If you are part of a B2B marketing department that has a dedicated salesforce, you probably feel the pain and frustration of trying to do your best to give Sales what materials it needs. In return, you probably hear that they are creating their own materials anyway. Sometimes you even directly ask what they want and follow their direction to the letter—and they still don't use what you create.

Why?

They Don't Know What They Need

In theory it seems simple: You ask Sales what it wants, you do it, and the salespeople use what you create. However, in practice, this approach can actually have the opposite effect. What research experts have discovered is that people in general just don't know what they need and certainly can't articulate it. The part of the brain that has the most impact on decision-making and the drive for what is "needed"—the old brain—has no language center. So... it's not that they don't want to tell you, they physically can't due to the way the brain processes information.

1. Frame of Reference

People in general are bound by their own frame of reference; they can explain things only in terms of what they're familiar with. Which is why Henry Ford famously said, "If I'd asked people what they wanted, they would have said a faster horse."

2. They Don't Know What You Can Create

Sales reps are not marketing experts. They have no idea of the scope of creativity that you can produce. And since they are bound by their own frame of reference, they will never be able to tell you anything more than to make a change to something they already know. This leads marketing on a wild goose chase to make every conceivable version of a material, only to find it still not hitting the mark or not being used.

3. Want vs. Need

A "need" is something that is extremely necessary for a person to survive (or in this case to make a sale). A "want" is something that a person desires, either immediately or in the future. Unlike needs, wants differ from one person to another. People in general can't express their needs clearly because they reside in their old brain, which has no language center (so people have no way to vocalize the thought).

What people can vocalize, however, is "wants." Most people have a lot of those and they can change—frequently. They are also different depending on the person, the situation, or the time. "Needs," on the other hand, are true to the problem that needs to be solved or the activity that needs to be accomplished. Needs stay relatively consistent among different people at different times.

So What Can Marketers Do?

The way to resolve this problem is to get Sales to give you the data so you can find their unexpressed needs—or those things they need to get their job done but can't articulate. And you need to do it without falling into the trap of asking them what they want.

1. Define Sales Activities

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Why Asking Sales What They Want Is NOT Sales Enablement

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Jennifer Robinson

Jennifer Robinson is a marketer who specializes in sales enablement, complex selling situations, and out-of-the-box ideas.

LinkedIn: Jennifer Robinson