David FullerMike and James had a big plan to sell more of their widgets. The widgets they built were wonderful. They had numerous testimonials that these widgets changed people’s lives.

Mike wanted to grow this aspect of their business and James agreed. They came up with a plan, built the brochures and sales materials, started down the road to contact the ideal customers for their widgets – and then things fell flat.

What was once a promising campaign melted away like an ice-cream cone on a hot summer day.

This isn’t uncommon in business – we get an idea to grow our company or sell more of a certain product or service, but after all the planning, the reality sets in that this is going to take more effort than we first imagined and people become distracted.

Our dreams of selling more widgets become another failure in the pile of good ideas and great intentions.

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So what do we need to do to have a successful campaign?

Treat it like a construction project

When people build out projects, they have a timeline, measurables, and a firm start and finish.

There are aspects of the project that need to happen in sequence, like building the foundation, the floor and then the walls. We don’t put the roof on first – that happens after the trusses are up and they need to sit on the walls.

The same needs to happen with our sales campaign. We need to build the foundation and have a plan we’re following along the way.

Set time aside to do the work

Just like building a house, once we have a plan, we need to put time and energy into doing the work necessary for each step of the process.

Often in business, we draft up a plan for our campaign, but we forget to allocate time and energy into when and how we’re going to get that plan done. Setting specific times aside each week to work on the campaign will get you further than just trying to do it off the side of your desk during your free time.

We all know there are so many interruptions in our schedules that growth, unless we plan for it specifically, happens more by chance than by plan.

Be consistent

Often organizations have a great plan but the work doesn’t get done because plans are fun to make but harder to implement.

Being consistent and working every week during the timeline set aside for the campaign will make all the difference.

Track and be accountable

“What gets measured gets managed” is the familiar saying that means that when we tell our teams they’re going to be measured according to their performance in a specific area, they will focus on that area.

More advice for your business community

When we have a sales campaign, we need everyone to keep measuring the success and discussing their specific results every week. Having a chart, setting individual goals and measuring specific activities that will contribute to the campaign’s success are going to be important.

Celebrate

When we celebrate our successes, we’re more likely to achieve great things. Teams want to celebrate together.

However, unless we have a measurable target and rewards, the celebration aspect gets forgotten and the campaign is just another rock that needs to be climbed on the way to retirement.

When we can make our sales campaigns fun, accountable, measurable and there’s a plan we’re going to follow, we’re more likely to be successful.

Working to achieve these goals every week and holding the team accountable to make things happen will ensure your success.

When we fail to treat our campaign like a project, we position ourselves to stumble on the road to success.

Dave Fuller, MBA, is an award-winning business coach and a partner in Pivotleader Inc. Selling yourself short? Email [email protected]. For interview requests, click here.


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