Archive for the ‘marketing’ Category

Getting the New Product Launch Right

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009
I found this post on the Frost and Sullivan website with important information and guidelines to use BEFORE launching a new product.  This is geared to technology companies and unfortunately is a step that is skipped by too many people.  Investing time and money in doing market research first does pay off in the end.

Many new products are launched into the marketplace with little prior planning for targeting the customers, creating a sales strategy, developing a distribution strategy, training the sales force, and integrating the competitive strategy. This mistake significantly reduces or eliminates any potential profit the product may have, and greatly increases the sales development time. These problems must be avoided if a company wants to survive in today’s competitive marketplace.

10 Ways Market Engineering Can Help Make New Product Launches More Successful

  1. Identifying the best customer segments for penetration
  2. Positioning the product successfully against competition
  3. Optimizing impact of sales strategy
  4. Creating a system to maximize sales leads while minimizing marketing expense
  5. Basing sales strategy on customer benefits rather than features
  6. Making the team market-driven rather than technologically-driven
  7. Setting sales goals based on market potential, not staff’s guesses
  8. Reducing sales development time and maximizing profit
  9. Improving market efficiency
  10. Identifying optimal mix of marketing tools and distribution channels to maximize sales

Market Engineering Checklist for Product Launch

  • Market Engineering cross-functional team training
  • Determination of Market Engineering Measurements
  • Completion of customer survey
  • Focus group performance
  • Beta sites on product
  • Selection of distribution channels analyzed
  • Sales targets based on market size and potential
  • Design of lead generation programs
  • Design of market-based pricing strategy
  • Lead tracking systems
  • Design of public relations strategy
  • Design of sales strategy
  • Design of marketing strategy
  • Competitive analysis and benchmarking
  • Design of customer database
  • Development of customer database
  • Design of market monitoring system
  • Buying, reading, and implementing Customer Engineering

Challenge Questions

  1. Into what market will the product be launched?
  2. What customer segments will purchase the product?
  3. For what applications will the customer use the product?
  4. Into what geographic segments will be sold?
  5. What are the benefits for the customers?
  6. What is the price/performance ratio relative to the competition?
  7. Who are the principle competitors?
  8. What will make your product unique in the market?
  9. What percentage market share is targeted at end of year 1 and year 3?
  10. What percentage of the customer base currently uses this product?
  11. From what distribution channels do customers purchase today, by percentage?
  12. What influences the customer’s decision to buy?
  13. How will competitors position themselves against this product?
  14. What is your sales strategy?
  15. What is your marketing strategy?
  16. What Measurement of Performance will you use to track success?

Back to School for Hubspot’s Inbound Marketing Course

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

I received HubSpot’s Inbound Marketing Certificate for proficiency in blogging, social media, lead conversion and nurturing, closed loop analysis. The online class was challenging but very well organized to cover many aspects of Inbound Marketing. My favorite lecture was of course David Meerman Scott’s class. Recommend taking the class–another one next week: Sign up at : http://www.inboundmarketing.com/university or join any of the Inbound Marketing Forums.

How to Convince Your CEO to enter 21st Century Marketing

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

Great post by Hubspot on how to Convince your CEO to enter 21st Century Marketing. They even created a presentation where you just plug in your details.. Great tool for in-house marketers and marketing consultants. I will certainly use it… Let me know if you have any success with it..

How Analyst Relations Can Boost Your Company’s Sales

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Upcoming Event: Thursday, June 11th, 9:00-12:00
Workshop on How Analyst Relations Can Boost your Sales
Place: Gelbart Kahana Offices, Azrieli Towers, Triangle Tower, 38th Floor, Israel
Agenda: 9:00 – Networking
9:30 -How AR Can Boost Your Company’s Sales
10:00- Case Studies
10:45- Tips and Tools for Effective AR
11:30- Q&A
For: Marketing Managers, Marcom Managers, VP Marketing, VP BizDev and Strategy, PR Managers of technology companies.
Please come with your questions and case studies to share.
Cost: 150 Shekels
Limited to 25 people only: RSVP to: nancy@gk-biz.com or 03-6070588

A Threat to Analyst Groups?

