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In the July 2007 issue:

 
 

Editor's Note

What's Your Personal Brand Equity Score?

By Meghann Wooster, info@itsma.com

As marketers, we're all used to thinking about how to build brand equity for the companies that employ us. How can we make more people aware of our company and its capabilities? How can we make them more apt to choose our company over the competition? How can we make sure that every time they think of us, they get a warm, fuzzy feeling that makes them want to buy, buy, buy?

A few days ago, ITSMA published a new Marketing Tool that helps marketers calculate their companies' brand equity scores. This got me thinking about how to measure my own personal brand equity, so I found an "Online Identity Calculator" that gave me a score based on how many times my name showed up in a Google search and how many of those entries were relevant to me and my area of expertise.

One could argue that this "online identity" score is equivalent to the awareness and possibly even the familiarity metric that goes into ITSMA's Brand Equity Index. But measuring preference is much harder to do and is more about the quality of your references than the number of hits you turn up on the Web. (LinkedIn can be a useful tool for aggregating references and testimonials about your performance.)

So keep getting your (and your company's) name out there, but remember: Awareness is nice, but it doesn't pay the bills.

[ top ]What's Hot

Combating Commoditization and Upholding Value: Marketing's Role in Shaping Negotiation Strategy

By Jeff Sands and Meghann Wooster,  jsands@itsma.com, info@itsma.com

Buyers today are aggressive. As recent ITSMA research shows, they want their B2B technology and services providers to be reliable, competent, and responsive, but they also want low prices. According to Julie Schwartz, senior vice president of thought leadership and research at ITSMA, "It used to be that low cost was equated with poor quality. But now, with globalization and the advent of offshoring, this just isn't the case anymore."

Low cost providers

At the same time, systems companies, software providers, consulting firms, systems integrators, telcom and networking firms, and others are increasingly vying for the same business, and converging technologies have eliminated competitive restrictions based on place or time. The sales force is no longer selling to the IT director based on "speeds and feeds" but is instead facing senior business buyers who care less about features and functionality and more about business value. Deals are bigger, opportunities are fewer, and the sales cycle is longer and more complex. The sales force is struggling to adapt.

A Vicious Circle

According to a new research study by the Strategic Account Management Association (SAMA) and Think! Inc., a vast majority (80%) of the 361 study respondents said that "they see mounting irrational competitive behavior, such as competitors drastically lowering prices or giving away services." This type of behavior, added Barrett Moore, a negotiation consultant at Think! Inc., is a problem because "giving away value tarnishes brand perception and signals competitors to do the same, lowering margins for everyone."

Only 9% of the study's respondents reported that "they have a well-defined strategy to respond to competitive behaviors like drastically lowering prices or giving away services," and a mere 5% of them "rated their capability in customer negotiation as highly effective." To break the irrational sales circle they're caught in, companies must develop a clear negotiation strategy.

Turning the Ship Around

The report stresses that, contrary to popular belief, negotiation is much more than "a set of soft skills made up of reactive verbal tactics … [It's] also about far more than determining mere price for volume. It's about everything you have to offer that the competition doesn't, from length of contract to delivery and from follow-up to customer support and service." In other words, positioning plays a large role in strategic negotiation, and this is where marketing must be involved.

Effective positioning starts with a thorough understanding of market and customer needs. Marketers need to conduct research that gives them a solid understanding of what their customers value so that they can ensure that the company develops relevant offerings and is able to articulate their value in a language that customers will understand. In addition, it's extremely important for marketers to know how customers perceive their company in relation to competitors. This knowledge enables the company to sharpen competitive differentiation, which is essential to avoiding commoditization.

Next, marketers need to create clear and compelling value propositions for each and every product, service, and solution the company offers, and they need to make sure that this information is available to sales in the formats sales finds most useful and instructive. Obviously, the more closely marketing and sales collaborate, the better the results will be. For example, companies that employ Account-Based Marketing (ABM)—an approach that treats an individual account as a market in its own right—at this stage of the game are able to target value props not just to a certain customer segment, but to specific individuals within specific customer accounts. This strengthens the sales rep's position during negotiation and leads to better results.

