There are many excuses for why people don't spend the time and the diligence targeting possible buyers one-by-one for their services and products.Let's look at the excuses (and, yes, they are excuses) outlined here....


Cleaning up prospecting lists. Deciding one-by-one which companies out of these 30...300...3,000 we should target for lead generation. Finding out the names and the titles of the specific decision makers that would be the most likely buyers of our services...
"I just don't have time to do things like this!"
Or
"Boring."
Or
"Just buy a list. Someone sells the right list for us, right?"
Or
"This menial work is beneath me. I should do more important things."
There are many excuses for why people don't spend the time and the diligence targeting possible buyers one-by-one for their services and products.
Let's look at the excuses (and, yes, they are excuses) outlined here, starting with the top few:
"I just don't have the time for this" and "boring." I've worked with many services firms over the years. When it comes to marketing, senior people at the firm meet again...and again...and again to talk about the website graphic design, or the new logo, or the new brochure colors. They go through 12 design round edits when they should have gone through three. Edits from the firm leaders come in volumes in terms of their mark-ups and commentary (didn't they have anything better to do all weekend?), and they meet endlessly, debating the final renditions. Design processes have a way of spiraling out of control.
I can't remember the last time I heard partners and marketers complaining about the endless meetings talking about honing more closely into their specific targets. Doesn't happen.
In terms of the list part being boring, so it is. I don't know about your job, but not everything in my job compares to an afternoon extravaganza of Playstation III, my old friends, and a bucket of hot wings. Yet, the important tasks seem to get done.
"Just buy a list. Someone sells the right list for us, right?" Every once in a while a list broker or association has just the right list for you. Typically, they don't. When it comes to list compilers (e.g. D&B and InfoUSA), in my experience, the data isn't clean enough for decent lead generation without a lot of scrubbing of the lists. The mythical "perfect list" is usually just that: a myth.
"This menial work is beneath me. I should do more important things." Leaders at services firms spend plenty of time on graphic design processes. Design plays an important role in marketing success, but the time leaders spend on design silliness is disproportionate to the success that good design can bring.
So how much time should you spend on targeting? In our What's Working In Lead Generation benchmark research report, we asked over 700 leaders in professional service businesses a number of questions about their lead generation practices.
Among the questions were these two:
1) Do you consider your company's overall ability to generate leads to be Excellent, Good, Fair, or Poor?
2) When it comes to lead generation, does your firm know:
- The general profile of your target companies?
- The titles of decision makers at your target companies?
- The specific names of the organizations that are your best targets?
- The names of specific decision makers for your service areas at your best target companies?
Click here to view the results and compare how much the self-reported excellent-at-lead-generation companies know about their targets versus the self-reported poor-at-lead-generation companies.
How much time does your company spend on targeting? How would you answer these last 4 questions? Is this menial work still beneath you?

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Mike Schultz

Mike Schultz, President of the Wellesley Hills Groupis world-renowned as a consultant and expert in services marketing and rainmaking. His practice focuses on strategy for service and technology businesses in the areas of branding, marketing, and lead generation.

Along with his client practice and management responsibilities, Mike is the Publisher of RainToday.com, the premier online source for insight, advice, and tools for growing a service business. Mike has led RainToday.com from a startup to the leading online magazine focused on marketing and selling for professional services.

Mike is a well-known speaker in his areas of expertise, delivering keynotes and speeches for such organizations as MarketingSherpa, Business Marketing Association, American Marketing Association, Direct Marketing Association, CPAmerica, Association of Accounting Marketing, Society for Marketing Professional Services, and a number of major colleges and universities.

Over 60 publications such as Business Week, Inc. Magazine, Publisher's Weekly, Sales and Marketing Management Magazine, and others have featured Mike's original articles and white papers, and frequently quote him as an expert. Mike’s most recent research work includes Making Lead Generation Work for Professional Services, How Clients Buy: The Benchmark Report on Marketing and Selling Professional Services, and What's Working in Lead Generation: The Benchmark Report on How to Spend Your Time, Energy, and Money for the Best Marketing ROI in B2B Professional Services.

Mike’s clients include: Fidelity Investments, Communico, Monitor Group, Mellon Financial, John Hancock Financial, Dun and Bradstreet, Deep Customer Connections, Fleet Financial, Everon Technology Services, Trustee Leadership Development, and many other professional services organizations of all sizes.

Mike is a graduate of Brandeis University in Waltham, MA with a B.A. in American Studies, and holds an M.B.A. from the F.W. Olin Graduate School of Business at Babson College (where he often returns to deliver specialized classes to graduate students). Mike also enjoys fly fishing and golf, and actively studies and teaches the traditional martial arts of Kokondo Karate and Jukido Jujitsu, holding the ranks of black belt and Sensei in each.

You can email Mike at mschultz@whillsgroup.com or contact him through his website at www.whillsgroup.com