Discover how aligning marketing, sales, and delivery through the IC Triad enables professional services firms to commercialize their expertise and drive market momentum.
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Discover how aligning marketing, sales, and delivery through the IC Triad enables professional services firms to commercialize their expertise and drive market momentum.
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: RSS
Aligning Thinkers, Sellers, and Doers to Create Market Momentum
Key Takeaways
The IC Triad: The Engine Behind Commercialization
The IC Triad is the go-to-market operating system that turns a firm’s intellectual capital into market value. It aligns marketing, sales, and delivery to build brand preference through insights (expertise), solutions (results), and ideal clients (simpatico).
Why Firms Struggle to Grow
Firms falter not in execution—but in misdiagnosing the problem. Growth stalls because of fragmented culture, vague strategy, poor resource allocation, and unclear process ownership—not because of weak marketing or sales output.
Brand Preference Requires Role Alignment
Marketing demonstrates expertise via market-relevant insights. Delivery proves results through solutions clients value. Sales builds simpatico by focusing on ideal clients who trust, relate to, and want to do business with the firm.
Culture Is the Silent Growth Killer
Nine times out of ten, failures blamed on marketing or sales are actually cultural—where internal silos, fiefdoms, or a productivity-mindset prevent collaboration, innovation, and clear execution.
Human Relationships Still Matter Most
Perception, trust, and ease of doing business are relational—not digital. Simpatico can’t be automated. It must be earned through shared values, real understanding, and consistent behavior across the buyer journey.
Practical Takeaways for CEOs
Stop allocating marketing budget by practice revenue. Invest where market opportunity is greatest.
Reframe “thought leadership” as discovery, not just demonstration. Insights must flow in both directions—to and from the market.
Clarify roles with tools like a RACI to assign responsibility and build cross-functional collaboration.
Evaluate your firm’s cultural readiness before blaming execution. Dysfunctional dynamics between thinkers, sellers, and doers are often the root cause.
Define and agree on the right problem to solve. Don’t default to hiring or branding as a fix.
Final Thought:
Firms don’t fail because they lack expertise, results, or relationships—they fail because they haven’t aligned the people, roles, and systems that deliver them. Diagnose the real hurdle. The path to growth begins with clarity.
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