How Small Business and Start-ups can Stay Competitive and Close Big Deals
by EnyOsung
How Small Businesses and Startups Can Stay Competitive and Close Big Deals
- List enterprise companies to target.
- Identify the right people to contact at each company.
- Use a CRM to track leads, conversations, and sales.
- Engage prospects through outreach.
- Learn about their needs and how you can help solve problems they face.
- Ask for business and close the sale.
- Practice patience through the longer sales cycle.
It is easy for customers to choose familiar vendors by default. Without a big brand name, small businesses and startups should take advantage of the 11 tips below to beat larger competitors on project bids. By combining the talents of a lean sales force, a small marketing crew, and a scrappy product team, boutique firms can outdo the competition and close large-scale sales.
Apply retargeting
According to a 2014 study, more than 90 percent of marketers believe retargeting is as effective as—and in some cases better than—search ads, email marketing, and other display advertising. Instead of a broad, mass-media approach to advertising, make room in your marketing budget for retargeting. A majority of the buyers you contact will decline to work with you at first. Invest in ads that educate them about your business at their pace. Retargeting allows marketers to display ads to a target audience that has recently interacted with your brand. Feed prospects information about:
- What you do and who you are: Promote earned media that talks about your business in a positive light.
- Industry expertise: Distribute branded content that demonstrates authority and thought leadership.
- Value proposition: Advertise case studies, customer reviews, and client testimonials.
Use retargeting to boost brand awareness and familiarity among prospects, which increases their likelihood of working with you. Retargeting is an affordable and efficient solution for creating multiple touchpoints with buyers and engaging them throughout each stage of the sales cycle.
Build a memorable brand
You don’t need hundreds of employees to be regarded as a leader in your industry. Build a brand with which customers want to align. To accomplish that, businesses must:
- Execute a targeted public relations strategy to create awareness and buzz.
- Produce thoughtful content that helps your audience achieve more at their jobs.
- Be authentic, consistent, extraordinary, and relatable with customers in your niche.
Through different branding activities, you want to leave a lasting impression. If prospects regularly stumble on positive press about your business or reference whitepapers you publish, they will want to seek out your services.
Create new, exclusive products
Cater to your customers’ egos. Enterprise accounts love one-of-a-kind solutions. Though small teams may be resource-limited, they are innovative and can move fast. Use that to your advantage. Unlike bigger businesses who need approval and acceptance of new ideas through several layers of bureaucracy, startups can switch gears and execute fresh strategies almost instantaneously. According to serial entrepreneur Steve Blank, small businesses use the fear of failure to drive innovation. For corporations, that same fear stymies success.
Customize unusual aspects of the deal
Though custom proposals are labourious, this extra step grabs a client’s attention and holds it. Big buyers like doing deals their way. As a small business eager to secure the contract, you will want to be accommodating. Change the language as needed, add a few extra services you typically would not offer, and do whatever you can to get the client excited about working with you. Items you may want to be flexible on include:
- Contract milestones and timeline
- Ownership rights
- Indemnification
- Payment terms
- Termination clauses
Find original points of entry
During the sales process, avoid first reaching out to visible decision-makers at a firm with whom you want to work. Those individuals are often too busy to hear a sales pitch and are likely already being courted by a dozen other vendors. Instead, small business coach Marla Tabaka advises, “Take the road less traveled. Sometimes the best door into a corporate client is the one that no one else considers.”
For a company that sells marketing automation software, for example, the chief marketing officer at a Fortune 500 organization would be the obvious person to contact about your services. Intelligent sales teams may, instead, reach out to the chief financial officer to initiate a conversation about how much more money the business can earn and the time it could save by switching to your platform.
Focus on your business
Don’t let your competition rattle you. One of the surest ways to sink a business is by focusing your energies on what other companies in your industry are doing instead of finding original ways to increase consumer awareness, generate sales, and boost profitability.
The bottom line: Stop looking sideways. Admittedly, monitoring your competitor’s every move can be informative. However, also identify new ways of doing business your competition has not tried yet. Consistently conceive and develop new ideas to improve your competitive edge and stay ahead of rivals. To be truly innovative, inventor Arnold du Toit suggests ten things:
- Make it fun
- Build relationships
- Evoke emotions
- Push boundaries
- Identify core values
- Passion
- Precision
- Flexibility
- Be inspirational
- Excite people
Form strategic alliances and partnerships
As a small business moving upmarket, you should find allies with like-minded companies in your industry on ambitious initiatives. Together, you can pool resources to produce collaborative marketing campaigns; share tactics, tips, and strategies for growth; and partner on larger projects.
This last point is important because enterprise businesses prefer to work with vendors they believe have the expertise and headcount required to execute meaningful campaigns. Vendors that were too short-staffed and overworked, or for some reason failed to deliver have burnt plenty of companies. Strategic partnerships allow you to take advantage of readily available talent. As a startup closing its first big enterprise deal, you don’t have to scramble to hire new staff and train them before the engagement begins.
Highlight past work
First-time customers need confidence that you can fulfill your end of a contractual obligation and deliver real value. Leverage testimonials when interacting with prospects. Name-drop big brands you worked with previously. Mention companies they are familiar with, including their competitors. Also, call out relevant performance stats to quantify the ROI of your role. On the Pardot blog, Jenna Hanington outlines four ways companies can use customer testimonials.
- Source in-depth case studies.
- Feature positive customer tweets on your website.
- Produce customer testimonial videos.
- Encourage clients to share their best reviews.
Play the long game
Keep in mind that enterprise deals take a while to come to fruition. Some projects have a sales cycle that lasts several months—while others last years. Continue working with existing customers and feel free to take on new clients while you nurture enterprise leads. Many startups make the mistake of relying too heavily on potential big budget projects while neglecting short-term cash flow.
Pilot small programs
Large businesses are careful in structuring news deals. With their profit margins on the line, buyers take their time to consider every aspect of the engagement. It can take weeks to make progress on just a small portion of the negotiation. Instead of pursuing a big contract up front, pilot smaller programs with potential clients.
Department managers within large enterprises often have a large enough expense budget that you can squeeze in a small-scale project without requiring sign-off from the company’s executives or directors. Small projects minimize risk for the buyer and allow everyone to put the relationship to a trial. By proposing lightweight engagements, small businesses and startups win. Most vendors will invest their energies in securing significant commitments upfront. You, on the other hand, can slowly create value for the organization after you get your foot in the door.
Over time, small businesses with a pre-existing relationship with a larger corporation can expand the scope of their working arrangements to close bigger and better contracts.
Work through current vendors
Many startups have an indirect relationship with their first big-name client: They often play the role of sub-contractor to another provider who originally sourced and secured the deal. Enterprise businesses tend to be loyal to current vendors. An indirect sales approach allows smaller companies to gain experience working for bigger clients, eventually allowing them to develop case studies and testimonials—valuable sales collateral—which they can use in pursuing other enterprise accounts.
Final thoughts
Remember that even a small portion of a £1 million contract can help make your business’s quarter healthier. Acting as a secondary vendor to bigger projects can be the perfect way to circumvent the sales process and still work with world-class clients.
Recommended Posts
Eny talks with Lydia on The Joyful Path Podcast
9th December 2022
How to use new LinkedIn Campaign Manager
20th July 2022