Observations

Marketing Helps Close, Not Open, Deals

In the world of B2B sales, there is a classic mantra: “Marketing opens doors; sales closes deals.” This division of labor worked for decades. However, in today’s complex world, where clients take months to make decisions and consult with numerous colleagues, this model is outdated. It’s not just inefficient; it causes you to lose deals you could have won.

What if the primary value of modern marketing wasn’t to “open” as many doors as possible for you but to help you successfully close those you’ve already entered?

Imagine a sale is a Formula 1 race and your salesperson is the driver. “Opening a deal” is merely taking a good starting position. However, the race itself is not won at the start. It is won on the track, lap after lap. Victory is impossible without a pit crew that provides the right tires at the right moment, analyzes telemetry, and adjusts the strategy. In this analogy, systemic marketing is your pit crew.

In this article, we will break down three stages where marketing transitions from an “opener” to a “closer,” directly impacting your win rate and pipeline speed.

The Battle for the “Middle of the Funnel”: When the Client “Thinks”

The largest “graveyard” of potential deals is not at the stage of the initial rejection, but in the quagmire of the “middle of the funnel.” Your salesperson had a great meeting, sent a commercial proposal, and received the polite response, “Thank you, we need to think about it.” After that, silence. The deal “hangs.” It’s not lost, but it’s not moving either. This is the most exhausting and unpredictable stage, which breaks all forecasts.

In the traditional model, marketing has already finished its work of “opening” the deal at this point. The salesperson is now solely responsible and begins calling with the question, “So, have you thought about it?” This risks causing irritation.

However, in a systemic approach, this is precisely when marketing’s most crucial role as a “closing” tool begins. Marketing’s task is to prevent the deal from “cooling down,” constantly and unobtrusively warming the client’s interest and proving the value of the offer.

For example, after the salesperson’s meeting, marketing provides “aerial support” by showing employees of the client company targeted advertising with a case study from their own industry. The client sees your brand constantly in the context of solving their problems, which reinforces the effect of the negotiations. Alternatively, if the CRM indicates that the client has doubts about implementation issues, marketing can automatically send them a detailed “30-Day Implementation Plan” or an invitation to a private webinar on the topic “How We Migrate Data Without Stopping Work Processes.”

Thus, the client is not left alone with their doubts. The system continues to work with them, providing value and addressing concerns. Rather than waiting for the salesperson to pull the deal out of the “swamp” alone, marketing actively helps them build a bridge to the other side.

Arming the Champion for Victory

You have warmed up the deal and removed the client’s personal fears. One final step remains: Your ally (“Champion”) must approach management for the final approval. Their main battle awaits them here.

Your champion is probably an excellent technical specialist or line manager, but not a professional salesperson. They don’t know how to handle a CFO’s objections, have difficulty proving ROI, and get lost when asked to compare you with a competitor. Leaving them alone at this stage will almost certainly result in losing the deal.

The final “closing” function of marketing is to serve as the “armory” for your champion. Your job is not just to wish them luck; it is to provide them with a full set of armor and weapons for their internal presentation.

What kind of “weapon” is this? One example is a “battle card,” which clearly shows your advantages over the main competitor on one slide. It could also be a ready-made business case template: a simple Excel file where your contact can plug in their own numbers and show management how quickly the investment will pay off. It’s a concise “for the CEO” presentation of five slides that explains the strategic benefit to the business, not the technical details.

When your ally comes to the meeting with such an arsenal, they will feel confident and speak a language that their management will understand. You haven’t just sold them a product; you’ve made them a hero in their own company.

Change Your Main Question to Marketing

Warming up stalled deals, addressing fears, and empowering the “champion”—all of this demonstrates one fundamental concept. The power of modern marketing is not so much evident at the beginning, but rather throughout the entire sales process.

Viewing marketing merely as a means of “opening” deals means using a powerful tool at only 10% of its capability. Its true value lies in its ability to influence, accelerate, and increase the final conversion of the pipeline. Therefore, the most effective question to ask your marketing director is not “How many new leads did you bring us?” An effective question sounds like this: “How can we help the sales department close our three main deals this quarter?”

Take the five most important but “stalled” deals from your pipeline. Schedule a meeting with your marketing director to discuss only this topic: “What content and actions can we implement this week to advance these specific deals?” You may be surprised by the answer.

Do you need marketing to attract customers and help sales?