Tuesday, November 3, 2009

The Best Marketed Software Ever!

I have recently been advising a client on how to improve their marketing and sales effectiveness. The company is a very innovative manufacturer of industrial equipment and despite the economy, they are in rapid expansion mode. One of their key goals is to implement an integrated marketing and sales platform to more quantitatively manage direct sales, channel sales and marketing activities. The company has decided to move forward with Salesforce.com, a decision I wholly endorse, and a platform that I have led the implementation of twice in the past. But I digress, this post is not about the criteria for selecting an integrated sales and marketing platform, rather it is about excellent marketing. 


After (re)evaluating the current features of a handful of CRM competitors like SugarCRM and Microsoft Dynamics CRM, Salesforce.com takes the cake. Their feature checklist keeps them in the game, but it is their marketing, sales and positioning that really makes them standout. Can't say it's surprising. Since Salesforce.com burst onto the enterprise software scene in the late 90's, they have year-in and year-out done an excellent job of positioning their solutions, defining value props and making it easy to try then buy. First, it was "No More Software" and "Lower TCO", then it was extendability within their ecosystem with AppExchange, now it is about "the Cloud" and the volume of success stories (1.5million success stories and counting) using their service.


Effective Positioning (Product Marketing & Product Management) is obviously critical, but the Promotion (PR, Product Marketing and Field Marketing) then Sales (Direct Sales / Indirect Sales) is where Salesforce.com really shines versus their competitors. They are the company getting the awards, driving the industry buzz, showing up everywhere and growing at an industry leading rate.


I guess if you are the segment leader in CRM, it is almost expected. So how could you replicate Salesforce.com's success? A good team and strategy is important, but Marketing & Sales spending is where the difference really comes in. Microsoft, CA and Intuit all have strong teams, sound strategies and are certainly no slouches on the Marketing & Sales front, but the discrepancy in marketing spend is astounding:


Sales & Marketing as a % of Total Revenues From Most Recent Financials:
Microsoft spent $12,879m on $58,437m [22%]
Intuit spent $927m on  $3,183m [29%]
CA spent $1,214 on $4,271m [28%]
Salesforce.com  $534m on $1,076m [49%]


What is even more remarkable, is that Salesforce.com is essentially a one trick pony (i.e. CRM). All the others have broad portfolios of products and services.


Bottom Line:  While business success requires excellent Marketing and Sales execution, outspending your competition and blowing the doors off of industry spend comparables, certainly doesn't hurt.

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