ITSMA Home Order Research
Register for Events
InsightResearchConsultingTrainingEventsAbout UsMembers
Account-Based Marketing  |  Digital Marketing   |  Solutions Site Search
             
       
ITSMA Ezine
 
Quick Links:
Ezine Archive
Subscriptions
Forward to a friend
 

In the April 2007 issue:

 
 

Editor's Note

Announcing ITSMA's Sales and Marketing Collaboration Council

By Meghann Wooster, info@itsma.com

At ITSMA's Workshop on account-based marketing (ABM) a couple of weeks ago, Avaya's Shawn Jean told an interesting tale. "As someone who's worked on both the sales and marketing sides of the fence," he said (and I paraphrase), "I can see both sides of the story. On one hand, there's marketing, which is out there creating all these great marketing programs that the sales guys don't always pay attention to, and that can be frustrating. On the other hand, you've got the sales reps, who are so focused on what needs to get done right now that it's a challenge to keep track of relevant campaigns, tie them to revenue, and see the value in execution." He stopped for a moment and looked around the room. "It's hard to bring the two sides together."

Shawn then went on to describe his company's burgeoning ABM program, which is going a long way toward closing the gap between marketing and sales at Avaya.

But ensuring that marketing and sales are collaborating, truly collaborating, on shared priorities that are of strategic importance to the firm requires more than the implementation of an ABM program. It requires a whole new approach to working together—one that emphasizes flexibility and speed, necessitates the creation of multiple joint programs and shared metrics, and perhaps even mandates organizational change.

In response to strong expressions of interest in this topic from our members, ITSMA has decided to launch a Sales and Marketing Collaboration Council. The Council will bring together a committed group of senior executives from ITSMA member companies to network, share best practices, and collectively advance the state of the relationship between marketing and sales within the industry as a whole.

If you are interested in learning more about this Council and who is eligible to join, please contact Jeff Sands at +1-781-862-8500, ext. 11, or jsands@itsma.com.

[ top ]What's Hot

An Updated Model for Account-Based Marketing

By Jeff Sands and Steve Hurley,  jsands@itsma.com

Many ITSMA members have embraced the concept of account-based marketing (ABM), an approach that emphasizes relationship development by treating an individual account as a market in its own right. The benefits of ABM—including improved relationships, enhanced positioning, and increased profitability with ABM accounts—can be enormous, and for the past couple of years ITSMA has been helping a number of member companies adopt our six-step approach to ABM.

Well, as we did more and more work around ABM, our thinking evolved, and we recently decided it was time to update our model. Whereas our six-step approach was all about applying ABM principles to a single account, our new model is designed to help companies think through everything they need to do to create an overarching ABM program that encompasses multiple accounts.

As we've seen the adoption curve of ABM by our member companies get steeper, we've seen the starting point change. A few years ago, companies jumped into the deep end of the pool by initiating pilots without a tremendous amount of forethought. Frankly, there wasn't a lot to think about—the pioneers didn't have the luxury of learning from predecessors.

At this point, however, much has been written about the positives and the negatives of ABM initiatives, and we've documented the ways that pilots have turned into sustainable programs. You can now benefit by laying the foundation for overall program success before jumping into the implementation of ABM with pilot accounts. We believe that companies will have an easier time institutionalizing a successful, wide-scale ABM program for their top accounts if they begin full program planning prior to diving into pilot accounts.

Figure 1. ITSMA's New Model for ABM

Figure: ITSMA ABM Model

As you can see from Figure 1, we haven't abandoned our six steps—far from it. Selecting target accounts is now part of Phase 1, along with other planning and design issues such as program oversight, funding, sales integration, and staffing. The remaining five steps from the old model—understand and analyze the target account; map value; develop the tactical plan; execute; and measure results—reside in Phase 2, since they are all account-specific activities that must be done individually for each target account. In Phase 3, the company institutionalizes the learnings from the pilots and builds ABM into the fabric of the way the sales team develops its account strategies.

