Terms like “sales intelligence” and “actionable insights” get tossed around a lot, and frankly, most of it is BS.
There are some big, respected data companies claiming that they offer sales intelligence to power account-based sales campaigns.
Just query their database and like magic they’ll show you a list of people who have a certain job title in a certain kind of company. They’ll include a lot of “insights” like a feed of articles about the company, scraped LinkedIn profiles, info about their tech stack, and firmographic data.
They may even share the unicorn-like holy grail of sales – buying intent. As in, the prospect downloaded 3 white papers on something broadly relevant to what you sell in the past 6 months.
Well, I might as well raise my forecast right now with that kind of predictive power. /sarcasm
Seriously, it’s not that the data is bad, it’s just data. It’s a collection of stand-alone information that you must parse and interpret to figure out if they are likely to respond to a pitch for your particular IoT application platform.
Once you’ve parsed, interpreted and reached defensible conclusions about what all that data means for what you’re trying to sell, we can safely call it “sales intelligence”.
A feed of press releases is not intelligence. A categorized list of technologies used by IT is not intelligence. A dump of all open positions at a company is not intelligence. A search result from Sales Navigator of people with “IoT” or “Blockchain” in their titles is not intelligence.
However, what if I look deeper and see
This looks like a real opportunity for my IoT secure analytics platform. THAT is sales intelligence.
If your BDRs are producing this level of sales intelligence, congratulations! If they aren’t, they’ll need to be trained and closely mentored to develop the ability to turn signals into sales intelligence. BuyerForesight can produce sales intelligence for you, and format it for upload into your CRM.
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