It's a challenging time for sales teams. Virtual selling and a hyper-competitive economy have made it difficult to get a product in front of others. And you, as a marketer, are probably feeling the pressure.
What sellers need now is for involved marketers to work directly with their team and create the best sales content for nurturing prospects and closing deals.
Unfortunately, many marketers have found that their material does not meet the expectations of their sales teams. You've probably created dozens of solid content pieces that sales reps never even touch.
Even with the best intentions, a lot of content that marketers create can be misunderstood or kicked under the rug, leading to more work on both sides—with fewer results.
But you have the power to alleviate that stress by collaborating closely with the sales team, figuring out what works, keeping up on market trends, and actively creating new content that sales reps will actually use.
For better sales content, collaborate
Collaboration is key. But don't just pay lip service to it. I'm talking real collaboration.
Marketers and sales reps need to communicate regularly, sometimes daily, with each other as well as with managers, other departments, and subject-matter experts throughout the company who can give insight into the current state of affairs.
Don't favor one department or rep over the other; if there's a breakthrough or a new lead, share it with everyone involved to figure out the best approach and prepare the team.
If, for example, you publish a video for your sales team and something has changed in the market or with prospect needs, allow comments that lead to constructive discussions and solutions for future content. There's no better way to find out whether your work is delivering results than to ask.
Communication on both ends provides Marketing with valuable insight, which often leads to better content with tangible benefits for the sales team.
An open, direct line allows for quick and easy problem-solving.
As a marketer, rather than just publishing new content, you can activate new collateral by sharing an overview of the resource, its intended audience, and potential talk tracks so sellers know how to use the resource. A brief video explaining the new asset is easy to create, and quick for sellers to review on their own schedule.
Sales teams can review the material and quickly respond with questions and suggestions. A conversational style will involve both parties far more than transactional models of communication where there's little to no dialogue (which happens more than you might think).
Give feedback and show transparency
New sales opportunities can happen anywhere, at any time. Constant communication between all parties involved gives everyone live updates, making a marketer's job easier and more efficient while creating more opportunities for the sales reps to use their content.
As with prerecorded videos, feedback helps everyone involved and leads to better collaboration on future materials. Teamwork in every step of the sales process helps marketers figure out what works and how to effectively produce fresh content.
You can also ask your sales teams to share relevant intel. Presentations and videos showing "what good looks like," competitor updates, and insights from conversations with prospects allow you to improve and adapt your work to current market trends and buyer pain points.