B2B Myth of the Week: Sales Collateral Is No Longer Important
by MGB2B
The Myth: Sales Collateral is No Longer Important
The Truth: High-Quality, Tangible B2B Sales Collateral Can Leave a Lasting Impression on Clients
With all the buzz around online content, it’s easy to think sales collateral is no longer important. But consider this: there’s tons of technical information to share with clients. We can’t expect them to remember it all. That’s where sales collateral comes in. It serves as a tangible reminder of the benefits or your products or services. And it simplifies the sales experience so you can close deals. If that’s not enough, here’s four more reasons why well-executed sales collateral is an important part of your marketing arsenal.
4 Reasons B2B Sales Collateral Is Still Important
- It Communicates Important Information Succinctly. It’s unlikely that your leads will remember everything you tell them in a meeting. Having information laid out in simple terms all in one place makes it easy to both digest and remember. And while having that information online is important, a brochure is something prospects can keep on their desk to remind themselves of your brand when making a purchase decision.
- It Can Showcase Your Credibility. Rather than wait for your leads to seek out your case studies, hand them over directly. Seeing your success displayed in a quality document offers proof, reinforces your reputation, and is easily shared with other decision-makers.
- It Adds to Your Brand Story. While it may be tempting to put all of your information online, your personality comes to life more so in a printed piece. The weight of the paper, the feel of it, the gloss or matte finish, all give your brand story more depth. In addition to creating consistency and credibility across your brand, it rounds out the personality you’ve created online and in your offices. From business cards to brochures to sell sheets, your collateral has the potential to strengthen your company’s image – so long as you create a high-quality experience.
- It Can Close the Deal. According to Forbes, buyers go 70% of the way through the decision-making process before engaging with a sales representative. So if a buyer is more than halfway there when you meet, imagine leaving them with a high-end, well-designed, well-produced, and authoritative booklet or sell sheet. Since many companies are funneling their money into digital efforts, it could be the point of differentiation that seals the deal.
It’s easy to overlook printed collateral in today’s digital-first world. But that’s even more reason to make your sales materials stand out. Need help with the execution? Give us a call.
Continue ReadingB2B Myth of the Week: All Mobile-Friendly Sites Are Created Equal
by MGB2B
The Myth: All Mobile-Friendly Sites Are Created Equal
The Truth: Unless Your Site’s Responsive, It’s Not Really Mobile-Friendly
Gone are the days of browsing the Internet on a desktop alone. Today’s B2B buyers are constantly on the move. Meetings. Traveling. Multitasking. You name it. Today’s websites need to adapt to cater to these on-the-go decision makers. How? By being responsive. Responsive web design focus on maintaining readability across all devices. Viewing is compatible despite window or screen size. This seemingly small factor is of utmost importance for all businesses, especially B2B brands. Here’s why:
- Buyers Are Using Mobile More Than Ever. According to Hubspot, 49% of B2B researchers who use mobile for research are doing so while at work. Therefore, mobile devices are crucial to buying decisions. B2B users expect their experience on mobile to be just as seamless as on a desktop. But just because a website can be accessed on a mobile device doesn’t mean the experience is seamless. If your website isn’t responsive, the page most likely does not fit on a mobile screen. This means your audience has to zoom in and out, scroll left and right, and finagle their screen before they can get the information they want. In contrast, responsive sites ensure your information is accessible across all platforms – smartphone, tablets, laptops, and desktops. A responsive web design ensures your website leaves buyers with a great experience. Remember, the more your buyer has to hunt and peck, the more likely they’ll leave (and go to your competitor).
- Having a Responsive Website Lowers Maintenance Time and Cost. When the shift from desktop to mobile first took off, many companies developed a separate mobile website. If your company is still using this method, you have two sites to update and manage. Needless to say, maintaining two websites is much less efficient than one responsive site. It doubles your workload when changes are made, and it’s not cost-effective in the long term.
