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In the October 2007 issue:

 
 

Editor's Note

Making Marketing "Sticky"

By Meghann Wooster, info@itsma.com

I had the opportunity earlier this week to attend a talk that Chip Heath, co-author of Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die, gave to a room full of B2B marketers on what makes marketing sticky. (Hint: The answer wasn’t a bigger budget or better PR.)

According to Heath, there are six principles for making marketing messages stick in the minds of customers, prospects, and other influencers:

  1. Simplicity
  2. Unexpectedness
  3. Concreteness
  4. Credibility
  5. Ability to evoke an emotional response
  6. Story format

Obviously, there are a few big challenges here for services marketers. For starters, services are intangible and therefore hard to describe in concrete terms. Services offerings are also complex and therefore difficult to explain in simple words and phrases. And IT marketers get a very bad rap when it comes to making credible claims. (Eighty-one percent of the CIOs surveyed by the CIO Executive Council in the spring of 2006 said that technology vendors either overstate or wildly overstate their capabilities.)

All of this is to say that most of us (myself included) could learn a thing or two from Chip. Luckily for us, he’ll be delivering the keynote address at ITSMA’s Annual Marketing Conference in Boston on November 14 and 15—and attendees will even get a free copy of his book.

So join us in November to learn more about the six principles of stickiness. I guarantee that Chip Heath won’t disappoint!

[ top ]What's Hot

Personalize It, Please

By Chris Koch,  ckoch@itsma.com

For many people, the lure of social networks like MySpace, Facebook, and LinkedIn is the opportunity to express their individuality and creativity. The same holds true for all the social media tools emerging on the Web, from the avatars of Second Life to the mindless chatter of Twitter. People are drawn to the opportunity to personalize their online appearance and experience, and the bigger the crowd, the more people long to stand out.

This motivation should not be lost on B2B marketers. As customers—especially younger ones—come to expect rich and personalized online experiences in their leisure hours, they will expect it of their services and solutions providers as well. Findings from ITSMA’s recent survey, How Customers Choose, demonstrate that personalization is a factor in the degree to which customers value the emerging digital media offerings from their B2B providers. Though many of these tools are crude and experience and expertise in deploying some of them are limited, marketers who don’t personalize their marketing will miss out on an opportunity to reach customers more directly—and with lower costs—than more traditional marketing vehicles offer.

How Personalization Plays into Loyalty

Perhaps the clearest evidence of customers’ hunger for more personalized information from providers is their clear rejection of traditional, undifferentiated one-to-many communications. Of the 346 technology buyers surveyed by ITSMA, 83% said they no longer read unsolicited e-mail. Okay, so maybe that’s not very surprising. But here’s where personalization plays into the picture: Asked if they would read unsolicited marketing materials that contain ideas that might be relevant to their businesses, such as success stories, research reports, and Webinar invitations, 75% said they would.

Now, here’s the interesting (and in some ways scary) part: Asked if they would pay attention to these marketing materials even if they were from solution providers they had not previously done business with, a whopping 92% said they’d take a look. Think you can take your loyal customers for granted by giving them generic marketing campaigns? Think again.

Of course, this means marketing must work harder than ever to maintain customer loyalty. And the more personalized that content is, the better—especially when it comes to digital content. When we asked respondents to rate the value of digital supplier-sponsored programs, they ranked them as follows, from most valuable to least valuable:

  • Dedicated client extranets
  • Social networking
  • Blogging

Of the three, extranets clearly have the best possibilities for personalization, given the nascent state of social networking technology and the one-to-many positioning of most corporate blogs. But that said, digital personalization technologies have not yet developed to their full potential, and exposure to them is relatively low. (For example, 74% of respondents participate in executive-level business events, whereas only 16% have their own provider-supplied extranets.) In part, that’s because providers aren’t up to speed on the technology. Indeed, in a recent survey by McKinsey, only 36% of 410 respondents from provider companies said they were using digital tools or techniques as part of their sales management or advertising marketing programs. And 41% said they had insufficient internal capabilities to handle digital marketing programs.

This should not be construed as a lack of interest on the part of marketers in taking their digital marketing to a higher level. A recent survey by analyst company Aberdeen Group found that 64% of nearly 300 respondents plan to deliver personalized content and products to specific market segments.

Evolving Beyond Email

Today, email is the dominant channel for delivering personalized digital marketing strategies, mostly because it’s relatively simple to automate the campaigns. But personalized Websites (a.k.a. microsites) and customized landing pages for customers—both of which have much more potential to build and maintain customer relationships—are gaining momentum. They are held back by the relative lack of tools for automating the process, though such tools are becoming available.

Building in-depth user profiles is critically important to building a valuable microsite or relevant landing page. These profiles should include such information as pages visited, past purchases, sales relationships, and service interactions. But marketers need to remember that it’s as important to get content to visitors based on what they do when they get to the site as it is to track their past history. Their goals for their next visit may have little or nothing to do with the information they sought the last time around. For example, a visitor might be seeking information on computer printers during one visit and networking services the next time. Filling the screen with suggested links to printers during the second visit won’t make the experience seem more personal.

