What you will find are pages
of reasons, a litany of lament. You will find dozens of the top 5 reasons, even
more of the top 10 reasons, you will find countless reasons why marketing is
not merely disliked but hated by the sales profession.
Now google the following four
words: Why marketing hates sales.
What you will find is…not so
much. Here and there you will encounter a few rants, but mostly you will find a
continuation of the previous essays on why sales-hates-marketing.
What’s going on here? Could
it be that marketing does not hate sales? After all these years of alleged
conflict and across-the-hall resentment, has such intense “hatred” not been mutual?
No it is not mutual. Marketing
generally does not “hate” sales and the reason is simple: Especially in the
world of small to mid-size industrial manufacturing, people employed to provide
marketing services simply can’t afford to “hate” anyone. They are already
under-appreciated and undervalued by the leadership in their organizations and
are in no position to wage war with anyone, including the sales staff. So then,
what are marketing people doing that is so offensive to the sales people down
the hall?
The answer, unfortunately, is
that in many small to mid-size manufacturing companies especially, marketing
people are simply not allowed to do much marketing.
Marketing has become a
misnomer in these companies. What passes for branding and marketing is the reluctant funding of marketing
communications, aka “marcom” – rightly regarded as a create-and-update cost
center that oversees the manufacturing of web content, catalogs, line cards,
brochures and PowerPoint presentations that are all produced from the product
sales perspective directed by the VP of Sales and Marketing.
The VP of Sales and
Marketing.
In many small to mid-size
manufacturing firms, the title VP of Sales and Marketing would seem to point to
a very conflicted individual. This has in our experience not been the case. He
or she may distrust marketing, but invariably loves sales. The marketing side is barely a distraction. Odds are, the VP of
Sales and Marketing came up through the sales ranks and was given the title so as to achieve in a single stroke a genuine measure of employee recognition, followed by an equal measure of payroll cost conservation, followed by a bolted-on measure of insurance that in the event “marketing”
were to ever become relevant to the company, well there you go.
Which is how so many small to
mid-size industrial manufacturers go -- not as companies uplifted by branding
and marketing discipline, but held down by product worship and sales forces deprived
of the means to achieve their companies' greater sales potential.
Every time an organization
substitutes marcom for branding and marketing, it substitutes sales support with
sales appeasement. So the next time you hear someone repeat the old song about
how sales people hate marketing, you will know the truth. What sales people
hate is branding and marketing done wrong. And they will rightly continue to
hate it, so long as top management continues to encourage it.
jb
www.centrifuge-now.com

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