It Might Be The Most Important Stage And The Most Often Overlooked Stage
This is also the stage in the Cyclonic Buyer Journey™ where so few companies realize changes can have a dramatic impact on revenue. Instead of looking to add more leads at the beginning of the revenue cycle, work harder to drive up the close rate on proposals submitted.
Taking your close rate from 10% to 20% will double your monthly revenue results. No more leads necessary, no redesigned website needed and no increase in marketing budget required.
All you need is better execution in the Decision Stage.
Sales typically wants all of the glory for closing new customers, and including marketing in the sales process isn’t always at the top of their list of things to do. That’s especially true this late in the sales process.
But sales needs to include marketing in the conversation. Analysis and recommendations around how to make this part of the sales process remarkable for the prospect and still highly educational remains key.
Remember, you can lose the deal even after the prospect says they want to hire you. They still need to review your contact. I’ve seen it over and over again, in big companies and small companies.
I’ve seen a multi-million-dollar software deal with a major pharmaceutical company killed because the software company refused to use the bigger company’s legal documents.
I’ve seen companies offering discounts and free services up to and even after the paperwork was finally signed.
Some of this is sales execution, but allowing marketing to work closely with sales and creating a part of the experience that is equally as interesting, exciting and frictionless is key.
To have prospects move quickly through this process, you need to eliminate every single bit of friction by understanding all of their questions, concerns and requirements at this stage of their buyer journey.
By far one of the biggest mistakes is ignoring this stage altogether, but assuming you’re not doing that, the two other big mistakes take the form of not providing any content for people in this stage and not looking at the signing experience from the perspective of your prospects.
Content can be provided at every stage of the buyer journey. In the Decision Stage, you should be looking at content that focuses on the delivery experience.
For example, at this stage, potential new customers are looking for detailed information on the team they’ll be working with. Consider holding “get to know you” sessions with your team, sharing kick-off session schedules and showing videos of new customers leaving kick-off sessions.
You want your soon-to-be new customers to feel very excited about getting started. In fact, if you execute correctly, you can have them hounding you to get started instead of you hounding them for the signed agreement.
Your agreements, contracts and paperwork will have a major influence on how quickly you get through the Decision Stage.
If clients need a lawyer, get comfortable, because that will take time. If they can review it on their own, you’ll cut days (if not weeks) off the back end of the process.
Sending this out in advance is also a part of the process you might want to consider. It provides a great assumptive close. If they want to see your agreement paperwork, they’re obviously considering hiring you. If they don’t, you might not be in the Decision Stage but rather still in the Evaluation Stage or Rationalization Stage.
The other mistake we talked about that everyone can avoid is objectively reviewing the signing experience. Do you walk your prospect through every detail? Do you make it educational? Do you try to make it fun? Is a celebration associated with the signing or kick-off? You worked hard, and so did the prospect, so why not celebrate the move from prospect to new customer?
Once you get the verbal agreement, experience-map every single step that comes next, and make sure each and every step is exciting.
Tactics in this stage have the potential to provide huge payoffs. Remember, any move on the close rate produces major lift. In terms of low effort and big results, tactics in the Decision Stage fit the bill.
Here’s a more detailed description of some new tactics:
That is not a comprehensive collection of tactics, but it’s a good start. With the right tools, you can also measure the effectiveness of the changes you’re deploying.
Every stage has its set of metrics, and the best way to fast-forward your revenue cycle is to measure the effectiveness of each stage individually. Some of these stats are going to look familiar because this list includes the standard sales-related stats.
Here’s how we design the dashboards for the Decision Stage:
The best way to keep tabs on this in real time is to set up a handful of buyer-journey-specific dashboards and check the data weekly. In some cases, you might want to look at the data daily, but in this stage, weekly is probably more appropriate.
You may also want to project this stage’s data based on performance to do more accurate forecasting and projections.
A lot of the technology designed for this stage is focused on closing deals and getting signatures. This is appropriate if the tools provide the insights you need to adjust your process based on data.
Here are the stage-specific software tools we’ve looked at, tested and recommend to clients building a rich tech stack around the Decision Stage. Remember, these are all built on top of CRM platform software like HubSpot or Salesforce.
(If this looks familiar, it should. We mistakenly used it in the article about the Rationalization Stage. That article has been updated to reflect the correct tech stack recommendations, and these tools are appropriate for this stage.)
By smashing the funnel and applying a new map (the Cyclonic Buyer Journey map), we’re encouraging people to start building more buyer-centric marketing and sales strategies, executing tactics more thoughtfully, tracking the performance of everything, and using technology to automate and analyze your results.
The business outcomes? Month-over-month revenue growth and consistent, scalable, repeatable and predictable revenue generation machines. Give it a try, it works! That’s why we guarantee results for our clients.