Once the value proposition for any given offering has been created, the company must determine what negotiation success should look like. The SAMA/Think! Inc. study recommends that leaders from across the company's silos come together to establish what a successful negotiation looks like for each of them as well as what the collective vision needs to be. For example, product management might be entirely pleased if a sales rep sells software to a customer and throws in maintenance services for free. Maintenance, finance, and services marketing, on the other hand, will not be happy. There need to be clear boundaries around what can and cannot be offered during negotiations. Together with sales, marketing can take the lead on initiating these cross-functional meetings.

Marketing will probably be less involved in defining the negotiation process for the sales force, but this is also, according to the study, a critical step in combating commoditization and upholding value. In fact, Moore has seen companies experience a 200% ROI within six months of making improvements to their negotiation strategies and processes.

So don't ignore the irrational behavior of your sales team; by taking the steps outlined in this article, marketers can help break the vicious circle of discounting and giving away services for free.

[ top ] New Thinking

Marketing to CIOs: An Interview with ITSMA's Chris Koch

We recently sat down with Chris Koch, former executive editor of CIO magazine and ITSMA’s new associate director of research and thought leadership, to discuss the four CIO "archetypes" and what these archetypes mean for technology marketers.

ITSMA: While you were at CIO, you wrote about four CIO "archetypes." Could you tell us about them?

Koch: I should preface this by saying that the archetypes describe four different skill sets that bring value to an organization above and beyond the basic ability to run IT as an efficient utility. An actual CIO won’t be constrained to one archetype but will likely have a combination of the different skills described. The four archetypes are:

  • The operational expert. This CIO has the most traditional set of IT skills: making sure the computers and networks are running properly, maintaining and upgrading software, and fulfilling new project requests from the business. These CIOs distinguish themselves by excelling at project management—delivering on time and on budget. However, if their company views IT as strategic, these skills might not be enough. CEOs yearn for CIOs who can go beyond the pure technology operational role and think strategically about the business. That is why, increasingly, you tend to see this type of CIO at companies that do not see IT as strategic or at companies that are smaller and resource constrained.
  • The business leader. This CIO is more focused on the business than is the operational expert; he or she possesses a solid knowledge of business processes and strives to use IT to improve these processes to demonstrate real business returns. Indeed, some of these CIOs have taken on additional business operational responsibilities for functions or processes that rely heavily on IT—supply chain, for example. This CIO has good interpersonal skills, interacts frequently with other C-level executives, and may emphasize IT governance as a tool for aligning with the business—forming a cross-functional executive committee, for example, that meets regularly to discuss IT and business issues.
  • The turnaround artist. With a deep background in IT operations and consulting, this CIO's top priority is to "turn around a sinking IT ship." Change management is therefore a top priority: How do you maintain morale when outsourcing, cutting staff, or bringing in a new team? Turnaround artists possess very strong motivational and leadership qualities, and they're able to give the organization a sense of confidence that its IT transformation will have serious benefits in the long term, even if the measures it must take to get there are painful in the short term. Due to the nature of their mission, these CIOs tend to have short tenures—averaging about three years—at any given company. Aggressive, impatient, and eager to perform their next great feat, these CIOs are easily bored—if you don't tell them their job is done, they might tell you.
  • The innovation agent. This CIO can be found at companies that genuinely love and "get" IT, often smaller companies that are willing to experiment and take risks. Innovation agents are strategic thinkers, planners, and great salespeople who can convince their companies to take a risk on IT. (In fact, these CIOs frequently have sales and marketing experience.) They are less interested in "keeping the lights on," focusing instead on driving real innovation. The innovation agent tends to focus on customer-facing systems because they have the most direct payback, but because of his or her risk-loving personality, this CIO could promise results that he or she ultimately can't deliver.

ITSMA: Is one of these archetypes more prevalent than the others?

Koch: Right now, we tend to see a lot of CIOs who fall into the "business leader" category. All CIOs are expected to "keep the lights on," so pure operational experts aren't in high demand anymore—at least among companies that view IT as a strategic asset. Turnaround agents are highly prized—their compensation is highest of the archetypes—but they tend not to be in it for the long haul. And most companies today aren't ready for innovation agents; they still spend between 70% and 95% of their IT budget on "keeping the lights on," leaving a mere 30% or less for potential innovation. It's the business leader CIOs who can achieve operational excellence and ensure that the company's IT strategy aligns with the goals of the business that are most common.