Automated personalization has a long way to go: Just 17% of the Aberdeen respondents are able to change Website content dynamically in response to the real-time actions of a visitor. And there are security and privacy concerns; 39% of the Aberdeen respondents cited them as a roadblock. But an effective response to those concerns is to give customers more control over their profile—the kind of personalization they enjoy on Facebook and LinkedIn.

It’s important to begin experimenting with online personalization, because one day, online interactions are going to approach the kind of intimacy and value of in-person executive meetings—at a fraction of the cost. But even today, customers are increasingly looking to the Web to make their purchasing decisions, and when they do, you need to make sure they find exactly what they are looking for.

[ top ] New Thinking

"We" Are Smarter Than "Me": An Interview with Barry Libert

We recently sat down with Barry Libert, CEO of Shared Insights, a provider of community education, management, and services, and co-author of We Are Smarter Than Me, a new book on how communities are changing the face of business, to talk about the unique way in which the book was written and why its message is important to marketers today.

ITSMA: Barry, tell us about how you came up with the idea to write a book on a wiki with more than 4,000 contributors.

Libert: Shared Insights started building communities for clients back in 2001, so we’re firm believers in the wisdom of crowds. A few years later, we partnered up with Wharton, MIT, and Pearson to tap into their communities to write about how employee and customer communities are beginning to impact traditional business processes.

ITSMA: Sounds like it was a real case of practicing what you preach. Logistically, how did it work? How did you get the community’s input and make something meaningful out of it?

Libert: We invited over a million students, faculty, and alumni from Wharton, MIT, and a few other places to participate in our wiki-based community. Of those million people, 4,375 registered as members of the community, where we asked them to share their insights about why community approaches work or don't work when it comes to marketing, business development, distribution, etc. We also asked them what companies have to do to make communities work better. People not only contributed content, they also provided their opinions on how we should structure the book and organize the chapters.

We’d anticipated that most of the submissions would come through the book wiki, but in the end we got a ton of content from the discussion forums, podcasts, blog posts, emails, and in-person comments. Narrowing thousands of pages down into a digestible book-length manuscript was very difficult, and we actually brought in professional writers to help us do that.

We ended up organizing the book around basic business functions such as sales, marketing, and product development and included case study examples of companies that are outsourcing some of their capabilities in these areas not to India or China, but to communities of people, such as customers, who have a vested interest in them.

ITSMA: What benefits of leveraging communities did your book community identify?

Libert: Communities can be very helpful during the offer development process. For example, Dell IdeaStorm is a community site that helps Dell gauge which ideas are most important and most relevant to the public. By engaging with a community, companies can "open source" the design of their offers and ensure that they’re giving their customers exactly what they want. For marketers, customer communities obviously hold tremendous potential in terms of word of mouth, recommendations, and referrals.

ITSMA: Community-based marketing is still quite new. What new skills will marketers need to possess as communities gain more importance within the business world?

Libert: The first thing they need is a new mindset. Historically, marketing has been about creating and broadcasting messages to customers and prospects. Communities change all that, because they turn the customers into the marketers. In the future, marketers will need to be facilitators. They’ll have to get used to letting customers design and deliver the company’s messages. It’s a very different mindset than marketers currently have.

ITSMA: How are you planning on marketing and promoting the book?

Libert: We’ll be marketing the book through the community that created it. Pre-orders are just starting to ship this week, and the book will hit stores in mid-October, so the journey has just begun. But our community is already blogging and podcasting about it, we’re doing some interesting things in Facebook, and we’re planning on using interactive media, virtual roundtables, "unconferences," and so forth to generate interest and spread the word.

More information about We Are Smarter Than Me is available at www.wearesmarterthanme.com.

[ top ]On the Job

Addressing the Midsize Market: Avaya’s Three-Pronged Approach

By Meghann Wooster, info@itsma.com

The midsize business segment of the IT industry is growing faster than any other segment, but Avaya’s share of the market declined from 2002 to 2004. In response, the company created a Midsize Business Focus team led by Kevin Cook, Avaya’s vice president of North American Sales, to assess the right solutions for the midsize market, the right focus on the sales channel, and the proper organizational structure to support long-term sales success. This cross-functional team embarked on a multi-year, multi-step initiative to accomplish a wholesale change in how Avaya approached the midsize market.

Step One: Understand the Issues

Cook’s team knew that before they could implement change, they needed to understand why Avaya’s share of the midsize market was not on target with the company’s expectations. As they performed extensive research with both customers and channel partners, it became clear that gaps in Avaya’s solutions portfolio needed to be filled with value propositions that were the right fit for the midsize market.

Utilizing research completed by Avaya’s corporate marketing group, it became clear to the team that the midsize market needed to be segmented further into three sub segments:

  • Basic communicators
  • Mainstream communicators
  • Strategic communicators

Interviews with Avaya resellers revealed that channel partners were comfortable selling Avaya’s solutions to the strategic sub segment of the midsize market, but didn’t feel that Avaya had the right offers for the basic and mainstream groups.

