Leadership often dismisses positioning as a "marketing thing." To get buy-in, connect it directly to sales failures. When prospects are confused on calls ("What are you again?") or miscategorize you, it’s a positioning problem that kills pipeline. Highlighting this revenue impact gets executive attention and resources.

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When pitching new marketing initiatives, supplement ROI projections with research demonstrating a clear audience need for the content. Framing the project as a valuable service to the customer, rather than just another marketing tactic, is a more powerful way to gain internal support.

Executives don't care about tactical benefits like 'five fewer clicks'. A crucial skill for modern sellers is to extrapolate that tactical user-level gain into a strategic business outcome. You must translate efficiency into revenue, connecting the dots from a daily task to the company's bottom line.

Instead of pitching the abstract value of 'delight,' connect it to concrete business objectives. By asking a founder, 'Are users proud enough to recommend our product?' the focus shifted from a vague concept to a clear driver of word-of-mouth growth, making it easier to get buy-in.

Tailor your message by understanding what motivates your audience. Technical teams are driven to solve problems, while sales and marketing teams are excited by new opportunities. The core idea can be identical, but the framing determines its reception and gets you more engagement.

The "Marketing" in ABM creates resistance from non-marketing teams, pigeonholing the initiative. Using broader terms like "Account-Based Strategy" or "Account-Based Engagement" repositions it as a company-wide GTM motion, dramatically improving adoption across sales, customer success, and leadership.

Instead of waiting for top-down alignment, salespeople should take the initiative to bridge the gap with marketing. The most effective way to do this is by bringing marketing team members onto actual sales calls. This direct exposure to customer interactions is the fastest way to ensure marketing creates relevant and effective support materials.

Don't just solve the problem a customer tells you about. Research their public strategic objectives for the year and identify where they are failing. Frame your solution as the critical tool to close that specific, high-level performance gap, creating urgency and executive buy-in.

Instead of debating whether Product Management or Product Marketing "owns" positioning, teams should treat it as a critical point of shared alignment. It's a collaborative space where the entire team agrees on the product's value and market strategy.

Securing executive buy-in is its own sales stage, distinct from champion agreement. Don't just repeat the demo for the boss. Use executive-level tactics like reference calls with their peers, exec-to-exec meetings to build relationships, or roadmap presentations to sell the long-term vision and partnership.

Position marketing as the engine for future quarters' growth, while sales focuses on closing current-quarter deals. This reframes marketing's long-term investments (like brand building) as essential for sustainable revenue, justifying budgets that don't show immediate, direct ROI to a CFO.

Secure Executive Buy-In for Positioning by Framing It as a Sales Problem | RiffOn