Integrating Complex Selling and Inbound Marketing

Articles and tips for integrating complex sales and inbound marketing in this buyer centered world.

Every Complex Sale has its own Heartbreak Hill

The Boston Marathon is the world’s oldest marathons and one of its most famous.  Runners from around the world gather in Boston every April, along with 500,000 spectators, to enjoy this spectacular event.  The race starts in the suburbs and ends in the heart of Boston.  One of the more famous elements of this race is known as Heartbreak Hill, and if you ever talk to a marathoner, they will likely grimace at the memory of running this hill.  That may be surprising because the hill itself is only 91 feet long, which makes it one of the shortest hills in all five of the large city U.S. marathons. I always thought a 91 foot hill should be fairly easy for a marathoner who is in great shape.

But year after year, drama plays out at this site and many runners crumble. Why does this relatively short  hill cause such big problems for well conditioned athletes?  One reason is that the hill is actually quite steep, one of the steepest hills of all the US marathons.  In addition, it also comes at about 20 miles into the race, which is the point in a marathon when muscle glycogen stores are most likely to be depleted – often referred to by athletes as “hitting the wall."

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Part 2: The Hunter, the Farmer, and the Fisherman

Part 2 - Which Sales Model is best for Your Practice?

Hunter Farmer Model Not Quite Right

Early in my career when I was developing a new practice, I had few clients and was not a widely recognized guru.  I had valuable expertise and felt I was at my best when cultivating established clients, but I needed lots of new clients before I could become the farmer type suggested by the customary Hunter-Farmer model.  I also could not afford to hire a hunter to help find me new clients.   So I took it upon myself to develop hunting skills.  I went to various training courses and read lots of books on the subject and I indeed developed some hunting skills.  But overall, I felt like I was fighting a dual personality; some days wearing my hunting gear and others donning my farmer jeans.  It just didn't feel right trying develop and integrate both hunter and farmer attributes.  I worried that I would not develop sufficiently as either a hunter or a farmer.  But did I really need to?

As I struggled with how to aggressively grow a practice while cultivating relationships,

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Consultant's Sales Model: The Hunter, the Farmer, and the Fisherman

A sales metaphor is helpful in understanding your strengths as a business developer and as an intellectual framework for developing your consulting practice’s business development approach.  Many professional service firm managers and practice leaders use the classic Hunter-Farmer model when thinking about what types of business developers the firm needs to recruit in order to grow.  Should we just have farmers, or do we need to bring in more hunters.  The hunter-farmer model, stem from traditional industrial sales approaches, but is it really that useful for management consultants, technical consultants and other professional service firms?  Frankly, the hunter farmer model does not adequately describe the business development approach of most successful practicing consultants.  Well what does?  This article adds a third element to the Hunter-Farmer Model -- the Fisherman and explains why the Fisherman’s best attributes are descriptive of successful consulting practice leaders.

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