Powering
the Business: Rolodexes vs. Campaigns
by Tim Smith, PhD, 25 June 2003
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Pushcart or Engine Powered?
Starting a business venture with a good Rolodex is like starting
at the top of a hill with a good pushcart. Going down the hill,
the pushcart will gain speed and move quickly. Once at the bottom
of the hill, the pushcart will slow to a halt and you’ll have
to push it back up.
Pushcarts are fun for a while, but at some point most
people want a go-cart. Strapping a 3.5 horsepower lawnmower engine
to the pushcart, the go-cart will be able to both roll quickly down
the hill and have the power to propel itself back up.
For businesses in business markets, the integrated
sales and marketing campaign is that engine. As with most building
efforts, a business can start with an integrated sales and marketing
at the go-cart level and build up to the level of NASCAR.
Off to a Good Start, but Sustain
the Momentum.
Many venture capitalist and non-profit support agencies will offer
to open their Rolodex for a young business to help get the ball
moving. Their Rolodex provides a highly valuable resource for businesses
to investigate the market demand and understand customer needs.
Initially, these Rolodexes and the Rolodexes of the executives within
the business may provide the momentum needed to get the business
off the ground. But, at some point, the business will go through
these Rolodexes, exhausting the prospects within their network.
The Rolodex will run-out-of-steam if it isn’t
fed by some mechanism.
To feed the Rolodex, business people can practice
business networking, but this too will fail eventually. Networking
activities produce a closed set of prospects. New prospects within
the network will cease to be an easy find and the returns to networking
will diminish. On a personal level, this leads to the formation
of tight, fruitful friendships based on a common set of interests.
On a business level, this can be disastrous. Without fresh prospects,
the business will stagnate. Momentum must be sustained.
Networks too become stale if fresh relationships
are not created.
Buying New Rolodexes
Many businesses, realizing that their Rolodex momentum is slowing,
will seek to bring in new partners and employees with fresh Rolodexes.
Buying a brand new Rolodex, in the form a new hire or new partner,
will add prospects to the lead of the sales funnel. But this is
little more than a temporary solution. Businesses must find a means
to create their own Rolodex.
Perhaps more disastrous than discovering that the
Rolodexes are burning out, is the sycophant effect of using employee’s
Rolodexes without adding back to them. At some point in the process,
the salespeople will question the wisdom of donating their Rolodex
to the cause without having the activity help them grow their Rolodex.
While pay and incentive based compensation may be a nice elixir,
their band-aid effect won’t suffice forever. More importantly,
it won’t create a salesperson excited and dedicated to the
cause.
Buying Rolodexes is a temporary solution at best
and produces negative support at worst.
The Alternative: Build an Engine.
Using Rolodexes to find initial customers is an excellent means
to investigate the market for new products and service. But if the
business hasn’t built the integrated sales and marketing engine
while enjoying the downhill ride with the Rolodexes, climbing back
from the bottom of the hill will be a trudge.
In the sales vernacular, the business must constantly
feed the sales funnel. Either through calling on new prospects,
expanding the network, or hitting the tradeshow circuit, salespeople
must constantly feed the sales funnel with fresh prospects.
In the marketing vernacular, the business must constantly
create awareness within the target market for their products and
services and convert the aware portion of the market towards investigation
and forward to choice. Either through direct mail, telemarketing,
advertising, or tradeshows, marketing people must constantly feed
the customer lifecycle with fresh prospects.
An integrated sales and marketing campaign is the
engine that drives the constant building of a business’s Rolodex,
creating sustainability. Integrated sales and marketing includes
a branding component, but it isn’t branding alone. The sole
focus of a campaign should be to generate revenue in the most economically
efficient manner. Brand awareness isn’t sufficient, but brand
awareness, coupled with targeting, clarification of brand identity,
relationship building, prompting of customer investigation, needs
identification, customer choice, purchase, and client development
is closer to the mark. An integrated sales and marketing campaign
should touch every point in the customer lifecycle – including
repeat purchase. Its results should be measured by its ability to
create new customers and capture new revenue.
To provide a numerical example, consider the effort
that might be undertaken by a small sales and marketing team. If
the team starts with a Rolodex of 1200 contacts, finds that 5 out
of 100 contacts will make a referral, and holds conversations with
300 people each month, that team will have contacted a total of
1374 individuals in the first six months but be out of new contacts.
At that point, the business will fail. In contrast, if the same
team starts with nothing but an Integrated Sales and Marketing Effort
that generates 300 new prospects each month, then, given the same
rate of attaining referrals and holding conversations, that team
will be able to contact 2202 individuals in the same six months
and go forward with a growing prospect base. The Integrated Sales
and Marketing campaign produces a sustainable business. (See Exhibit:
Managing the Contact Flow.)
Build the Engine AND Enjoy the
Ride
Rolodexes can build short-term value in a fast downhill ride, but
an integrated sales and marketing campaign that builds the corporate
Rolodex will create a lasting enterprise that both coasts downhill
and forges paths uphill.
Exhibit 1: Managing the Contact Flow

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Tim Smith, PhD is a principal at Wiglaf, a Market Research and Sales
and Marketing Strategy consultancy serving tech-driven businesses
operating in business markets. Businesses select Wiglaf for our
quantitative and fact driven approach to intelligent revenue growth.
www.wiglaf.biz.
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