Published: November 22, 2004
U.S. Companies Severely Mismanaging New Business Opportunities, CMO Council/BPM Forum Survey Finds
Marketing and C-Level Executives Are Dissatisfied With the Way They Generate New Business Yet More Than Half Lack Formal Process to Correct the Problem
U.S. companies may be suffering huge losses
in revenue due to mismanagement of new business development activities,
according to an online survey fielded by two leading executive
organizations. Many of the corporate officers polled believe revenues at
their companies could increase by more than 20 percent through the adoption
of improved prospect harvesting practices.
Entitled "Gauging the Cost of What's Lost," the study suggests that while
companies may be good at generating large volumes of business leads, most
prospects languish because sales is too frequently focused on only closing
the most promising and qualified short-term opportunities. According to
business acquisition experts, an estimated 80 percent of leads are
typically lost, ignored or discarded, compromising top-line revenue growth.
Some 73 percent of respondents in this survey say their company has no
process for re-qualifying and revisiting business leads.
The study is based on a third-quarter, 2004 online survey of nearly 800
respondents in which CEOs, CFOs, COOs and Division or Group Executives
represent 47 percent of the respondents, while nearly 20 percent represent
CMOs and Senior VPs or VPs of Sales. Approximately 13 percent of the
respondents represent companies with more than $250 million in annualized
revenue. The study was fielded by the Chief Marketing Officer (CMO)
Council, whose members include more than 1,000 top decision makers at
high-technology companies, and the Business Performance Management (BPM)
Forum, an elite group of 500 senior managers dedicated to furthering
operational visibility and financial accountability at global corporations.
The survey was underwritten by Wendover Consulting, a leading provider of
Opportunity Recovery Services outsourced by leading BtoB marketers.
In "Gauging the Cost of What's Lost," nine out of ten survey participants
said new customer acquisition is important to business growth. Yet,
approximately 44 percent of all respondents are unsatisfied with the way
their companies go after new business. Nearly three-quarters of respondents
believe they could increase revenue at least 10 percent with better
business development practices; 37 percent say they could increase the top
line by more than 20 percent.
Also among the survey findings:
-- While 53% of respondents believe the sales and marketing functions
have a close and collaborative relationship, only 7% feel the two groups
work together very effectively to harvest business prospects.
-- 56% of the respondents don't have a formal process for generating,
qualifying, certifying and validating new business opportunities.
-- 56% of respondents convert less than 10% of their business prospects
into deals; approximately 30% covert less than 5%.
-- Most respondents are not satisfied with their conversion rates; only
5% are very satisfied.
-- Nearly half of the respondents say it takes at least six months to
close a deal.
"New business acquisition and conversion is challenged in today's
commercial enterprise, and the problem is significantly impacting top-line
performance," said Donovan Neale-May, Executive Director of the CMO Council
and founder of the BPM Forum. "Marketing today is utilizing new digital
channels of interaction to gain customer access and response, but current
qualification and filtering systems are unable to handle the influx of
leads. Companies have to devote much more attention to how they target,
capture, qualify, manage and track pipeline opportunities within their
organizations."
"It's time companies take a hard look at the revenue they're leaving on the
table because they lack the infrastructure, disciplines and budget
necessary to effectively monetize new business inquiries and
opportunities," added Larry Dillon, Chief Executive Officer of Wendover
Consulting. "Marketing is focused on creating new business leads; sales is
focused on closing the most promising of those leads. It's my belief that a
new and separate function is now required to extract unrealized revenue
growth from marginalized, overlooked and neglected business opportunities."
To undertake the research, the CMO Council and the BPM Forum joined forces
with BusinessWeek Research Services and Sales and Marketing Strategies &
News magazine. As the online survey was conducted, it was accompanied by
one-on-one interviews with senior marketing executives at several major
companies. The full report, with detailed findings from the survey as well
as a full analysis, will be made available this week for download at
www.cmocouncil.org and www.bpmforum.org.
About the BPM Forum
The BPM Forum is a high-level, invitation-only thought leadership forum
that targets senior level executives in operations, finance and information
technology, as well as those serving on corporate boards worldwide. The
Forum helps advance the understanding of business performance management
techniques, technologies, and processes in global enterprises. Heightened
concerns with corporate governance and accountability have created growth
opportunities in the market for BPM solutions -- expected to grow to $20
billion by 2005. The ability for enterprises to collectively engage in the
process of embracing business performance management practices and
solutions has become a critical corporate mandate. Driven by demands for
improved operational dexterity and corporate governance, the BPM Forum
helps research, develop and promote cutting-edge methods to strengthen
financial management disciplines, drive performance accountability, tighten
budgeting and planning practices, strengthen operational visibility and
insight, and ensure performance improvements across large organizations.
More than 500 companies are currently represented as members of the BPM
Forum, accounting for well over $400 billion in aggregated annual revenues.
These include: Ameritrade, Bank of America, BearingPoint, Inc, Biz360, Booz
Allen Hamilton, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, Chordiant, Citrix
Systems, Inc., Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Deloitte Touche, Daimler
Chrysler, Fidelity Investments, FileNet, Fujitsu, The Gap, GEAC, General
Electric, Harper Collins Publishers, Hewlett Packard, Hitachi, JP Morgan
Chase, IBM, ICN Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Lexmark International, National
Scientific Corporation, Phelps Dodge Corporation, Pinnacle Technology
Partners, Inc., Porsche, PPG Industries, Inc, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Quest
Industries, Inc., Sabre-Holdings, Safeway, Inc., Saks Incorporated, San
Jose State University, Southwest Airlines, Staples, Inc., Starwood Hotels &
Resorts Worldwide, Inc., Stratascope, Inc., Symantec, T. Rowe Price, TCF
National Bank, TD Bank Financial, TEK Digitel, Tickets.com, Toshiba
America, Tyco International, Verizon and many more.
http://www.bpmforum.org.
About the CMO Council
The CMO Council is a private, non-profit organization dedicated to
high-level knowledge exchange, thought leadership and personal relationship
building among senior marketing and brand decision-makers in the global
technology industry. Based in Silicon Valley, the Council works to further
the stature, credibility, influence, and understanding of the strategic
marketing function among business executives, opinion leaders and critical
stakeholders in the technology sector. Nearly 1,000 technology companies
are currently represented on the CMO Council, accounting for well over $500
billion in aggregated annual revenues. These include top decision-makers
controlling more than $40 billion in global marketing expenditures for many
of the world's foremost computer systems, software, networking,
communications, consumer electronics, component, distribution, and
consulting brands. http://www.cmocouncil.org.
About Wendover Consulting
Wendover Consulting specializes in extracting unrealized revenue growth
from marginalized, overlooked and neglected business opportunities. The
company has pioneered a dedicated functional area and precision practice
that derives new business value from dated, discarded and doubtful
opportunities. By embracing and outsourcing Wendover's performance-based
"Opportunity Recovery Services," companies acquire and convert business
that would otherwise be lost through traditional marketing and sales
processes. http://www.wendoverconsulting.com.
About BusinessWeek
The world's most widely read business magazine, BusinessWeek is a vital
resource for nearly 5.6 million readers worldwide who require insightful
coverage and commentary to stay ahead of their competition.
http://www.businessweek.com
About Sales and Marketing Strategies & News
Sales and Marketing Strategies & News delivers information to
decision-makers who control sales, marketing, automation, e-commerce,
incentive, promotion, and advertising functions. The readership consists of
executives in corporate management positions as well as in sales,
marketing, advertising, sales promotion, travel, training and meetings
management. http://www.salesandmarketing.com
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