One of the short-term, stop-gap initiatives that the company implemented immediately was the Takeshare Program, a promotional pricing initiative that allowed Avaya to aggressively improve market position and test the input they were receiving from their channel partners—information that proved to be critical. The company attributes the success of this program to clear, honest, and focused communication with and from its channel partners.

To achieve a high level of valuable information, training its Avaya channel account managers was particularly critical. The managers were trained to discuss what Avaya’s position was in the midmarket, the company’s long term plans for change, and how the partners could use the program to win in deals where they typically could not compete. To ensure a clear and consistent message, Avaya’s channel account managers met with each of their partners to review the program, including specific examples of how to use the program to their advantage in competing to win customers through rebates and how to adjust pricing of existing Avaya offers to make them more attractive to basic and mainstream communicators within the midsize market.

The Avaya team then executed an aggressive marketing campaign around the TakeShare Program. The campaign was designed to inform Avaya’s channel partners of the company’s current position in the midsize segment and train Avaya resellers to pursue midsize opportunities that they may not have previously considered worthwhile.

Since its inception in early 2005, the TakeShare Program has driven in more than $150 million in incremental revenue.

Step Two: Build Midsize Solutions

Despite the success of the TakeShare Program, Cook’s team knew that, in the long run, they needed to create a portfolio of offerings that were built specifically for the midsize market, especially in the mainstream communicators segment. To meet the needs of this particular market, Avaya’s solution needed to have the right level of sophistication, but not the complexity that a small staff of IT personnel at a midsize company might find difficult to manage. It needed to be easy for the channel to sell it, and easy for customers to purchase and use it.

Again, Avaya called on its community of certified resellers for input. The result was MultiVantage® Express, a solution that integrates the company’s call processing software and Avaya Communication Manager, along with applications such as conferencing, messaging, mobility, and call center. It’s very easy to design—the purchaser only has to answer how many and what type of phones they desire—and all the applications are integrated into one server to reduce the maintenance cost and effort. Furthermore, implementing MultiVantage Express isn’t nearly as difficult or time-consuming as implementing an enterprise-level solution.

Avaya knew that properly marketing to the midsize segment was essential to success. To that end, it created a Website specifically for the midsize business customer, as well as a midsize-focused section on Avaya’s channel portal. The sites contain information, white papers, and demos. Channel partners can also find appropriate midsize reference customers and a Small and Midsize Positioning Guide, which helps them determine if a prospect’s company is a basic, mainstream, or strategic communicator and also helps them identify the most relevant Avaya offering.

Due in large part to the creation of the TakeShare program and MultiVantage Express, line shipments of Avaya’s midsize portfolio grew 17 percent from 2005 to 2006.

Step Three: Organize for Growth

To ensure that its focus on the midsize market remains sharp, Avaya created the Midmarket Solution team, with focused responsibility for this segment. The team’s responsibility includes end-to-end global solutions targeted at this growing and competitively-contested customer segment, including coordinating packaging, pricing, positioning, requirements, and go-to-market for the midmarket portfolio components.

In April 2007, the solution team’s efforts bore fruit, with the launch of two new applications:

  • Avaya Customer Interaction Express, a customer contact application designed for midsize call centers of 20 to 100 agents.
  • Avaya Meeting Exchange Express, a mid-level conferencing and collaboration offering that provides industry-standard conferencing.

Avaya’s three-pronged approach to addressing the midsize market has been very successful, with a significant increase in its midsize revenues.

"One of the best things about the experience," said Jeff Koehler, Avaya Midmarket Channel Director, "is that we’ve reinforced our belief in listening closely to our channel partners. Partner input through the entire solution development process was vital to ensuring that these offerings speak to the market and meet customer needs, and we’ll continue to engage with our partners as we move forward with this critical market segment."

[ top ] Research Desk

Ask ITSMA: How Can We Grow Our Support Services Business?

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: Although my company’s support services business is profitable today, customer buying behavior is changing and we’re worried about sustaining profitability and growth into the future. What can we do to ensure continued growth?

Answer: It’s true that customer behavior is changing. Recent ITSMA research shows that customers are increasingly asking for lower pricing, moving to online and peer support models, opting for SaaS, and even questioning the need for support altogether. In this environment, providers do need to think about what they can do to "future proof" their support businesses.

We have five recommendations for companies that are looking to ensure continued growth:

  1. Make services easy to buy and even easier to sell. Labyrinthine services portfolios are confusing for customers and salespeople alike. Simplify the portfolio and arm the sales force with the tools they need to sell your services.
  2. Make the portfolio more meaningful to customers. For example, Cisco has organized its portfolio by customer-centric dimensions instead of by the company’s delivery structure.
  3. Segment and create services packages based on needs and interests—not just size and vertical industry. Companies like EMC and HP are creating new classes of services based on research and needs-based segmentation strategies.
  4. Integrate support services with your solutions. Companies that have moved from providing product-level support to solutions-level support are experiencing positive results.
  5. Reposition support services to go beyond traditional break-fix and help customers deal with their business issues. Avaya, Cisco, EMC, HP, Juniper, and others are making this critical shift to focus on business value, not just uptime insurance.
 
  Do you have a services marketing question?
Visit Ask ITSMA to access our experience, insight, and research results.
 
 

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