We agree that when marketing creates demand (leads) it takes talent and intuition and creativity.
Sales skills are unarguably learned, but a little natural ability from an out-going personality helps. Sales lead management however is another topic. It crosses many department boundaries (not just sales and marketing). It is detailed, rule based and leadership driven. Everyone can do their job to manage the lead and the whole thing can cave-in if the salesperson looks at the name and tosses it in the can and never follows up because (take your pick):
2. No email address.
3. Not a corporate address (must be a student).
4. Never bought from us before.
5. Long way by car to visit the prospect.
6. They inquired before and didn't buy.
How does that saying go? "When you don't want to do something, one excuse is as good as another." The one thing I can tell you is, properly managing sales leads reaps huge rewards. Improperly managing sales leads, even a little bit, cuts the marketing return by the high double digits.
So, I recommend: Create a set of rules for managing sales leads; have all stakeholders present. Set goals. Meet regularly. Measure follow-up. Measure ROI. Buy more of what creates a qualified lead, less of what doesn't. Repeat.
This cartoon is sponsored by Will Crist of Sandler Training. Other cartoons are available for downloading on the SLMA Site. Catrtoons are created by Stu Heinecke www.cartoonlink.com

This article makes the case for the inside sales function.
Inside sales happily spends all day calling the leads that sales does not want to. I am an inside sales professional and I use a power dialer to reach the prospects that sales people are too busy to. I work them until they are ready to buy and then hand them over to sales as a "hot" lead. This way the leads don't get neglected and the sales people only get hot leads.
Posted by: Mitsu Fisher | 11/06/2021 at 07:44 PM