Cultural frames that drive sales and marketing apart: An exploratory study
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 06:09authored byMichael Beverland, Marion Steel, Peter Dapiran
Despite the necessity of close integration between marketing and sales, managers report less than satisfactory results in this area. This paper aims to examine what keeps the two functions apart. It propses going beyond surface level behaviour to examine the different sub-cultural mental frames that characterize the two functions. A total of 44 salespeople and marketers across four different organizations in different industries were interviewed. The research finds that conflicts between marketing and sales are driven by differences in beliefs about the valid scope and focus of activity, time focus, valid sources of knowledge, differences in percieved status, and the relationship to the business environment. Managers need to focus on removing implied status barriers between sales and marketing, provide sales with a strategic voice, and atttend to structural issues that drive the two functions apart. Research on the sales-marketing interface remains scarce. The paper examines this from a cultural point of view and identifies a number of basic cultural frames that explain behavioural differences between the two functions. Critically, it also identifies significant points of difference on which to build greater understanding between the two functions.