- Google Prioritizes Mobile-Friendly Sites. Google constantly evolves its algorithm to ensure the best search results. In 2015, Google changed its algorithm to prioritize mobile-friendly sites. This means that websites that are not compatible with mobile tech get displayed much lower in search results. In addition, Google recently rolled out a mobile-first index – which means it sees your mobile site as your primary website. These updates alone should be encouragement enough to add responsive web design to your marketing to-do list.
The digital world is moving pretty fast, and it doesn’t look like it’s slowing down anytime soon. As the shift from desktop to mobile grows more significant, it’s imperative you create a seamless user experience for your buyer. Reducing the time spent on site maintenance and upping your search rankings doesn’t hurt either. Don’t lose potential leads – incorporate responsive web design into your marketing plan. Have questions about where to begin? Drop us a line.
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5 Marketing Tips Manufacturers Can Take from Steve Jobs
by MGB2B
Whether you loved him or loathed him, Steve Jobs knew a whole lot about marketing. He wasn’t a brilliant engineer. That was his buddy, Woz. But Jobs knew how to sell the brilliance. How to package it, how to market it, and how to stay ahead of the competition in ways that the CEO of any manufacturing company would envy.
After all, isn’t that what keeps you up at night? That burning question: How can I keep up with – and surpass – my competitors? As I’m reading the Steve Jobs biography, it’s easy to see that Jobs was a master at this. Sure, he had his failures. But his successes were far greater.
Here Are 5 Marketing Tips for Manufacturers That We Can Gather from Jobs’s Time as the Face of Apple:
- Put Innovation Ahead of Money. While he was referring to his use of LSD when he said it, Steve Jobs famously declared, “It reinforced my sense of what was important — creating great things instead of making money.” It seems elemental, but in the hot pursuit of the almighty dollar, creativity often gets lost. Don’t lose sight of what ultimately drives business – creatively solving the problems of your customers.
- Think Different. While this was a longstanding tagline for Apple products, it perfectly embodies the Jobs philosophy. You can read anywhere that he stole the idea of a Graphical User Interface (as opposed to green characters on a black screen) from Xerox. But that’s only half of the story. Jobs and his team thought differently than the folks at Xerox PARC. They took something that was designed for businesses and made it a seamless, friendly, intuitive experience for the consumer market. In doing so, Apple eventually attracted different kinds of businesses from what Xerox was pursuing. Design-focused companies like ad agencies and architecture firms were an easy match for the Mac’s simple yet graphically advanced platform.
- Get Inside the Heads of Your Customers. Like the design of products, the design of your ad campaigns, web content, and any brand communications should be created with your consumer in mind. You want them to know your features. They just want to know what they’ll gain. But they also want to trust your brand. They want to feel like you know what their day has been like. Like you can offer them something to make it better or easier in some way. Jobs knew this. And almost every decision he made – whether for marketing or product development – was driven by it. Today, there’s an easy way to use your customers’ desires and needs to drive your decisions. A core user study. Smart engineers do them. Smart marketers do them. And smart CEOs live and breathe by their results.
- Don’t Be Everything to Everyone. Apple is for dreamers. For creators. For people who want to make change. That’s how they positioned the brand in 1997. The legacy that Steve Jobs created stands true even today. And it applies to both products and advertising. Focus on what you’re best at instead of adding mediocrity into the mix. Keep your message on-point. Don’t sully it with unnecessary excess. Simplicity is the name of the game.
- Know Your Enemies. And your friends. Apple’s relationship with Microsoft was on-and-off over the years. And even when Microsoft succeeded, Jobs knew what Apple’s reaction would be and how their products would be different. As mentioned earlier, he kept an eye on what Xerox was doing, and used what he learned from them to create the interfaces we now use every day. Don’t copy your competitors. But know and understand what they are doing, so you can rise above them.
Steve Jobs had many flaws, for sure. But his product development and marketing instincts have changed the way we live today. Manufacturing companies would benefit from any one of these tips. Take them all together, and you might just find inspiration to revolutionize your industry. That sounds a whole lot better than simply “increasing the bottom line.”
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