Here are some things to consider:
Branding:
Are you clear on your potential customers? Are you narrowing who will buy your services or talent? That clarity is crucial. Sometimes you need to brand for a niche group of customers, not to the entire market. Be clear on who will buy as well as what buying language they speak and understand. Then craft your written, spoken and visual messages appropriately.
Marketing:
Are you tying your marketing to your brand so the connection is clear? Do the two look alike and send the same messages? Every aspect of your communication—web content, social media, news releases, etc.—should move together and be smoothly synchronized. From there, you can create tools for your team to use during sales presentations.
Sales:
Do your sales tools match up with your branding and marketing efforts? Your toolkit should contain pieces that complement one another. Pull out these two pieces for this customer, a different pair to suit a different one. From PowerPoint slide sets to elevator speeches, all of your sales tools should be mined from branding and marketing research.
When you are intentional about your business development and carefully arrange all of the moving pieces, you will see real improvements.