The Roadmap Leading to Your Company’s Revenue

revenue

Shifting your organization from company-centered (marketing and selling) to customer-centric (supporting the customers’ buying process) makes perfect sense.

Your customers are driving the buying process. They are in charge of the interaction. They know what they want and how they want to buy it. They hold all the cards. They can walk away at any moment.

revenue
Photo By Austin Distel on Unsplash

If what you say and do supports the way they want to buy, they will stick with you through the process. You will make the sale. If you don’t support their process, they will simply take their money elsewhere.

Making the shift from company-centered to customer-centric is a journey.

After you make the shift, you won’t be marketing and selling anymore. You’ll be supporting the customers’ buying process, systematically removing barriers to the sale and selling more.

The Work Ahead

You can’t make the shift from company-centered to customer-centric without interviewing your customers. But there is more to it than just finding out what they want to buy from you and how they want to buy it.

You have to analyze that knowledge, turn it into an action plan and get everyone in your company involved. If you don’t, you won’t really be making the shift. You’ll still be marketing and selling, while trying to make the shift. You’ll still have all the same problems, plus the complication of everyone thinking, “The Boss wants us to do this shift thing, but I’m not clear what I should do, and I have a deadline to meet right now.” You’ll be confusing matters instead of bringing new clarity to your revenue-generating activities.

The entire roadmap to revenue process includes three basic steps.

Step 1: Discover What Will Generate Revenue

Find out what they want and how they want to go about buying it.

You will interview customers to find out what they need and how they want to buy. During the interviews, customers will also give you additional critical information, such as their perceptions of your company, products, services and website; trends they see; how they’re using technology to make purchases; and what they think of your competition.

The information gathered in the initial interviews will be turned into two reports: a conversation report and a summary/recommendations report. The conversation report will contain the customers’ comments, categorized by subject. The summary/recommendations report will contain summaries of what your customers said and recommendations on how the company can solve the problems raised by customers.

These reports will reveal what is broken and what is working. You will know what customers want to buy from you, how they want to buy and which aspects of your product or service they find most appealing.

It is never what you assume; customers will say things that surprise you and make you realize you’ve been moving in the wrong direction in some areas of your business.

Step 2: Debate the Research

Resolve the differences between what they want versus what you have to sell, and how they buy versus how you sell.

Once your brain trust has read these reports, it’s time to hold a brainstorming and planning meeting. On the first day, you will:

  • Analyze, discuss and prioritize what customers have said. The findings of your customer research will be presented to the people in the room (usually consisting of top management, sales, marketing, product management and web folks). List the issues most important to customers and all of the other issues, trends, perceptions, needs and buying-process data uncovered in the interviews. Everyone in the room will now be aware of what customers want, the problems that need to be solved, your strengths and weaknesses, and barriers to the sale.
  • Agree on the essence of your promise to customers. Customers are attracted to companies and their products or services because they expect to find a solution there. Promises are made by the company, to the customer, about the company and its products. The customer expects those promises to be kept. This is where you will identify and articulate the promises customers want you to keep—and ones that you can keep.

Step 3: Deploy Your Revenue Plan

Document your customers’ buying process so you can support them every step of the way, then build an action plan.
On the second day of your brainstorming and planning meeting, you will:

  • Build a buying-process roadmap. Using the information gathered in interviews, and the experience of your salespeople, marketing people and web people, you will build a buying-process roadmap for each of your products and services. The roadmaps will show the different stages of the customers’ buying process. For each stage, you will list who is involved in the buying decision, the concerns they have and the actions they take, as well as the tools you will use to address those concerns, answer their questions and make it easy for them to take the next step. The buying-process roadmap will align your sales, marketing and web teams. Everyone in the room will understand their role in supporting your customers’ buying process.
  • Build your revenue-growth action plan. You’ll want to fix what is broken and improve what needs improving. You will create a master to-do list. Each item on the list will have a description of the issue, the recommended solution, the steps involved, the owner, the due date and the status.

As you go forward, with the buying-process roadmap as your guide, you will build, implement and then fine-tune your lead-acquisition and lead-conversion activities. You will institute methods for obtaining customer needs and preferences data. After the initial meeting, you’ll have weekly meetings where everyone can report on their progress (or completion). If anything is falling behind schedule, you’ll figure out how to get it moving again. The action plan must include the processes and systems for continuing to interview customers and gather data from customers when they interact with your customer-facing people. Processes must then be set up so the data leads to action.

The revenue-killing momentum caused by insider mentality is like a boulder that must be pushed up a hill. Stop pushing, and it will roll over you. Over time, as you make the shift from a company-centered mentality to a customer-centric mentality, the boulder will decrease in size. Don’t be surprised if it takes a year for the shift to take place. Don’t relax even then. There will always be negative forces at work trying to separate you from your customers’ realities. You can’t afford for that to happen. Customer realities drive your revenue.

Of course, even the small, immediate changes you start to make will make it easier for people to find you, understand what you are selling and buy from you—even before you have fully instituted the shift. Their questions will be answered in a way that satisfies them and takes them comfortably to the next step in their buying process. One by one, their concerns will be addressed and eliminated, and they will gladly make a purchase.

The initial, incremental changes in the way you market and sell will move your revenue needle in the positive direction.

Author

  • Kristin Zhivago

    Kristin Zhivago is an expert on the buying experience. In her role as a "revenue coach," she helps CEOs and entrepreneurs increase their revenue - by making it easy for buyers to buy. Kristin publishes a blog for company leaders called the Revenue Journal, and is the author of Rivers of Revenue: What to do when the money stops flowing. She is working on her second book, Roadmap to Revenue: How to sell the way your customers want to buy. Kristin published Marketing Technology, an e-zine for marketers, from 1991 to 2004. Her articles and monthly columns have appeared in numerous trade and business journals since 1984, and she speaks at conferences worldwide. She founded Zhivago Marketing Partners, Inc., in 1979, a consultancy that has served hundreds of clients, from startups to Fortune 100 companies, including IBM and Johnson & Johnson.

Author:

Other Resources in this Series

Most Recent

Article

7 Critical Product Manager Interview Tips

Getting ready for an upcoming product manager interview? This article offers essential strategies and tips for showcasing your skills effectively and using research and practice to make a strong impression.
Article

Women Product Leaders and Changemakers

In the spirit of Women’s History Month, we brought together the insights of product management leaders and Pragmatic instructors Cindy Cruzado and Amy Graham in a comprehensive interview that sheds light on their experiences, challenges,...
Category: Leadership
Article

How to Write a Product Manager Resume

A comprehensive guide to writing a product manager resume with best practices, dos and don’ts for writing a resume, and templates.
Article

Top Reasons to Pursue a Product Management Certification 

Earning a product management certification is a strategic move for professionals immersed in product development, whether they're officially holding the title or managing related tasks. It’s also a smart step if you’re aspiring to move...
Article

How to Choose a Product Management Certification

Learn how to choose the best product management certification for your career development and what makes a certification worth it.

OTHER ArticleS

Article

7 Critical Product Manager Interview Tips

Getting ready for an upcoming product manager interview? This article offers essential strategies and tips for showcasing your skills effectively and using research and practice to make a strong impression.
Article

Women Product Leaders and Changemakers

In the spirit of Women’s History Month, we brought together the insights of product management leaders and Pragmatic instructors Cindy Cruzado and Amy Graham in a comprehensive interview that sheds light on their experiences, challenges,...
Category: Leadership

Sign up to stay up to date on the latest industry best practices.

Sign up to received invites to upcoming webinars, updates on our recent podcast episodes and the latest on industry best practices.

Subscribe

Subscribe