Sunday, May 31st, 2009

Tech Crunch has moved into the Analyst/Research Group space with their new venture: Tech Crunch Research offering either single reports at $149 or an annual subscription at $450..
RedMonk was the first opensource analyst firm and their tagline is : Analysis for the people,by the people. They offer their research for free and sell their consulting hours based on the company size, use of research and ability to pay.
I see this as the business model of the future for the big guys also-Forrester and Gartner. The subscription model has a limited lifetime as a business model since everything else in the IT and Marketing world is moving towards transparency. I am guessing that Forrester will be the first to move and Gartner the last–but it will happen.

David Meerman Scott’s New Book on Viral Marketing

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

David Meerman Scott’s New Book about Viral Marketing: World Wide Rave–another step away from “Old” Marketing Tools. David gives 9 tips on how to create a Viral Marketing campaign and the last tip is:

“Above all, have fun!
Don’t be afraid to go out
there and experiment.
Video content on the Web is still very new for marketers and communicators. But the potential
to deliver information to buyers in new and surprising ways is greater when you use a new
medium. And while your competition is still trying to figure out “that blogging thing,” you
can tap into the world of video and leave the competition behind.”
You can download his free ebook here. Enjoy!

Why Marketing is So Much More Important than Technology

Monday, February 16th, 2009

All Marketers Are Liars by Seth Godin–a brilliant video of a lecture to Google personnel about Google and why Marketing is so much more important than Technology….

Social Media Marketing Madness

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Social Media Marketing Madness–this says it all-and we marketers have to track it all….

The Easiest Way to a First Page Ranking on Google

Sunday, January 11th, 2009

A good article from Forrester that I would like to share with you:
The Easiest Way to a First-Page Ranking on Google. “If you’re not optimizing your videos, you should start. “Blended search,” the practice in which search engines display videos, images, news stories, maps, and other types of results alongside their standard search results, has become increasingly common on major search engines. And optimizing video content to take advantage of blended search is by far the easiest way to get a first-page organic ranking on Google,” says Nate Elliot from Forrester.

  • Best of all, so few interactive marketers focus on video optimization that most of the videos in Google’s index aren’t very well optimized — so if you optimize your videos well, your chances of success will increase even further.
    So how can you optimize your online videos? The agencies and search engines I’ve talked to offer a number of different tips:
    *Insert keywords into your video filenames.
    *Host your videos on YouTube, and embed those YouTube videos into your own site. Google says its algorithms consider how many times a video is viewed, and any views embedded videos receive on your own site get added to the ‘views’ tally on YouTube. (And yes, nearly every video we saw Google blend into its results came from YouTube.)
    *Optimize your YouTube videos by writing keywords into your videos’ titles, descriptions, and tags.
    *Embed videos into relevant text pages on your site. The context provided by the text on those pages (which is hopefully already optimized for search as well) will help the search engines figure out what your videos are about.
    *Also create a video library on your site, so Google knows where to find your video content. (Google Video Sitemaps can help with this too.) Write keyword-rich annotations for each video in the library.
    Clients can read more about this topic, including some examples and further best practices, in our reports SEO for Blended Search (a Europe-focused report) and Video and Image Optimization (which is US-focused).

Marketing for 2009

Tuesday, December 30th, 2008

One of my favorite websites for information on new web marketing tactics is Duct Tape Marketing even though it is supposed to be for small businesses-I find a lot of practical advice and free webinars on hot topics such as Social Media. It looks like that will be the keyword for Marketing 2009. Here are some general tips to help you change your mindset:

focus on your ideal customer
find a unique value proposition
educate instead of sell
be found as opposed to hunt
harness the Internet

One of my favorite authors on the New Marketing is David Meerman Scott–his quote for tips for 2009: David Meerman Scott, author of The New Rules of Marketing and PR said . . . stop spending $$ on marketing. Instead create interesting information people WANT to consume. -

Please feel free to download this free ebook published by MS on Social Media–is basic but does have some good tips:
A free ebook on social media for small business-but there is still some good advice for medium sized businesses.


 

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