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  • B2B vs. B2C Matching for Sales and Marketing

    Posted on May 22nd, 2009 goloboym 3 comments

    I recently read the KnowledgeBanks article Why is b2b marketing different from b2c marketing? The article works to disprove the common misperception that “B2B marketing is just marketing to consumers who happen to have a corporation to pay for what they buy.” I completely agree, and would like to extend the points made to include the differences in matching, sales, and marketing. I’ll also point out ways to know if you’ve reached your goals.

    Some background before I begin. I spent two years working for Harte-Hanks implementing primarily B2C matching for Financial Services Marketing systems. Did you ever wonder how the banks knew that your accounts were linked even though you opened them as different names and addresses? Think about Bank of America’s history. It’s a collection of dozens of banks, and you could have opened accounts any time in the past. To merge that data which could include 10-100 million rows of accoutns, massive B2C matching systems are required, and equally complex logic. My work at Monster has centered on B2B data and how it’s used by Sales and Marketing teams. I’ve worked primarily with matching engines based on Trillium software, but I’ve gotten to know most of the other technologies used at an Enterprise level over the years. I’m a free-agent when it comes to technology, and I’d recommend all technologists embrace an open mind when it comes to vendor selection.

    B2C Matching

    B2C matching is absolutely nothing like B2B matching. The difference? Householding. In B2C the goal is to household different contacts at the same address. You household John’s accounts, then you household Mary’s accounts, then you merge them both together if they live at the same address. Sounds simple right? Well, sometimes John goes by Jack, and sometimes Mary uses her maiden name, and their phone company and credit card records are all listed as “M & J.” These are the troublesome records to figure out, and most of the records have some flavor of variation similar to this.

    B2C Sales and Marketing relies on volume, and the companies focused on matching process huge data sets. You need to find many interested parties because the available money from each is very small. A person may buy $100 worth of software, a $2000 computer, or even a $20,000 car. But they will never spend $1MM with you unless you sell houses to the moderately rich or toys to the ultra rich.

    B2B Matching

    B2B matching is also about householding, but we don’t call it that. We call it Parent-Child Hierarchies. The goal is to determine all of the locations of a business that you are selling to, and try to figure out how they fit together. Of course this is an enterprise perspective, and SMB would be more focused on single locations. So the enterprise question is, which locations are headquarters of other branches? Does that headquarters control purchasing for the child branches? Or are the branches empowered to buy on their own? What does the sales history tell us about them? Do the reps know anything that can help, and how do we capture that data in an automated matching process. All that, and I haven’t mentioned that companies buy, sell, and merge all the time. Think about GE, Berkshire Hathaway and Tyco. Is each of those 1 business or 20?

    For B2B Matching each sales and marketing person would like to know how much each location has purchased and which has the purchasing power. Some of those locations will purchase services that could result in multi-million dollar deals. When I worked for Accenture the philosophy shifted to “Big Bets” and the partners (who functioned as sales people) only targeted accounts willing to commit to $25MM per year. That year they sold several Billion dollar deals. Think about that for a minute. The sales reps will need appropriate level high quality contacts and contact information at each location. You can’t sell a $25MM deal to a line manager or team lead. There are many ways to get B2B contacts - list purchase, telemarketing, partnerships, etc. - but that’s a different post.

    Measuring Results

    If you think you’ve reached your goal and found success with your matching, you’re wrong! Matching is more of an art than a science, and as soon as you get to an acceptable level of completeness and accuracy you need to start looking for the next round of improvements. Matching (like data warehousing in general) must change with the business. As new products are developed, new technologies released, and new business processes implemented, the matching must be updated to dovetail with those changes.

    To Address in Future Posts…

    Preferences and Opt-out Management
    B2B vs. B2C Analytics
    Number of Services per Contact (B2C) vs.
    Number of locations per Company (B2B)
    Demographic and Firmagraphic Appends

     

    3 responses to “B2B vs. B2C Matching for Sales and Marketing” RSS icon

    • Interesting points Mark. I didn’t realize there was such a difference in approach between B2B and B2C. We need more Marketers like you worrying about better matching for sales leaders like me! Look forward to future posts.

      Marci Reynolds
      http://salesoperationsblog.com/

    • Thanks for referencing our blog Mark and also adding to it - you have our team thinking about other areas we can cover now.

      B2B marketing has traditionally been the little brother of B2C because of the volumes, though obviously B2B prospects are typically much more valuable than consumers, so the investment level is higher for the client. As you are pointing out, because there is much more to lose on a poorly executed job, this also, means the client needs an expert rather than a dabbler - which they often do not realise until after the event!

      Our aim is to explore as many issues which face B2B marketers in the blog and obviously you also have much valuable experience in this complex area, so if it’s ok with you, we’ll be sending our valued visitors your way too.

      Thanks again, The KnowledgeBank team.

    • Thanks KnowledgeBank. I always appreciate referred traffic. I’m drafting my next post on B2B vs. B2C this week. It’s going to focus on Firmagraphic and Demographic appends, and the challenges with each. Let me know if you’re ever intersted in comparing notes. I often get great insights from talking with colleagues.


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