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By Gerry McGovern
Cheap and free cost the Earth. And we’re all a part of the problem, along with digital giants.

Much of the digital world is built on lies. A search is not free. A tweet is not free. Facebook is not free. Packing and shipping are not free. Every year, billions of trees are cut down for packaging. Every year, Amazon uses enough plastic to smother the Earth. Delivery trucks cost. We return four times more bought online than in stores. Most returns end up being dumped rather than resold. Cheap and free cost the Earth.

Digital Brands and Humans Are to Blame

The digital brands cleverly hide from us the true and total costs, and we hide from ourselves the acknowledgment that costs must be paid so that we can do these things for “free.”

We are in a climate crisis that has exploded onto a whole other level of harm since the 1970s. Of all the CO2 damage that humans caused over millions of years, we have caused 75% of it since 1970. In 50 years we caused three times more damage than in the previous three million years. This explosion in harm runs hand in hand with the explosion in technology.

A human with their bare hands can only do so much damage. A human with a smartphone is lethal. To manufacture, that phone caused 60 kg of CO2; 90 kg of earth were dug up; 4,000 liters of water were wasted. Using the phone, we can book “cheap” flights, order four pairs of jeans when we only intend to keep one, browse the superficial features of the next planet-killing SUV we plan to buy. Digital has turned humans into devourers.

What Facebook, Google Really Represent

This is some of the cost of free. Relentless, AI-manipulating advertising. Google is an AI advertising machine, not a search engine. Facebook is an advertising machine, not a community. The free model of the Internet can only be maintained through overconsumption and constant growth. If we continue this free model, we are guaranteed to eliminate life on Earth within the next 50 years.

In 1970, we dug from the Earth 25 billion tons of material. In 2020, we dug 100 billion tons. In 2050 we will dig 170 billion tons. Mount Everest has a mass of 150 billion tons. Life on Earth cannot survive a species that is devouring a Mount Everest every year.

I have been very slow to change myself. Since 1996, I have been publishing this opinion piece for free. From January 2023, I intend to charge €10 for a 12-month subscription to the email version. Perhaps nobody will subscribe. That’s OK. It’s much better than sending thousands of emails every week to people who no longer want them. I will leave it for free on my website for those who genuinely can’t afford to pay but who would like to read it.

If you’re using the free model, I ask you to reconsider it. It is a poisonous and deceptive model, full of tricks and multi-layered costs. The advertising industry has an enormous underworld web, consuming vast quantities of energy and creating enormous and utterly unsustainable levels of waste.

Digital advertising is probably an even greater threat to life on Earth than the fossil fuel industry. Every time we buy into the Big Lie of free, we make a down-payment on our extinction.

When it’s free, you are the product, and the Earth pays the price.

By Gerry McGovern

Gerry McGovern is the founder and CEO of Customer Carewords. He is widely regarded as the worldwide authority on increasing web satisfaction by managing customer tasks.

Sourced from CMSWIRE

By Andris A. Zoltners, PK Sinha, Sally E. Lorimer, and Ty Curry

In-person meetings between customers and salespeople were once at the heart of B2B buying and selling. Now digital communication is embedding itself in every aspect of business. This had led some organizations to look at the future and ask a simple question: Will we still need salespeople?

This question is not new. However, two powerful forces are reshaping the answer. First, personal and organizational digital savvy are skyrocketing, even among those who were once digitally challenged. Second, evolving technologies make it possible for companies to engage customers in ever-richer experiences, both digitally (e.g., websites, mobile apps) and virtually (e.g. live video calls).

Where do salespeople fit in the digital world?

The Critical Roles They Play

The role of salespeople as talking brochures and order takers has been dying for some time. Yet salespeople continue to play critical roles in many circumstances. Even as customers spend more time interacting through digital channels, salespeople bring value to both new and existing customers, while helping align buying and selling organizations around a mutually valuable solution.

They bring in new customers.

