Business events are at their most powerful when they are part of an integrated go-to-market strategy. Integration sounds logical, but how do you actually pull it off?
First, you have to have control—or at least influence—over all the elements of the marketing mix. Then, you must develop a sound strategic approach to business event planning. Among the most productive strategies are those based on the following:
- The customer's buying process
- Quarterly (or periodic) sales objectives
- Target audience
Business Event Planning Based on the Customer's Buying Process
Fortunately for marketers, most business buyers follow a fairly well-defined process as they evaluate options and make purchase decisions. In some companies, the process is so well defined that it is codified, and prospects will share with you the exact steps they must go through to buy. The more marketers understand the buying process of their prospects, the more efficient they can become with their selling processes. The secret is to map the selling activity to the prospect's buying process stage.
For a list of the typical steps a business buyer goes through, see table 1. Of course, these steps vary by industry and by company size. In the second column of the table is a list of the seller's objectives at each stage. Notice how those objectives vary as the prospect's needs and activities evolve.
Table 1: Marketing Objectives at Each Stage
of the Buying Process
Customer's Buying Process Stage | Marketer's Objectives |
Identify need | Arouse interest |
Research solutions | Be known to the research team |
Develop short list | Be selected for short list |
Request proposals/quotes | Submit winning proposal |
Review proposals/quotes | Create preference |
Negotiate | Preserve margins |
Select vendor | Win! |
Install and use | Satisfy and support usage |
Upgrade | Up-sell, cross-sell |
The successful marketer will analyze the buying stages for each account, or customer segment, and understand who is involved at each stage. The marketer will then craft strategies to help the prospect move to the next stage—preferably toward a purchase from the seller rather than the competition.
The ideal approach is to develop a contact strategy for each prospect or customer appropriate to the buying stage. Table 2 suggests some of the tools the marketer may appropriately use to influence the buyer's behavior.
Table 2: Marketing Tools to Influence Buyers at Each Stage
of the Buying Process
Marketer's Objectives | Options in Marketing Toolkit |
Arouse interest | Advertising, PR |
Be known to the research team | Advertising, PR, search engine, trade show |
Be selected for short list | Direct mail, email, telephone, Web site, trade show |
Submit winning proposal | Face-to-face sales, inside sales |
Create preference | Face-to-face sales, inside sales, direct mail, webinar, road show |
Preserve margins | Face-to-face sales, telesales |
Win! | Face-to-face sales |
Satisfy and support usage | Support, website, e-newsletter, user group |
Up-sell, cross-sell | Telesales, direct mail, trade show, client conference, webinar |
There are two lessons for business event marketers embedded in the notion of the business buying process:
- Trade shows and corporate events are not the optimal marketing tool for every stage, but can be superb when applied at the right point in the buying process.
- Every visitor to your booth at a trade show or to your corporate event will be at some stage of the buying process himself or herself. The qualification process is designed to help determine that stage. Once you grasp that information, you can craft the best next step to offer the prospect.
Business Event Planning Tied to Sales Objectives
Perhaps the simplest strategy for business event planning is based on periodic sales requirements. The sales pipeline must be filled with enough prospective business to meet revenue goals. It is marketing's job to keep the pipeline stocked with the right amount of quality leads that will allow sales quotas to be met, at the company, region or territory level.
Business events can play an important role in generating the sales leads needed to fill the pipeline. If you understand how many qualified leads are needed in any given territory and during any given period, you can back your way into the appropriate marketing programs to support those objectives.
First, you examine the quota of each territory concerned, and subtract the amount that will be self-generated through the natural course territory management. The remaining amount is what needs to be supported by lead-generation programs.
You divide this amount by the average order size in your company or category to arrive at the number of closed leads required. Then divide again by the lead-to-sales conversion rate, to arrive at the number of qualified leads required per rep. An example is in Table 3.
Table 3: Lead Requirements Worksheet
Revenue quota per rep | $3,000,000 |
Percent of quota self-generated | 40% |
Quota requiring lead support ($3 million*1-.40) | $1,800,000 |
Revenue per order | $90,000 |
Converting leads required ($1.8 million/$100,000) | 20 |
Conversion rate | 25% |
Qualified leads required per rep (20/.25) | 80 |
In this situation, each rep needs 80 qualified leads in the territory per year. Review your event calendar, and estimate how many of these leads will be generated from the programs you have planned. Fill in the gaps with other marketing programs, like direct mail and online campaigns.
And make sure you are investing in the highest ROI leads first. You will need to adjust the integrated marketing program to optimize the results.
Business Event Planning by Target Audience
Another strategy for integrating business events into your marketing plan is based on target audience analysis. Select the key audiences you seek to acquire or retain, and apply the most effective marketing tools to those objectives. Events and trade shows can play an active, and effective, role.
Table 4 analyzes the best event applications against marketing objectives targeted to various audience segments. Here, the segments are organized by buyer type. But you can also set this up by any relevant business segment, like industry, company size or geography.
Table 4: Best Event Applications, by Target Audience
Target Audience | Marketer's Objectives | Audience's Objectives | Optimal Business Event Options |
End-users, current customers |
Product information delivery Repurchase/cross-purchase Identify problems and needsProduct demo |
Learn about new solutions Solve problems Network with peers |
User group meeting Partner conference Single-customer event (if a large account) Educational seminar (product topics) |
End-users, prospects |
Awareness Consideration Preference Product demo | Learn about new solutions |
Road show Trade show webinar |
Influencers, specifiers |
Consideration Preference Product information delivery Product demo |
Learn about ways to do job better Compare vendor solutions |
Trade show webinar Road show Single customer event (if a large account) |
Decision-makers, department heads |
Preference Purchase Repurchase/cross-purchase |
Solve business/financial problem Network with peers |
Executive briefing Entertainment event Educational seminar (business topics) |
C-level, senior management |
Preference Purchase Repurchase/cross-purchase |
Solve business/financial problems Network with peers |
Executive briefing Entertainment event |
Note: Ruth Stevens leads a MarketingProfs virtual seminar on January 19, at noon (Eastern): "Trade Show Strategies: Ways to Get Bigger Bang from Your Marketing Buck." Get more information or sign up.