“I don’t predict.” - Peter Drucker
Diagram 1–Predictable Growth Model
I have been visiting with new prospects the last two weeks and it forced me to go into the archives and dust off my Predictable Growth Business Development Model. I created it to help firms quickly assess where we should focus to build a sales process which rapidly produces predictable results but hadn't used it in a while. I forgot how effective it is and it's another reminder to revisit activities that worked in the past because they usually still work.
Diagram 1 identifies the 3 key segments of a business development system producing predictable results:
- Your Target Market's Awareness of the problems you solve/results you achieve.
- Inside the market, Identifying Multiple Buyers.
- The Quality of Discussions with buyers for opportunity development.
Target Market Awareness is just as it sounds. How well do the companies in your target market know the problems you solve and the results you get? It's where your marketing function should be focused.
Multiple Buyer ID'd is part of your cross selling effort. Inside your target market, how many different "buyers" involved in the decision process are you talking to? How many are aware of your firm? The larger the target market organization, the more buyers your team should be looking for. This is both a marketing and sales focus.
Discussion Quality is how effective your people are at developing opportunities when sitting in front of buyers. It's the sole function of your business development/sales team.
When all three segments are working together, you end up with Predictable Growth because your pipeline will have new leads coming in from marketing, more internal opportunities generated by client managers, and bigger opportunities developed in business development/sales conversations. The data from all these activities gives your leadership insights into the future and lets you predict growth.
Conversely, when one or more of these segments are out of balance, new opportunities are missed, we enter late into the client's decision process and have deals torpedoed, or deals are skinny, languish, and don't close.
The way the assessment works is to assign your firm a score on each of the three segments on a scale of 1-10 where 1 is "we're terrible at this," 5 is "we're average," and 10 is "this is our firm's competitive advantage."
You're aiming for balance to start, then improvement across all areas. For instance, if you're a 7 for Market Awareness, a 4 for Multi Buyers ID'd, and a 6 for Discussion Quality, my advice is to look at pulling each section up to a 7 before improving the entire process. If we did that, where would it show up in your firm?
Inside each circle is a world of opportunity. If you need to talk about the general idea or a segment in detail, call me.
Good stull
The Business Development seminar I'm hosting in September is focused squarely on Discussion Quality. Attendees will walk out armed with immediately useful words, questions, phrases, and listening devices that will result in larger opportunities and speed up activity. Then we'll experience NFL football. Learn more here.
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