Let's review each of the three new phases in more detail:

  • Phase 1: Program Planning and Design. This is where the company builds a foundation for ABM program success. It must answer important questions, such as who will fund the ABM initiative? How much will it be? Is there an executive sponsor who is invested in the program's success? Who will manage the overall ABM program? What skills does the program manager need to possess? Who will implement ABM within specific key accounts? How many accounts can a dedicated ABM staffer take on? What are the company's criteria for selecting ABM accounts? What role will the account team play in implementing ABM? What role will marketing play? How will we take it to different industries and geographies?
  • Phase 2: Account-Specific Project Implementation. The activities in this phase should all be familiar; they are five of the six steps outlined in our old, six-step approach. Some of the key questions to consider while executing on this phase include these: What kind of research is necessary to build a deep understanding of the target account? What are the target account's main business imperatives? How do the company's capabilities map to the target account's needs? How can the company ensure that the ABM team stays totally focused on solving client business issues rather than "selling more stuff"? What are the best marketing tactics for each of the company's plays vis-à-vis the target account? Who will own the execution of each tactic, and who will track the results?
  • Phase 3: Program Evaluation and Management. This is where the company steps back from the activities going on within each individual ABM account to see whether they are tracking according to plan and how likely they are to meet the stated objectives. This critical feedback becomes the basis for the final program design. Companies need to be prepared to answer questions such as how many accounts do we want to fold into the program? Where does this fit with our other marketing programs—segment marketing, mass marketing, partner and alliance marketing, and so on? Where will the funding come from for a significantly expanded program? Where will we find a large number of marketers with the skills that we now know we need?

Many services and solutions companies are harnessing the power of ABM to build better relationships, boost profitability, and achieve the coveted role of trusted advisor with their key accounts. Our updated model will not only help companies execute ABM within specific accounts, it will also help them lay the foundation for program success.

[ top ] New Thinking

A Better Way to Segment: What Marketers Can Learn from a Milkshake

Clayton Christensen, Harvard Business School professor, co-founder of Innosight LLC, and author of The Innovator's Dilemma, The Innovator's Solution, and Seeing What's Next, recently provided insight into what marketers can learn about segmentation from studying why consumers "hire" milkshakes.

ITSMA: Clay, you've said that you believe that the fundamental paradigm of how to segment markets is broken. Could you please explain?

Christensen: When we are marketing, we're playing in the categorization world. If you're inside the company looking out onto the market, it appears as though the market is structured by customer category or by product category. Therefore, we segment markets either by the attributes of the customers or the characteristics of the products. Then we try to find correlations between the attributes and the probability that customers will buy. But the fact that I'm in a certain demographic segment doesn't cause me to buy a product. The propensity to buy might be associated with those characteristics, but it isn't the causal mechanism.

So what causes us to buy? We buy because we have a job to do. We hire products and services to do the job for us. Therefore, if I really want to predict whether a customer will buy my product, I should not segment markets by categories of customers. Rather, I should try to figure out the segments based on the different "jobs" that people are trying to get done, for which my product might be "hired."

Let me illustrate this concept with an example from the fast-food industry. A fast-food restaurant was trying to goose up the sales of its milkshake product line. It segmented the market by product category and had extraordinary data on the demographics and even the psychographics of customers who bought milkshakes. It invited members of these demographic segments into conference rooms and asked them, "How could we improve our product so that you would buy more?" The company got very good feedback from these customers about how to improve its milkshakes. It did improve them, and surprisingly, the improvements had no impact whatsoever on sales or profits. Consequently, the milkshake was determined to be a "dog" product that had no growth.

Peter Drucker once said that rarely does the customer buy what the company thinks it's selling. Therefore, one of my colleagues went into a restaurant one day and observed for 18 hours to see if he could answer the question, "What job do people hire a milkshake to do for them?" He took very careful notes, including the time at which people bought milkshakes, what those people were wearing, whether they were alone or with a group, whether they bought other food or just the milkshake, whether they drank it in the restaurant or took it out. It turned out that nearly half the customers bought milkshakes in the very early morning. It was the only thing they bought, they never drank it in the restaurant, and they were always alone.

So the next day my colleague returned and confronted these people as they left the restaurant, milkshakes in hand, asking them, "Excuse me, please, but could you tell me what job you are trying to get done for yourself when you hired that milkshake?" As they would struggle to answer, he would say, "Think about when you're in the same situation, needing to get the same thing done, but you didn't come here to hire a milkshake. What did you hire?" It turned out that they all had the same job to do: They had a long and boring commute to work. One hand had to be on the steering wheel, but God had given them this other hand in which they needed something to hold while they traveled. They weren't hungry yet, but they knew they'd be hungry by 10:00 a.m. Therefore, they needed something that would land in their stomachs and stay a while.

