It seems counterintuitive. I know. I’m not telling you to handcuff your sales and marketing teams and keep them from picking up the phone or sending out a tweet or email. Far from it. What I am saying is, make sure they are first and foremost considering your customers and potential customers needs. Everything else will follow naturally after that.

Be a resource for your customers. Build their trust in you. Become an expert in your field. Teach them best practices and offer tips and tricks. Do all of that and when it comes time for them to need the products or services you offer, they won’t even think twice about going with you. Your job will have already been done. No need for the sales pitch.

Think about it. Look at your inbox. Those unopened emails from companies you’ve just been too lazy to unsubscribe from. The Twitter accounts you don’t follow back, because their feed is comprised of a thousand variations of the same sales pitch and nothing else. You tune them out, because they did nothing for you. That’s why you must dedicate your marketing channels to helping, rather than selling.

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Author Bio:

by Andy Shore

Andy Shore found his way to Benchmark when he replied to a job listing promising a job of half blogging, half social media. His parents still don’t believe that people get paid to do that. Since then, he’s spun his addiction to pop culture and passion for music into business and marketing posts that are the spoonful of sugar that helps the lessons go down. As the result of his boss not knowing whether or not to take him seriously, he also created the web series Ask Andy, which stars a cartoon version of himself. Despite being a cartoon, he somehow manages to be taken seriously by many of his readers ... and few of his coworkers.