Guts are squishy, often irritable, and can be 
irregular, yet, many sales and marketing professionals base their 
practices on “gut feelings” and hunches. 
“Marketing departments will continue to become less dependent on 
quantifying the value they are delivering to the organization based upon
 squishy, feel-good branding efforts and they will be even more driven 
to leverage data and analytics across all marketing channels,” says Russ
 Hearl, VP at DoubleDutch[1] in a collection of seven sales and 
marketing predictions for 2016.
To do this, marketing departments will need to borrow some tools and 
techniques used by other managers in their company. One such tool 
suggested by SMstudy in its book Marketing Strategy is Value 
Chain Analysis: “Value Chain Analysis is used to analyze the value 
created by a company’s current activities. It explores where more value 
can be added, as well as where value is not being added throughout the 
chain of activities.”
In addition to “quantifying the value [the marketing department] is 
delivering to the organization,” the data collected in the Value Chain 
Analysis can be used as benchmarks for evaluating the company’s existing
 accounts with a BCG Growth-Share matrix[2]. “Among the many things you 
should do is start by going backwards, not in how you sell, but how you 
plan and set yourself up for success,” suggests Tibor Shanto in “It’s A 
New Year – Let’s Go Backwards.”[3] Identifying which accounts are Cash 
Cows, Stars and Dogs can give great insights in how the company has set 
itself up for success in the past.
Shanto says that sales professionals need to make plans for the new 
year based on data. Among the data required, he includes “some core 
conversion rates :
 number of proposals that close, number of real prospects required to 
generate a REAL proposal, and number of people/companies you’ll need to 
engage to land one REAL prospect.” Based on a well-developed example, 
Shanto concludes, “The key is to execute a well-planned strategy, rooted
 in the real numbers to drive real results.”
“One of the most widely used criteria for lead qualification is BANT,
 which stands for Budget, Authority, Need, and Time frame,” says the SMstudy® Guide
 for corporate sales. An analysis in each of these areas produces real 
numbers that can be used to build successful strategies. SMstudy’s 
soon-to-be-released Corporate Sales book presents and analyzes 
the processes of lead generation, lead qualification, needs assessment, 
negotiation and closure—all within the arena of creating sales 
strategies that work.
Thinking about sales and marketing from a strategic point of view 
that leverages data and analytics demands a new approach. That approach 
is being championed by SMstudy and presented in our six-volume SMstudy® Guide because we want today’s sales and marketing professionals to be tomorrow’s success stories.
Find additional posts on sales and marketing at www.smstudy.com/articles. 
[1] Quoted by Erin Sherbert in “Seven Sales and Marketing Predictions for 2016” (12/7/2015) Salesforce Blog
 Retrieved on 1/26/2106 from 
https://www.salesforce.com/blog/2015/12/sales-marketing-predictions-2016.html?d=701300000021KSN&soc=LinkedIn
[2] The BCG Growth-Share matrix by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) is discussed more fully in SMstudy® Guide; Marketing Strategy, book one of A Guide to the SMstudy Sales and marketing Body of Knowledge (SMBOK® Guide), pages 42+ [available at http://www.smstudy.com/SMBOKGuide/Overview-of-SMstudy-Guide]  
[3] Tibor Shanto. (1/7/2016) “It’s a New Year – Let’s Go backwards.” SellBetter. Retrieved on 1/25/2016 from http://www.sellbetter.ca/its-a-new-year-lets-go-backwards/
Acknowledgement: This content has been uploaded from http://www.smstudy.com/Article/Do-You-Have-the-Guts-to-Do-That-Again-Sales-Strategy-and-SMstudy 
