Brain Dump

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Is Your Content More Trustworthy Than Your Sales Team?

According to research by the Content Marketing Institute, 74% of marketers agree their content marketing strategy is extremely or very effective. Almost half (47%) rate their organizations’ ability to create targeted content as excellent or very good.

That’s a lot of confidence in content (and no surprise to us)!

Marketing creates content that hits all the right notes to resonate with an intended audience. But meanwhile, sales teams armed with the same value props and backed by the same research, still struggle to close deals. The same messaging from a research study somehow feels pushy in a sales call. And the stats from an infographic lose their impact when delivered by a rep. What gives?

Salesforce data reveals that 59% of buyers agree that most sales reps don’t understand them, and 73% report that sales interactions feel transactional.

So what makes content marketing feel more credible and trustworthy?

  1. Content doesn’t have to close the deal. Your content can be nurturing and patient. A blog post, for example, can end without pushing for a meeting or a commitment. But sales (by nature) is trying to move the prospect forward, and that can make people more guarded and defensive. Once those walls go up, it can be tough to get through them. 
  1. It doesn’t ask personal questions. While gated content may require an email, your content in general asks for nothing. Your prospects can consume it with no pressure to act right away, so they can learn more without feeling exposed. They don’t have to share their budget, explain their timeline or reveal they’re six months away from making any decision.
  1. It can be vulnerable. Content earns trust through transparency. A product flyer can say “this solution works best for companies with X, Y, and Z” or openly suggest alternatives, and that honesty builds credibility. If a salesperson delivers the same message on a phone call, prospects may wonder if it’s genuine. But content gets to be brutally honest without the suspicion of ulterior motives. 
  2. There’s no risk of rejection. Most people hate saying no, especially when they’re put on the spot during a sales call. With content, there’s no awkward conversation to exit or wondering how to politely decline. This makes people more open to what your content is saying, so they can engage with your ideas without the pressure of a sales interaction. 
  3. It feels more objective. What’s more credible: A salesperson spouting stats on a phone call or published white paper? A rep delivering the exact same information may seem like a sales pitch, while a researched document with stats and insights has more standing in the eyes of a prospect.

Related article | Hey, Marketing: Play Nicer with Your Sales Team

 

Marketing and sales: Better together
Luckily, the disconnect between content credibility and sales skepticism is fixable. But it requires both teams to play nice in the sandbox.

Here’s how:

  • Let sales inform content strategy. Remember, the best content comes from questions prospects ask on sales calls and the objections they raise.
  • Make your content do the work. When content addresses real objections and challenges, prospects are already one step further down the funnel when the phone rings with a sales rep on the line.
  • Align on messaging. Create shared documentation for both teams to reference, including messaging standards and positioning, as well as common objections and responses.

Speaking the same language
Your prospects want to be understood, informed and guided toward the right decision — never sold to. When your content and sales team are on the same page, that’s exactly what happens.

Authored by: Lauren HarrisIs Your Content More Trustworthy Than Your Sales Team?
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