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The Center for Sales Strategy Blog

5 Ways to Work Your Marketing Content Into Sales Plays

5 Ways to Work Your Marketing Content Into Sales Plays

Marketing content isn’t just for branding and lead generation anymore. Today’s buyers aren’t interested in being sold. Instead, they want to be educated and informed.

Consequently, it’s more important than ever that sales teams have access to content relevant to their prospect’s business problems and positions the seller and the organization as thought leaders and subject matter experts. The content that Marketing creates to support the go-to-market objectives (blog articles, eBooks, whitepapers, case studies, etc.) is often repurposed to support the buying journey  and sales process as well.

To better support the sales team, marketers are not only creating and repurposing content, they’re also building specific sales plays (that include items like customizable email templates, voice mail scripts, and corresponding cadence schedule) that prescribe how and when the content should be leveraged to support the sales process.

5 Common Ways to Integrate Marketing Content into Sales Plays

1. Overcome Objections

When done right, your  blog strategy should be guided by the topics that are most important to your target personas.

Your blog should be proactively publishing content that answers common questions and responds to frequently raised objections. Prospect’s usually voice their concerns and objections early in the sales process.

Sales plays  (email sequences with specific embedded blog articles) can be developed and mapped to each specific frequently asked question. So, after each sales meeting, the salesperson doesn’t have to hunt through a library of content and recreate a specific message. Instead, they only need to review the playbook and execute the sales play that’s mapped to the specific question or objection raised by the prospect.Download a FREE Sales Play from our Sales Playbook

2. Educate Top-of-the-Funnel Leads

Another objective of your content strategy  is to position your company and its sales team as thought leaders, subject matter experts, and trusted advisors.

You can cement this brand position with your prospects by actively sharing content that addresses the business solutions your company is helping its client solve. Every communication with a prospect should reinforce your thought leadership  brand. This is done by embedding links to various content in every step of every sales play. This is accomplished simply by including the links in the signature profile of your salesperson.  

3. Nurture “Not-Ready-to-Buy-Yet” Leads

Put an end to the “just checking-in” emails  and voice mails. Instead, you stay top-of-mind with long-term leads by making each communication meaningful and having a specific purpose.

For example, let’s say you met with a prospect in Q1, and they expressed skepticism about the potential ROI and requested that you follow-up with them again in Q3. In Q2, you can send them an email that says, “Hey, I thought you might find this case study interesting. It outlines a phenomenal ROI that we produced for someone in your industry”.       

4. Facilitate the “Next Best Step” in the Sales Process

Leveraging marketing content as sales collateral in the sales process shouldn’t make your sales process more complicated. The objective of the content and any corresponding sales plays should be to remove friction in the sales process. It should help your buyer make their decision.

Your content should make it easier for your prospect to do business with you and accelerate the sales process. Review the sales cycle of each deal of every deal those that you close and especially those that you lose.

  • Where did the deal get “stuck”?

  • What were the biggest hurdles that needed to be overcome?

  • Is there anything that could have been done to streamline the sales process?

  • Is there any content that could be leveraged to improve your prospects’ buying journey?  

5. Resurrect Old Leads

Sometimes the next best opportunity for your sales team won’t come from marketing’s newest lead generation campaign. It will come from a lead generation campaign that was executed last month, last quarter, or even last year.

One of the biggest marketing mistakes organizations make is stopping communication with  old leads. Take your best performing marketing content and build a sales play sequence build specifically for your database of old leads that never produced any revenue. It’s amazing how fresh content, a new perspective, and different timing can breathe life into previously thought to be “old dead” leads.

Leveraging Marketing Content

Repurposing your marketing content will extend its life, as well as improve the return on the investment made in time, money, and effort to create it. More importantly, though, leveraging your marketing content in your sales play will support your buyers’ journeys, accelerate deals through the funnel, and drive more top-line revenue.New call-to-action

*This blog was originally featured on LeadG2

Topics: sales enablement sales playbook