What Does Business Development Look Like to You?
Earlier this year, while out doing my usual catch-ups with contacts (and drinking enough coffee to power a small city), I decided to do a little research. Everyone I met, I asked the same question:
“What does business development mean to you and your business?”
The responses were fascinating — and surprisingly divided into two camps:
- It’s all about sales and marketing.
- It’s more than sales and marketing… maybe strategy?
That’s when I realised my work was cut out for me. How on earth do I explain what business development actually is — and more importantly, what it can do for a business?
Spoiler Alert: It’s More Than Sales & Marketing
What if business development was more than sales and marketing?
(Spoiler: it is. And no, that’s not just my inner strategist talking.)
Sales and marketing are crucial — every business does them to some degree. Sending marketing emails, posting on social media, firing off newsletters… all good stuff. But those are actions.
Business development? That’s the why behind those actions — the secret sauce that ties them together into something powerful and profitable.
Seeing the Bigger Picture
I like to think of business development as the conductor of an orchestra — making sure every section of your business plays in tune, at the right time, and doesn’t wander off into a jazz solo halfway through.
Take sales and marketing, for example.
You could send out millions of marketing letters every year (and yes, some still do). But how do you know if that’s the right move?
Data is power.
If you understand how those letters are being received, you can refine your message. That influences your tone, your content, and even whether you need to send out a million of them in the first place. Because let’s face it — if no one’s reading them, you might as well be writing love letters to your recycling bin.
KPIs, conversion rates, engagement data — they’re not just buzzwords, they’re your compass. And a good Business Development Manager knows how to use them to build strategies that are both smart and flexible.
So What Else Does Business Development Actually Do?
This is where businesses can really start to shine — by not just understanding what business development is, but by learning how to strategise and implement it.
Let’s break it down:
Marketing
Understanding buyer psychology, increasing visibility and brand awareness, and crafting messages that actually make people stop scrolling.
Sales
Potential clients are engaged and excited. Your salespeople build rapport, have meaningful conversations, and sell with confidence (not desperation).
Operations
The client is on board, and it’s go-time. Deadlines are met, communication is clear, and everyone’s rowing in the same direction.
Customer Experience
Clients get top-notch service and exactly what they were promised — maybe even more. They become loyal repeat buyers because every part of their
journey feels smooth, human, and genuine.
Staff Experience
Your team knows their roles, collaborates effortlessly, and feels part of something that matters. Morale goes up, productivity follows, and management becomes approachable (not feared like the office printer).
Finance
The company is profitable, reinvesting wisely in products, services, and people. Credit control is tight, margins are healthy, and your accountant actually smiles for once.
Compliance
Everything’s above board, with no nasty surprises when the auditors pop round.
Quality
You’re not just meeting expectations — you’re exceeding them. Your competitors might try to tempt your customers away, but they’ll come running back when they realise the grass isn’t greener.
Value
When all these elements are in harmony, customers feel the value. They understand that cheapest isn’t always best — and they’re happy to pay for quality that delivers.
But Let’s Be Honest…
It all looks great on paper — until:
- The software holding everything together starts acting like it’s haunted.
- The wrong people are in the wrong roles and everyone’s quietly losing the will to live.
- You’re chasing volume instead of value (and watching profit margins vanish).
- Credit control’s gone AWOL and cash flow’s tighter than your jeans after Christmas.
- Deadlines are slipping, customers are fuming, and staff morale’s taking a nosedive.
- Marketing spend is sky-high with nothing to show for it but a few pity likes.
- You simply don’t have the resources or experience to juggle it all.
Sound familiar? You’re not alone — and that’s exactly why business development exists.
The Heart of It All
Business development isn’t just about sales and marketing.
It’s the strategy behind the entire company — the glue that keeps all the moving parts aligned, efficient, and sustainable.
When it’s done well, your business doesn’t just grow — it thrives.
In short: business development is like coffee for your business — strong, strategic, and absolutely essential☕.
Kate Baines
kate@virtualprestige.co.uk