ITSMA: What are the implications of these archetypes for marketers?

Koch: Being aware of the CIO archetypes can help marketers better target their messages. Most marketers today are aware that if they have a product or service that can help companies align IT with business goals, that message resonates with a lot of CIOs. Marketers can also help sales account teams better understand the type of CIO they're dealing with, which can enable them to identify appropriate offers, talk about those offers in the language that will most appeal to the specific CIO they're dealing with, and close more deals. For example, marketers could develop a sales tool that maps out how to classify CIOs into the different archetypes based on personal information such as educational background and work experience and on characteristics of the organization at which the CIO is employed, including size, financial performance, and so on.

Another tip for marketers: The cost-cutting mentality that was applied to IT after the dot-com bust has become more or less permanent in most companies. Good CIOs are expected to take money out of their IT operational "utility" (networks, hardware, maintenance, etc.) each year, regardless of the economic situation. The good news is that constantly plummeting hardware and bandwidth costs make that possible; the bad news is that businesses often take those savings out of IT rather than reinvesting them in new or improved IT capabilities. Marketers who can offer solutions that reduce operational costs while adding new capabilities will find a ready market among CIOs, who need help building a business case for innovation.

[ top ]On the Job

Building Stronger Relationships: Account-Based Marketing at Xerox

By Julie Schwartz, jschwartz@itsma.com

In early 2004, Xerox Global Services faced a number of challenges as it worked to build stronger relationships with its largest accounts. Sales teams were confident about how to sell Xerox equipment but hadn't found an effective way to talk about and sell the company's consulting and outsourcing expertise. Sales were made opportunistically, with little planning or strategy around how to sell the company's consulting services, and marketing was underused, viewed simply as a source for collateral and sales tools.

Aware that it needed to make changes, Xerox decided to pilot Account-Based Marketing (ABM)—a practice ITSMA introduced four years ago that treats an individual account as a market in its own right—in order to:

  • Compel marketing and sales to work more closely with each other
  • Increase services opportunities and revenue within Xerox's largest accounts
  • Strengthen and deepen relationships with the company's top customers

ITSMA's Model for Account-Based Marketing

Phase 1: Program Planning and Design

It was immediately clear that Xerox lacked sufficient information to select the right pilot accounts for its ABM program. The company hired an outside firm to help develop account profiles, which contain publicly held information such as account financials and organization structure, as well as deeper research into such issues as the account's perceptions of Xerox, its buying behaviors, and its cultural dynamics.

Using the account profiles as a common source of information, Xerox selected three pilot accounts—two in financial services and one in manufacturing—based on two major criteria:

  • Which accounts presented the best opportunities for growth
  • Which accounts had Xerox sales teams that were:
    • Ready to embrace services as their selling focus
    • Ready to embrace marketing as a full partner

Phase 2: Account-Specific Project Implementation

Understanding and Analyzing Accounts

The account profiles carried their importance past the account selection phase, becoming an ongoing information resource for sales representatives, sales support staff, and even marketing managers.

After considering the profiles, the ABM teams for each of the pilot accounts entered into account-specific workshops facilitated by ITSMA. A unique aspect of this process is the involvement of executives from the target account, who help define, quantify, and validate the business issues the target account is facing.

Defining and Selecting Plays

Next, the ABM team focused on how an expanded relationship with Xerox would be beneficial for the target accounts. The approach centered on stepping into the customer's perspective and identifying the services niche it needs filled. As a result, Xerox was later able to tailor its offerings and sales efforts directly to that need, rather than trying to create a need for Xerox's preexisting offerings. In ABM lingo, these tailored offerings are known as "plays."

Building, Executing, and Measuring the Sales and Marketing Plan

Within the account-specific workshops, the Xerox ABM teams evaluated a variety of campaigns and tactics, ultimately selecting those most appropriate for each account, each play, and specific individuals within each account.

Like any initiative, ABM plans are only as good as their execution. At Xerox, the key success factors during the implementation of the pilots included:

  • Committed resources from both sales and marketing
  • Strong project management
  • Close collaboration between sales and marketing

To measure success, Xerox built a scorecard that included, among other things, new executive relationships formed and new opportunities generated for consulting sales. Xerox determined a baseline for each criterion and designated performance targets over multiple years.

