"Maybe ever'body in the whole damn world is scared of each other." —Slim, to George, in Of Mice and Men

That quote from the well-known John Steinbeck novel may be a bit of an exaggeration if we apply it to the relationship between salespeople and marketers, but it's clear—and not especially surprising—that the people in Sales and those in Marketing can have differing mindsets.

It's also clear that if an organization is to be successful, Sales and Marketing must work hand-in-hand, combining their strengths to reach the company's goals.

How do organizations create empathy and greater collaboration between Sales and Marketing?

We've held key sales and marketing positions for many years and now work for the same company. We've spent many of our waking hours thinking about ways to get salespeople to think more like marketers—and vice versa—and putting that shared understanding to work for our business.

What we've learned is that it's critical to create empathy between the two teams. When you foster an understanding of what each team's members are charged with, they all can more easily understand one another's motivations and behaviors.

Doing so takes a commitment of both time and resources, but it can and should be done.

First up: some primary concepts marketers needs to adopt to understand salespeople.

Marketing and the Mysteries of the Sales Team

Understand the company's sales compensation structure—and its effect on salespeople

One of the major differences between marketers and salespeople is the way they're compensated.

Most of us know that companies set a more complex compensation structure for the sales team—often based on a commission or percentage of each sale. That means salespeople don't necessarily know what each paycheck will look like; moreover, it's general knowledge that salespeople are motivated to make their quotas and be successful.

Those factors can affect salespeople's behavior: They might be (or seem) more emotional, erratic, and determined as a result, and so they can sometimes behave in unexpected ways.

Marketers, on the other hand, tend to earn a fixed salary (perhaps with merit-based bonuses), and they are likely to feel relatively more secure about their income.

To foster understanding, we recommend holding a "sales compensation" learning session for marketers, to help them understand how sales compensation structures work and how that motivates Sales differently from Marketing. That session could be a one-off, or it could be woven into a "Sales 101" series of presentations.

Understand why Sales views accounts differently from Marketing

One of the primary tasks Marketing is charged with is generating and sending leads to the sales team.

For most marketers, it's a numbers game: they want to use their marketing prowess to attract the highest number of leads, which they then pass to the sales team with the notion that the more leads they can deliver, the more sales will have to work with. The salespeople are then responsible for turning those leads into paying customers, or accounts.

What marketers may not know, or fully understand, is that the sales team is looking for very specific leads—those that fit each salesperson's criteria and which have the greatest opportunity to become an account for that salesperson.

In other words, Marketing tends to look at the big picture, and sales tends to winnow that picture down to what best fits each salesperson.

To gain a deeper understanding of this dynamic, a session on how Sales treats accounts could be part of another educational session, or (again) perhaps as part of a "Sales 101" series.

Understand why Sales sometimes needs to blow up a bridge

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How to Get Marketers to Think Like Salespeople... and Vice Versa

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Katie Bullard

Katie Bullard is president and chief growth officer at DiscoverOrg, provider of verified company insights and contact information.

LinkedIn: Katie Bullard

Twitter: @Katie_E_Bullard

image of David Sill

David Sill is head of sales enablement at DiscoverOrg, provider of verified company insights and contact information.

LinkedIn: David Sill