So what do I hire when I have this job to do? A banana doesn't do the job well at all. It's gone in three minutes, I am hungry an hour later, and it leaves an empty peel on the seat. Doughnuts get my fingers sticky and then the steering wheel is gooey. Bagels are dry and tasteless, and they make crumbs all over my clothes. If I try to put cream cheese or jam on them, I have to steer with my knees, and if the phone rings, I've got a real problem. And I hired a Snickers bar once, I'll admit, but it made me feel so guilty I never did it again. But let me tell you, when I hire this milkshake, it is so viscous that it easily takes me 20 minutes to suck it up that thin little straw. It gives me something to do, and I'm still full at 10:00 a.m. It also fits in the cup holder.

It turns out that the milkshake does the job better than any of the competition. Surprise! The competition is not Burger King's milkshakes. The competition is bananas, doughnuts, bagels, Snickers bars, and in many cases, boredom. Why boredom? It was so inconvenient to get these milkshakes that people quite often just drove to work bored.

My observant colleague also learned that in the afternoon and evening, the milkshake tended to be hired for a very different job. In the evening, the milkshake was bought by fathers with their children and eaten with a meal inside the restaurant. Dad feels bad because he has been saying no to his kids all day, and he just wants to say yes to something. He says, "Sure, Spence, you can have a milkshake." Dad finishes his meal. Spence finishes his meal, and then he picks up that thick, viscous milkshake and it takes him forever to suck it up that thin straw. Dad waits patiently. Then Dad waits impatiently. Finally Dad says, "We've got to go," and he throws the shake away half consumed.

Suddenly, the milkshake is not a one-size-fits-all product. If you understand the job the product is being hired to perform, it's very simple to see which improvements to the product would get the job done better. For the morning job, for example, you would actually want to make the milkshake more viscous so it would take even longer to suck up the straw. You would stir in tiny chunks of fruit, not to make it healthy, because customers don't hire it to be healthy, but to add variety. Think about it. Every once in a while, you would suck up a piece of fruit, and it would add an air of unpredictability to the morning routine. You would also move the milkshake dispensing machine from behind the counter to the front and give people a prepaid swipe card so they could just dash in and go.

For more insight from Clay Christensen, see our new ITSMA Viewpoint, Achieving Growth Through Innovation: Marketing’s Leadership Role.

[ top ]On the Job

Acting on the Voice of the Customer: CDW's Community-Based Approach

By Meghann Wooster, info@itsma.com

Most companies assume they're giving customers what they want. All too frequently, those companies are kidding themselves. Since its founding in 1984, CDW, a $6 billion-plus technology reseller, has strived to put the customer at the heart of everything it does. Over the years, the company's research team invested millions of dollars collecting customer insights and determining the drivers of customer satisfaction, loyalty, and retention. Toward that goal, CDW employed a sophisticated arsenal of customer research techniques, including frequent customer loyalty surveys and focus groups.

However, like many companies, CDW found that competitive pressure was growing, customer spending was cautious, and the Web was dramatically changing the sales process. Despite all its investment in customer research, the company was aware that there were still things it didn't know about its customers. The loyalty data helped identify "bigger customer challenges" but was not specific enough that the company could act on more granular opportunities for improvement. CDW needed to find a way to truly understand what was important to customers and to uncover what it didn't know enough to ask.

CDW Turns to Private Online Communities

As Calvin Vass, senior manager of research at CDW, explored new methods to collect customer feedback in more intimate and continuous ways, he became intrigued by the idea of building private online communities for specific segments of CDW's customer base. He looked to Boston-based Communispace to make it happen.

According to Vass, "Building online communities for our customers made sense to us for two main reasons. First, they'd enable us to get continuous customer feedback rather than semiannual or ad hoc feedback. Second, they'd allow us to really drill down on a particular topic and get insight we could act on. When we act on the feedback we receive from our customers, it shows them that we're listening to them, that we really care. The communities enable us to do that."

How CDW's Communities Work

CDW launched its first online community in March 2004. A year later, the initial community was split into three separate communities: one each for small, medium, and large business customers. Today approximately 400 customers participate in each of these three communities. The company has also launched two additional communities: one for its K-12 market and one for higher education.

Unlike public forums, private communities are facilitated to ensure that conversations stay fresh and strategically relevant. Community-building and research activities keep members highly involved. Through a combination of online chat, surveys, and online focus groups, CDW elicits feedback from its community members on anything from their top IT priorities for 2007 to the topics they would like to see covered in the next issue of CDW's Biz Tech magazine or how they would spend CDW's marketing budget if they were the company's CMO.

On average, community members spend 30 minutes a week providing feedback to CDW and other community members through diverse activities, including completing surveys, participating in brainstorming sessions, offering advice, commenting on market trends, and sharing experiences.

