The Board wants to see a fast revenue increase. Your sales team needs more pipeline, and your in-house Sales Development program seems to be going around in circles.
Even if you want to make changes, you don't have time to hire, train, equip, and manage a group of all-new SDRs. What should you do?
These are issues we hear a lot about as we work with clients here at Unbound. Companies need qualified sales appointments and pipelines today to hit their aggressive revenue targets. However, simply relying on the production of marketing or the Rolodex of your current contacts doesn't provide enough pipeline for your sales team.
Maybe it's time to think about getting some help.
Then, the critical question comes into play about your Sales Development program...
Should You Build or Buy?
This question is not without precedent. Engineering departments always outsource, and most marketing departments use at least one outside agency or PR firm, so why not use sales development?
Perhaps you have a Sales Development program, but it doesn't seem to be producing enough appointments, pipeline, and revenue to hit your goals.
You heard from a friend that they use a great outsourced SDR program that's perfect for their industry and is producing great results.
Should you give them a call?
The Investment of Building vs. Outsourcing Your SDR Team
There are two main arguments to consider when thinking about this problem.
Advocates for keeping Sales Development in-house focus on the long-term benefits it can bring to the company. They value hiring, training, and keeping high-quality candidates who can be groomed for other roles within the organization, such as sales, marketing, customer success, and product.
They also argue that the tribal knowledge on prospecting and customer in-house SDRs' buildup is important and needs to be tracked and processed into an ongoing Sales Development playbook.
Advocates for outsourcing look at Sales Development by the numbers. They argue that the cost, timing, and effort involved are so much more attractive when outsourcing that hiring SDRs makes almost no sense unless you’re a very profitable and established company. Most people need sales appointments yesterday and don’t have the time, motivation, or patience to start and run an in-house team.
When considering building or outsourcing your Sales Development program, it boils down to investment. We can examine the investment in terms of cost, time, and effort.
The Cost
Sales Development is a significant monetary investment. Whether it produces an ROI for your company will depend on many variables. Additionally, if you decide to invest in it, working out how to allocate resources and what kind of return you’ll get will be tricky.
In-house teams require salaries, benefits, data, management, and other costs, many of which would not necessarily come out of the budget of whoever is responsible for building the team. Additionally, computers, desks, lunches, and several other random expenditures might come from a totally different budget.
Outsourcing is much more straightforward. Instead of dealing with a myriad of expenses and convoluted budgets, you simply pay an outsourced company invoice each month. This payment comes out of the budget of whoever is making the purchase, just as would any other contractor, vendor, or perk.
The Time
Standing up an in-house Sales Development team is not a project to be completed overnight. At Tenbound, we recommend hiring a Sales Development Manager before starting a team (if you can afford it).
Many things must be done to set it up correctly, such as hiring, onboarding, training, coaching, playbook development, and ongoing management. Without these in place, the program will struggle, and this takes a long time.
Similarly, getting an outsourced firm up and running takes time, however it's generally shorter than setting up an in-house team. Depending on the outsourced firm, they can take your messaging, target profile, and playbook, and since they already have the people and infrastructure in place, they should be able to move much faster.
Starting from zero, you’d have to give your in-house team at least three months to start producing regularly, whereas hiring an outsourced shop should take less than a month to get productive.
The Effort
There's a common misconception that hiring an outsourced firm means you don’t have to put in too much effort because they will be doing the work. This is dead wrong.
While the effort might be less in the long term than that of an in-house team, outsourced companies still need you to provide a tremendous amount of information at the beginning so they can get started on your target list.
Without that effort, they simply will not have the information they need to be successful. This could cause issues like them sending over appointments that don’t fit your ICP or are not qualified, causing friction with your sales team.
On the other hand, building an in-house team is a long-term play and will take sustained effort and care over months and years. We often see sales or marketing leaders (who are passionate about Sales Development) do a great job running the program initially but eventually leave the company with no one to take the reins. The program is passed around, and all that effort slowly wilts and dies.
Decide Now Between Building or Outsourcing Your SDR Team
With each passing day and hour, the need for high-quality Sales appointments and pipelines continues to grow. Whether it's an in-house program, an outsourced program, or a combination of both, Sales Development needs to be done.
If you are motivated by building a long-term, successful program that will be a feeder program to the rest of the company for years to come, think about bringing or building the program in-house.
If you need appointments and pipelines as quickly as possible and don’t want to invest the time and money into starting an in-house program, go outsourced.
If you can afford it, do both and run them simultaneously. Start a competition and see who produces better results at a lower cost.