Salespeople still have an important role with customer acquisition. In early 2019, the sales team at Google Cloud Services (GCS) was less than one-tenth the size of the leading competitors, AWS, and Microsoft. Seeking to expand share of the fast-growing enterprise cloud market, GCS went on a hiring spree. It tripled its sales force coverage within a year, hiring industry-focused sales executives. The move helped GCS penetrate many more enterprise accounts, driving revenue growth meaningfully above the overall cloud market. In such complex situations, digital connections alone can’t match salespeople’s ability to bridge mutual knowledge gaps with new customers. Salespeople can learn about customer needs and uncover latent needs. Salespeople can orchestrate the shaping of the offering and highlight the sources of customer value. This is especially critical when solutions are not completely defined (e.g., services) or have uncertain dimensions (e.g., logistical requirements).

They bring value to existing customers.

With expansion sales, the role of salespeople as mutual-knowledge-gap closers continues. And even as more cross-selling and up-selling shift to digital self-serve channels, companies are adding roles to help customers realize value, especially when products or services are subscription-based (e.g., SaaS) or consumption-based (e.g., cloud services and consumables). Usage by customers is the key to renewal and growth, and usage depends on value. Technology companies have customer success managers who work mostly via phone and video to help existing customers maximize the ongoing benefit of their purchase.

They align buying and selling organizations around a mutually valuable solution. 

When a buying organization has multiple decision influencers, salespeople strive to build consensus. An under-appreciated role for salespeople is to also harmonize thinking within their own organization. While a sales manager focuses on sales metrics, a marketing manager thinks about product mix, and a finance person pushes to maintain margins. A technology buyer at our consulting firm, ZS, praised an account executive from our cloud services provider: “She connects us to their experts around the globe. She also negotiates on our behalf to ensure her company gets us the best deal.”

Finding the Sweet Spot for Virtual Connection

As simple seller-buyer engagements pivot decidedly to digital, customers continue to turn to salespeople for help with addressing complexity. However, many of the connections once made in-person have moved to virtual. Inside sales roles and hybrid roles (i.e., where salespeople interact with customers virtually and occasionally in-person) are fast replacing traditional field sales roles.

Virtual works when sellers and buyers have a trusted relationship.

In such cases, almost any sales activity can be done virtually. Examples abound. A seller of customized enterprise software established an inside sales team to sell ancillary products to customers after installation. A seller of business supplies replaced its entire midmarket sales force with inside salespeople. Other examples show field sales roles morphing into hybrid roles. A media industry sales team moved 80% of sales retention activity for midsized customers from in-person to digital and virtual channels, refocusing in-person effort on acquiring new customers. A nonprofit now uses informal small group virtual discussions to complement in-person meetings with loyal donors. The strategy has been highly effective for generating ideas and support.

Virtual works for motivated buyers and differentiated offerings.

In these instances, virtual selling can work for new customers and products, not just for repeat sales. The pharmaceutical industry has traditionally launched new products by having salespeople meet in-person with healthcare providers. During the pandemic, there were several successful mostly virtual launches of novel treatments for severe conditions. But launches of new drugs that were less differentiated from existing therapies achieved less success without in-person sales effort.

Leveraging the Power of Virtual  Selling and Avoiding the Pitfalls

Sellers are quickly learning that effective virtual selling requires more than merely shifting what was once done in-person to a video or phone interaction. Yes, it’s easier to jump on a call than to jump on an airplane. And virtual meetings are practical for remotely located customers. The true power of virtual is realized by leveraging its unique advantages. Both buyers and sellers can assemble stakeholders and experts from multiple locations. Meetings can be recorded. Participants can quickly look up information and share it on the screen. Digital and AI-driven prompts (for example, about what similar customers find useful) can guide discussions.

Still, virtual selling isn’t right for every situation. Virtual doesn’t work for some hands-on activities, such as demonstrating physical aspects of products. And virtual is less effective with customers who don’t typically spend time at a computer. (For example, an agricultural products company found it difficult to interact with farmers virtually).  A key account manager succinctly summarized some reasons to interact in-person: “Half my opportunities come from informal customer discussions. And off-the-record conversations never happen over video.” And another salesperson shared, “I sense what customers are feeling when I am with them.”

