Companies have been doing their segmentation based on industry verticals for several decades. Vertical knowledge as a key differentiator has been added into the equation in a more recent history. Yet not all companies in a vertical are faced with the same problems and priorities at the same time. All of this has led to some important inefficiencies.
- People had to be trained on specific vertical knowledge and product knowledge leading to long ramp up times for people in a multi offering company
- Sales & Marketing facing difficulty to match specific needs in a vertical to the product offering
- Sub optimal Product/technology innovation due to conflicts in priorities
- Product releases not adapted to market readiness leading to a high cost of sales and low hit-rate
- A frustrated sales force and an unhealthy tension between departments because their concerns are left unanswered by management
- Sales loosing a lot of time in finding the “needle in a haystack” prospects
A lack of “scalability” throughout the entire value chain is the root cause . The impact on scalability of an organization should be taken into account in each decision you take.
Let me propose how to use segmentation as a way to better align marketing and sales thus improving the scalability of your organization:
- Get to “really’ know your customers by understanding the problems their faced with.
- Define KPI-level pains a prospect should be confronted with in order to seek your leadership. (i.e. VP-Sales- not meeting sales target or too high cost-of-sales)
- Map your differentiators and delivered capabilities to those pains.
- You will now be able to create a set of “pain-based segments”
- Plot your segments in terms of size, solution awareness in the market and level of differentiation.
- You will now be able to prioritize your pain-based segments
- Identify the impacted people in their organization as high as possible on the org-chart which could or will be involved in a buying cycle (key-contacts)
- Map above information for each of them and rank them in terms of impact. The most impacted person will become key in your marketing and sales approach
- You should now be able to write a value proposition for each of the targeted segments. This value proposition is the foundation for all buyer-aligned deliverables such as white papers, solution briefs, case studies, product collateral etc.
- Build a sales kit per segment covering the quantified pains, their causes, needed capabilities, quantified results, ideal buying criteria, benefits and unique features per key-contact
- Populate and qualify your database with suspects based on their pains and readiness to buy and launch a lead generation and/or lead nurturing program to start generating qualified leads for sales.
Above will result in an increased focus:
- More engaged employees
- A lower time to productivity as low as 6 to 7 months for complex solutions
- Increased hit-rate up to 75% and more depending on the level of differentiation you can proof
- Decreased cost of sales by at least 22%
Above shows how segmentation can have an important impact in terms of a better sales and marketing alignment.
Write a comment or question to dig deeper into this improved way of segmentation.










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[...] Level 2: A meaningful interaction (phone or e-mail) with an individual meeting the requirements of a fully qualified company. Thus the company belonging to one of your market segments. [...]
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[...] Segment the market based on your differentiation:you can read more on segmentation in a previous blogpost: Segmentation: increase the hit-rate and lower the cost of sales [...]