Phase 3: Program Management and Evaluation

Xerox's initial three pilots were very successful, generating:

  • A 200% increase in new services opportunities
  • A 400% increase in new executive meetings
  • A 200% increase in making the shortlist for services

With these results under its belt, Xerox decided to continue to invest in ABM and is in the midst of scaling the program. Its goals for 2007 include 100% growth in the number of accounts year over year and expanded geographical reach.

Overall, Account-Based Marketing has allowed Xerox to build stronger relationships with key clients, form a new strategic partnership between sales and marketing, and broaden awareness of Xerox's consulting capabilities.

[ top ]EuroNotes

Strengthening Brand Differentiation

By Robert Bailey, rbailey@itsma.com

We're all familiar with the reasons that differentiation has become so important in the technology, communications, and professional services sectors: a maturing market, a plethora of providers, converging technologies, an ever-increasing amount of readily available information … the list could go on and on. But what are the real issues people face when entering the realms of differentiation? And how are these issues compounded when you look at the regional model?

Global vs. Local

The European market is very complex. The range of cultures, languages, and country sizes (and relative importance) presents a significant challenge in approaching brand differentiation and brand management in the region. There is considerable debate as to how much autonomy EMEA branches of global companies really have to adapt branding. There's even a question of whether this type of flexibility is desirable, given the challenges it entails: cost-oriented constraints, local language issues, and subtle cultural nuances, to name but a few.

Most people agree, however, that global organisations should present consistent core values through their global brand while at the same time providing an umbrella under which a degree of localisation can be adopted to account for the different markets and cultures they serve.

Brand Life-Cycle Considerations

It is widely accepted that successful global brands benefit from longevity, evolving over the years while still retaining and communicating the core values and essence of the brand. This relative stability is beneficial in many ways but is also potentially limiting with regard to the speed and degree of change at local market levels that often sets companies apart in competitive market sectors.

As with all things, you have to get the framework right to ensure that the core brand and its values are consistent, but by allowing localisation through the delivery of the brand—whether a local campaign, the office worker answering the phone, or the maintenance guy sent to the customer's premises—you can more closely align with the behaviours expected in the local market.

Choosing the Right Message

In some areas such as emerging convergence technologies, the very pace and complexity of technological evolution may offer companies an opportunity to differentiate through focus on simplification—minimising uncertainty, lowering risk, and accompanying clients on their journey as a trusted advisor. This route is one we have seen demonstrated by Fujitsu Services, which differentiates based on its straightforward, commonsense approach to doing business rather than specific offerings or capabilities. This type of experience-based differentiation has struck a chord with Fujitu's customers; they trust the company's marketing messages around its pragmatic, honest approach and are thus much more receptive to engaging with the Fujitsu Services brand.

Reputation Matters

As is apparent from the Fujitsu Services example, what you say about your company is only half the story. The other half is what other people say about you—your reputation. And reputation is established via services delivery and client and employee experiences.

Services and solutions companies often find it challenging to deliver a consistently superiour delivery or customer experience due to the involvement of multiple business units, partners, and/or end users. Strong internal and partner communications and training programs can help ensure that your customer experience supports the brand promise, regardless of who is doing the delivery.

Online Reputation Management

Building a strong reputation is rooted in delivering a superiour offering and customer experience, but it doesn't stop there. Reputation management is especially important today, given the proliferation of online tools and channels such as blogs, podcasts, social networks, and so on. Education and awareness of new channels and media must be key considerations of any effective brand differentiation strategy. Furthermore, companies must also develop a plan for the ongoing management of the influencer community. It's very difficult to influence the way your brand is presented in the rapidly evolving online space, and the longer you wait, the harder it gets.

In addition to the online angle, the power and effectiveness of focus in building and maintaining a superior reputation should not be ignored. Account-Based Marketing, an approach that treats an individual account as a market in its own right, is a very effective and compelling way to manage brand differentiation at the customer level.

