To grow revenue and market share, professional and B2B service firms keep looking for the business version of the Holy Grail in all the wrong places: "Hire big-time rainmakers!"; "Acquire that hot boutique firm!"; "Revamp our website!"

All too often, those ballyhooed initiatives fail to deliver on the expectations of increased effectiveness in an enterprise's marketing and business-development efforts.

Narrowly Focused Initiatives Aren't Working

Moreover, marketing and business-development leaders from small professional service firms (PSFs) and large global enterprises are increasingly taking it upon themselves to champion initiatives that they passionately believe will directly benefit the marketplace future of their firms.

Many narrowly focused initiatives to improve PSFs' and B2Bs' marketing and business-development results aren't necessarily wrong, but they're not working. To understand why, we have to take a step back to see the underlying problem.

The Root of the Problem

Professional and B2B service firms must face the fact that they have a critical, fundamental problem: Marketing and selling functions aren't effectively integrated throughout the enterprise. Their organization-wide disconnects prevent them from competing effectively, impede their financial success, and hinder them from delivering optimal client service.

The real Holy Grail is a lot closer than they realize. It can be found by ensuring that marketing and business development are integrated into every function: They must become part of every person's job.

The Structural-Integration Imperatives

PSFs and service B2Bs should consider using three structural frameworks to connect marketing and business-development functions. I call those frameworks the "Integration Imperatives."

The three structural frameworks pertain to the process, skills, and support of marketing and business development. Firms can use them along with cultural frameworks to break down the silos that have crept in to their marketing and business-development functions.

1. The Process Imperative—expand the range and shine a spotlight on it

The Process Imperative calls for PSFs and B2Bs to create a broader purview for their marketing and business-development functions, and to better prioritize all marketing and business-development initiatives.

It also includes making the marketing, business-development, and client-service processes more discernible to everyone in the firm, and more obviously iterative.

2. The Skills Imperative—grow the people

The Skills Imperative calls for executive managers to reframe advancement pathways for practitioners and nonrevenue-generating staff, and to more clearly direct the steps every professional can take toward competency growth in marketing and business development.

3. The Support Imperative—reframe administrative relationships

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Suzanne Lowe is founder of Expertise Marketing, LLC and author of Marketplace Masters: How Professional Services Firms Compete to Win. She blogs at the MarketingProfs Daily Fix and her own blog, the Expertise Marketplace.