about, create and curate content to support them.
In addition, build a social selling process: sharing the right content with the right audience on a regular routine. This is how your brand and team will build engagement and opportunities through social selling.
Stephen Walsh
Stephen has co-founded three businesses, formed and led global sales & marketing teams, exceeding $20M+ targets. He’s co-founder of global elearning provider Kineo (sold to City & Guilds), BuzzSumo, a content marketing tool (sold to Brandwatch), Anders Pink, a social selling and content curation tool and an advisor on sales, marketing and learning strategy to multiple companies.
He’s passionate about helping learning, sales and marketing teams achieve their goals with technology, content and great service.