Figure 1. Screen Shot from a CDW Community

Figure 1: CDW

Results

When CDW launched its first online community, the research team had to work hard to sell the value of the tool to the rest of the organization. Today, says Vass, that's no longer an issue. "Everyone wants to use the communities! Our biggest issue now is how to stagger all the activities everyone wants to do!"

In addition to the value that the communities provide to the business, it's also clear that the customer participants are benefiting as well. According to a recent survey, 84% of community members feel that their voice matters to CDW. And many have expressed how rewarding it is to see the company act on their feedback. As one community member put it, "I like the fact that a vendor cares about our opinions. If it helps make the service we receive better, then I'm all for it."

Another benefit of conducting customer research via online communities is that the voice of the customer is heard throughout the organization at a fraction of what it would cost to conduct traditional one-off surveys and focus groups. Vass estimates that the survey feature for the communities alone has saved the company about $3 million a year. Add to that the $6,000 average cost of a focus group—without company travel and expense to get geographical representation—and the company saves another estimated $1 million per year. This is more than four times the budget for CDW's online customer communities.

"Our online communities have revolutionized the way CDW interacts with customers," said Vass. "It's clear that customers today want to be heard. They want to collaborate with the companies that can help them succeed. Thanks to our online communities, our business strategy is more in tune with our customers' wants and needs than ever before, and that's a beautiful thing."

[ top ]EuroNotes

Making Partnerships Work: How to

By Robert Bailey, rbailey@itsma.com

Traditional partnering in the technology space has often focused on the use of partners to extend market reach—using partners in a "sell-through" model. But customers are demanding ever more sophisticated solutions that deliver business results rather than merely solve technology issues. Today's services providers are frequently required to collaborate with others to meet customer demands. Striking and developing these "sell-with" partnerships is not without its challenges, and at an ITSMA Roundtable in Paris last month, a number of European members got together to explore in greater detail best practices for creating successful partnerships.

Support From the Top

Many partnerships begin with good intentions but fail to deliver on their initial promise due to lack of senior-level buy-in and support from the start. All roundtable participants cited gaining this buy-in as a critical precursor for successful partnerships.

Ensure Strategic and Cultural Fit

Another critical step to creating a win-win partnership is to create an agreed vision for the partnership that links back to the overall business goals of both parties. These types of partnerships—the ones that are built around jointly identifying and meeting market opportunities, as opposed to opportunistic alliances struck around a specific customer bid—are much more likely to be successful, long-term affairs.

In addition to ensuring a strategic fit, however, it is also important to ensure that the partnering companies are a cultural fit. Conflicting metrics, differing management styles, or opposing attitudes on risk or investment philosophy can create major obstacles. Partners must also keep in mind that it is the strength of personal relationships at all levels that will hold the relationship together for the long term; therefore, they must work hard to build those personal connections.

Size Isn’t Everything

Remember that size or scale of operations does not necessarily dictate the scope of a potential partnership. Again, it is more important that the strategic fit of the partners and their respective contributions to the service proposition are equally relevant to the end user and target market.

Build a Joint Value Proposition

The next step in establishing a "sell-with" partnership is to identify a clear, differentiated joint value proposition. This is essential not only for communicating with customers; it also assists in minimising conflicts with other partners and programmes.

Educate and Communicate

Education and regular communication are also key to a partnership's success. This is especially true for services companies, which need to go to extra lengths to ensure the delivery of a consistent service experience. (It's much easier to ensure consistency with a sell-through approach whereby a partner acts as a reseller of a packaged "product" to the end customer.)

Participants at the Roundtable cited a number of activities to ensure that everyone involved in the partnership has a good handle on what it means and what it involves, including:

  • Executive briefings to all client-facing staff
  • Demos and training on capabilities
  • Easily accessible support materials—both physical and online

Trust Matters

As in any long-term relationship, openness and trust between partners (and in many cases clients, too) is essential if the partnership is to develop and grow over time. This requires considerable efforts where multiple country and business units are involved and should not be underestimated when embarking on the journey.

Keep Marketing's Role in Perspective

Finally, it is important for marketers to recognise that although marketing has a clear role to play in selecting and developing the partner portfolio, marketing should not own this relationship. A good test of an organisation’s commitment is the allocation of dedicated alliance management resources to be the ultimate owner of the partner relationship and nurture it over time.

[ top ] Research Desk

Ask ITSMA: What's the Difference Between Advisory Councils, Executives Forums, and Communities?

By Julie Schwartz, jschwartz@itsma.com

Each month, ITSMA receives a number of queries through Ask ITSMA, a resource designed to give members a quick and easy way to get insight on important services and solutions marketing questions they face. In this column, we will publish some of our favorite questions along with excerpts from our replies.

