Consider the job of marketing. Its purpose is to understand the marketplace. That plays itself out in all manner of ways—from segmentation to trade show posters to lead generation.

But, at its core, it's all about the same thing: understanding the marketplaces and letting them know that you understand them.

In other words, marketing is about listening.

Sales, on the other hand, is all about you and your products and services. Telling people what you offer, how they can buy it, what it costs. That, too, plays itself out in multiple ways—from proposals to catalogs to point-of-sales (POS) promotions.

But at its core it's all about the same thing: understanding your products and communicating information about those products to potential customers.

In other words, sales is about talking.

And sales can't begin until you've listened, and until the marketplace believes that you understand what they need. You have to listen first, and talk later.

This is one of my personal touchstones for determining whether I'm doing an effective job of marketing for my clients. A guidepost for every facet of my marketing planning and execution:

Am I listening, or am I talking?

A Guiding Principle

When we market, we are listening to the marketplace—not, as I've said before, listening to what they want, but listening to them explain what they do (and ,of course, observing them) . That is what research is all about, isn't it? Listening.

It's also what positioning is all about—finding an anchor for ourselves in the marketplace based on what we've learned by listening. It's what segmentation, and pricing, and channel development are all about—creating strategic structures that address what we've learned by listening to the marketplace, and which resonate with that marketplace because they are relevant to them.

That is, just as critically, what collateral and advertising and trade show signage and all our tactics are all about too: letting the marketplace know that we've heard—and understand—what they have to say and what they do.

As soon as we veer from that principle—as soon as we start talking about us and our products instead of listening and repeating what we've heard—we're no longer marketing, we're selling.

There's nothing wrong with selling. You need to sell to generate revenue—listening doesn't turn inventory. But before you can begin to sell, you must convince your marketplaces that you understand them. Only then will they start listening to you.

Only then will the marketplace give you permission to begin selling.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Michael Fischler

Michael Fischler is founder and principal coach and consultant of Markitek (markitek.com), which for over a decade has provided marketing consulting and coaching services to companies around the world, from startups and SMEs to giants like Kodak and Pirelli. You can contact him by clicking here.