Live the Brand

Ultimately, the best tool you have at your disposal in building your brand is your company's ability to connect on an emotional and trusted basis with people such as employees, external stakeholders, influencers, and customers. Live the brand, and the brand will live on.

[ top ] Research Desk

Thought Leadership: A Key to Business Development

By Zack Baginski, zbaginski@itsma.com

We all know that thought leadership is important. In fact, in a recent ITSMA survey, 97% of respondents said that thought leadership contributes to their companies winning business. Seventy-six percent said that thought leadership has become more important in the last two years, and 65% saw an increase in their 2007 thought leadership development budget over last year.

However, only 12% of respondents felt that their thought leadership was comparatively better than that of their competitors. ITSMA's research uncovered several factors that can help companies improve the quality of their thought leadership:

  • A systemized, formal thought leadership development process. Most companies said they lack a system to evaluate, screen, and promote the thought leadership that is created across the company. A formal process—with assigned responsibilities, goals, funding, and executive oversight—can be highly beneficial.
  • A dedicated thought leadership organization. Three-fourths of those surveyed said they lack a separate organization charged with developing thought leadership. Although broad organizational support is crucial to the success of any initiative, a steering group—composed of both internal staff and partners—can be very helpful. Such a committee can identify issues of importance to clients and targets, drive a research agenda, help design surveys, conduct interviews, and work on idea development.
  • A balanced focus on thought leadership development and delivery. Companies are spending more time on packaging, marketing, and disseminating thought leadership than on developing the content itself. This is a mistake! What good is getting your company's name "out there" if the content is stale, unexciting, or irrelevant to your target audience? Companies need to develop thought leadership that builds competitive advantage with respect to their strengths and resources. Marketing, typically the disseminator of thought leadership, can and should also be involved in helping to select, research, and develop appropriate thought leadership topics.

Methods to develop thought leadership

  • Incentives. Most respondents (95% of those representing products and services companies, in fact) said they lack incentives for people in the field to develop thought leadership. Incentives are important to capture attention and reward desired actions, but they must be chosen wisely. For example, aligning annual bonuses to thought leadership development may increase its quantity, but not its quality.
  • Improved measurement of results. Among the top measures used to track the effectiveness of thought leadership were downloads, press hits, and inquiries about the content. Measures like these are indirect and don’t show how thought leadership impacts the bottom line: 94% of respondents said they are unable to track the ROI on their thought leadership activities. Though it might not be easy, attempts to align the use of thought leadership with demand generation, pipeline development, and closed deals will have greater relevance.

Measure thought leadership activities

For more information, check out our recent Web Briefing on thought leadership.

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

[ top ] News & Notes

A Busy Summer at ITSMA

By Meghann Wooster, info@itsma.com

Things have been busy here at ITSMA so far this summer. We've welcomed a new member to the fold, along with a new staff member and a number of speakers for our Annual Marketing Conference on November 14 and 15, 2007. (Save the date!)

Here are the details of our latest happenings:

  • Our newest member is CompuCom Systems, an IT outsourcing company that provides infrastructure management services, application services, systems integration, and consulting services as well as the procurement and management of hardware and software. Please join us in welcoming them to ITSMA!
  • We're pleased to announce that Chris Koch, an award-winning writer and editor, has joined ITSMA as the associate director of thought leadership and research. Chris most recently served as executive editor for CIO, a trade magazine for chief information officers and other IT leaders with a circulation of 150,000, where he explored the intersection of information technology and business. We're thrilled to have him on the team.
  • The agenda for our Annual Marketing Conference on November 14 and 15 in Cambridge, MA, is shaping up nicely. We already have a fantastic list of speakers lined up to present at the event. Confirmed speakers include:
    • Lynn Anderson, Vice President, Influencer Marketing, Hewlett-Packard
    • Chip Heath, Co-author, Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die
    • Robert Painter, Vice President, Marketing, IBM Business Consulting Services
    • Paul Rand, Executive Board Member, WOMMA, and President and CEO, Zócalo Group
    • Bruce Richardson, Chief Research Officer, AMR Research
    • Julie Schwartz, Senior Vice President, Thought Leadership & Research, ITSMA
    • Srinivas Uppaluri, Head of Global Corporate Marketing, Infosys
    • Connie Weaver, Executive Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer, BearingPoint

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