Question: How do you define the difference between advisory councils, executive forums, and communities?

Answer: Advisory councils typically comprise senior representatives from top customers, and they're designed specifically to provide ongoing input to guide a company's strategic direction. They might meet several times a year for a day or two and focus on major company issues and direction. They are typically led by top company executives (ideally the CEO) and provide participants with an opportunity to give feedback and have an impact on the company—which presumably they want to do since they are invested in the company's success.

Executive forums are typically one-off events or a finite series of events that bring together small groups of executives to focus more on industry or technology issues of interest. We're seeing an increase in marketing investment in these types of events, which often feature third-party experts as well as company representatives as the main speakers. They are very much relationship-building efforts rather than sales pitches but don't require the ongoing commitment from participants the way an advisory council would.

Communities are the most amorphous of the three, but typically they are demographic- or issues-based programs that try to bring together larger groups of people (customers for sure, but often other interested parties such as developers, VARs, and so forth) for ongoing dialogue and education. Some are more online oriented, others more face to face. They typically bring together lower-level participants than the councils and forums—often IT directors and managers or people from other functions. Communities can be effective in building relationships with a larger number of people than face-to-face programs allow; they can also be effective for gathering information about customers and their perceptions of the company and its offerings on a more continuous basis than one-off surveys allow.

Because each of these relationship-building programs is targeted at a different audience, ITSMA recommends that companies should be leveraging all three, in addition to other customer-facing activities such as reference programs, satisfaction surveys, and other primary research.

 
  Do you have a services marketing question?
Visit Ask ITSMA to access our experience, insight, and research results.
 
 

[ top ] News & Notes

ITSMA Welcomes Four New Members

By Meghann Wooster, info@itsma.com

We'd like to extend a big welcome to four new members of ITSMA:

  • CGI, an information technology and business process services firm
  • First Data, a large provider of merchant processing services
  • Hexaware, a specialized IT and BPO service provider
  • LexisNexis, a provider of information management and workflow solutions

We're also happy to note that we've confirmed a number of speakers for ITSMA's Marketing Leadership Forum on May 22 and 23 in Berkeley, CA. They include:

  • Joann Duguid, Vice President, Solutions & Sector Marketing, Americas, IBM
  • Steven J. Garrou, Director, Solutions Marketing, Unisys Global Infrastructure Services
  • Terry Gebert, Vice President and General Manager, Manufacturing and Process Solutions, Rockwell Automation
  • John Hagel, Author, Senior Advisor to McKinsey & Co., and President of John Hagel and Associates, LLC
  • Robert Mattis, Vice President, Management Services, Pitney Bowes

Anyone who registers to attend the Marketing Leadership Forum before Monday, April 9 will receive a 10% discount, so sign up now at www.ITSMA.com/leadershipforum.

Subscription Information

ITSMA E-ZINE is a monthly email newsletter that provides highlights of new ITSMA research, analysis, ideas, tools, and events relating to marketing and selling technology services and solutions. ITSMA E-ZINE is available without charge and is sent only to opt-in subscribers.

Subscriptions are available in text and HTML versions. To SUBSCRIBE or to change the format of your subscription, visit http://www.itsma.com/aspfiles/press/ezine.asp.

To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email us at unsubscribe@itsma.com or mail us at ITSMA Subscriptions, 420 Bedford Street, Suite 110, Lexington, MA 02420, USA.

Branch information for recipients located in Europe: ITSMA, 8 Mount Ephraim, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. TN4 8AS. Company No: FC023364 Branch No: BR006173. Branch registered in England and Wales. VAT Number GB 840 4681 32.

Back issues of ITSMA E-ZINE are available at http://www.itsma.com/News/ezine/default.htm.

(c) Copyright 2007, ITSMA

Please forward this newsletter, but only in its entirety.

Public citation or publication of any information herein is encouraged but subject to U.S. and international copyright law and conventions. Any citation must include full attribution to ITSMA. Individual graphics or paragraphs can be published without permission as long as attribution to ITSMA is included. Publication of longer selections or complete articles requires ITSMA permission. For permission or more information, contact pr@itsma.com

HOME  |  Insight  |  Research  |  Consulting  |  Training  |  Events  |  Members  |  About Us  |  Site Map  |  Site Search
Phone: 1-888-ITSMA92 (Outside the U.S. +1-781-862-8500)
Feedback  |  Privacy Policy  |  © 2009 Copyright ITSMA. All Rights Reserved.