Don’t Practice Veterinary Marketing: Talk to Prospects

My father used to complain that a friend of his would make his doctor practice veterinary medicine.  The doctor would ask him what was wrong and his friend would reply in a non-committal way.  Some entrepreneurs, especially in the early market, seem to prefer veterinary marketing:  running tests and making changes in their application without actually talking to their prospects.

Don’t Practice Veterinary Marketing: Talk to Prospects

If you offer a trial period for your software here are some ways you can spark a conversation to understand how their evaluation is progressing:

  • Ask to schedule a phone call: E-mail asking if you can have a support person or one of the founders who has a support / service mindset call them to see how it’s going.
  • Include a phone number / skype number in your e-mails to them.
  • Add a chat service like Liveperson or OggChat so that they can chat with you.
  • Schedule regular webinars where you could trigger a conversation. Ask your customers to take part, structure it as an interview or lessons learned session not a sales pitch
  • Schedule open “office hours where prospects in who are in active evaluation or those who are  just the curious about your product can call in to a conference line or skype session and ask questions.
  • Ask your customers what specifically triggered their realization of the true benefits of your offer. Write up their answers as a simple narrative and have them review and approve it.  Consider posting these stories (case studies) on your web site so that your “yet to be enlightened” prospects may also understand.

Especially in the early market you don’t need to worry about scaling a B2B sales process.  You can employ methods that are very time intensive to get a deep understanding of each step in your prospects journey to becoming a customer.

Make changes that target specific symptoms suggested by prospects or needs suggested by customers.  Make it a priority to have real conversations with your prospects and appreciate the value of being surprised by what they say.

It’s also worth contacting those who don’t convert  who are no longer evaluating (e.g. have not logged in for two weeks, account has lapsed,…) and asking them how they solved the problem that led them to signup for an evaluation of your service. Even if only a few answer you may learn quite about who your real competitors are and why some prospects decide not to complete the evaluation.

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4 thoughts on “Don’t Practice Veterinary Marketing: Talk to Prospects”

  1. While this isn’t as direct a method, having the CEO’s (or someone very high up) email address available is often helpful. I have found that most people are respectful of using it.

  2. Pingback: SKMurphy, Inc. » Tools vs. Methods vs. Policies

  3. Pingback: SKMurphy, Inc. Q: Is Veterinary Marketing A Viable Approach To Market Exploration - SKMurphy, Inc.

  4. Pingback: SKMurphy, Inc. Customer Development: Scouting a New Market

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