Adapting to Changing Buyers and Evolving Technology

Customizing offerings to customer needs has always been part of a successful sales playbook. Now it’s also about customizing communication modes, finding the right mix of face-to-face and virtual personal selling, along with digital outreach and customer self-service. Success requires tailoring connections at each buying/selling step to the knowledge and preferences of buyers, which in turn are evolving rapidly.

As technology continues to advance, the metaverse promises increasingly immersive remote virtual experiences. So the inexorable move from face-to-face to hybrid connection continues. The question is no longer: Will digital replace salespeople? Instead, the question is becoming: How can salespeople and digital work together to create unparalleled customer value and trust?

Feature Image Credit: Tarik Kizilkaya/Getty Images

By Andris A. Zoltners, PK Sinha, Sally E. Lorimer, and Ty Curry

  • Andris A. Zoltners is a professor emeritus at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management. He is a cofounder of ZS Associates, a global business consulting firm, and a co-author of a series of sales management books, including The Power of Sales Analytics.
  • PK Sinha is a cofounder of ZS Associates, a global business consulting firm. He teaches sales executives at the Indian School of Business and is a co-author of a series of sales management books, including Building a Winning Sales Force.
  • Sally E. Lorimer is a marketing and sales consultant and a business writer for ZS Associates, a global business consulting firm. She is a co-author of a series of sales management books, including Sales Compensation Solutions.
  • Ty Curry is a principal at global business consulting firm ZS Associates, where he helps businesses transform their go-to-market models and drive more effective customer engagement.

Sourced from Harvard Business School

McDonald’s and GoFundMe do it well

In today’s digital world, we are constantly bombarded with noise, information and marketing, making it near impossible to remember every message that you scroll past on social media. However, if they do it right, you remember what those brands made you feel.

People do not want to be sold to.  They want to feel safe. They want to feel heard. They want to feel some sense of normalcy.

No industry practices empathy marketing better than the music industry.

Think about the latest album that you listened to on repeat. What made you love that music so much? Most likely the campaign, music or artist made you feel something. The artist and their team use empathy to relate to their target audiences, and they frame the music in a way that makes the album/single super relevant to their audience. Even in music, there are campaign best practices. There is no one end-all-be-all growth hack to make a song soar to the charts. What made artists successful was their ability to connect with their audience on an emotional, intimate and meaningful level.

For example, Justin Bieber put out a song called “Lonely” this year, and it spent 23 weeks on Billboard’s Global 200 Chart and peaked at Number 5. Bieber used vulnerability to share his own story and empathy to connect with us all on a deeper level.

So how does this translate to brands? How can brands embody empathy to build trust with their audiences? Here are recent examples of brands doing it well:

McDonald’s has been leaning into the most impactful emotion there is: nostalgia, making us crave their experience as we scroll through social. Something as obscure and random as popping the buttons on a soda lid conjures up the emotions associated with McDonalds, e.g., road trips, memories with friends, etc.

GoFundMe felt the fear and anger of the world as cases of hate crimes toward the Asian American & Pacific Islander community surged. They did not simply make a statement, but they also used their platform to build the AAPI Community Relief Fund to create a centralized resource for people to turn to and support. They felt the universal emotions of fear and anger and acted upon it with empathy.

Webflow created a whole new event experience for its community. The company used empathy to understand that its community was burned out. Zoom fatigue was real. Webflow created a custom Gather Town space that made the event interactive, gamified and fun. The physical action of sitting at their desks was the same, but the experience was personal and full of empathy and will be extremely memorable for the company’s guests.

You can use your superpower of empathy in a meaningful way. It’s the importance of writing to people’s emotions, not just the target demographic. By using language that involves them and makes them the focus of the conversation, you can make your audience feel something.

By Pat Timmons

Sourced from ADWEEK