Browsing Category

Product Marketing

Chris Brogan’s 100 Topics he wished someone would write….

I’m a big fan of the Top X list, but Chris’ wins. He came up with 100 things – yes 100! I had a hard time counting 100 $1 bills when I was a waiter, let alone think of a hundred things at any one sitting which wasn’t a random set of word combinations. Chris’ post is right on – there are too many things to post on. So he not only get’s on my blogroll after trolling his blog for months, but I will revisit his Top 100 list for at least another 99 times.

So what topic shall I leverage? #52. Telling My Boss About Social Media.

I had the opportunity to help bring the company I work for into the [tag]Web 2.0[/tag] fray and work the justification and value prop inside the business. I work for a technology company and we were SO Web -.5. Bad search, static content and no meaningful way to interact with our customers.

The good news is we had an new evangelist on the executive team to help pave the way and drive change. Smart people with cool ideas on the executive team is always upside. With a trailblazer already there and charging the way it went reasonably well – right up to the “So what’s the ROI?”. (dance… dance… dance…)

My answer was fairly smart ass-ed “this whole interweb thing could change our company and I mean like auto-magically!”. Nearly an exact quote, or not so near – I think there was a Sir or I understand or an equal “I hear you/I report to you” setup/suck up.

Not that I did the topic justice, but my general input/theme beyond my initial remark was “we CAN’T NOT do it – think dinosaur”. I love it when a double negative works, kinda like when Hannibal’s plans comes together!

Hannibal as the Aquamaniac

Passion makes the english language more interesting and improves the outcome of most situations… back to the topic.
I further opined/proposed basically it’s a relevance factor, the ROI will develop overtime and on multiple dimensions, but patience is required. [tag]Social media[/tag] I explained is how business gets done – it drives search, thought leadership and community. All of which are hard to drive metrics against. I explained the first metric we can track is traffic, but the real metric will be in the [tag]Win/Loss analysis[/tag] which should show a growth in the increased blog references as a relevant factor for inclusion in a sales cycle.

To that end, where I rant, rave and typically require metrics – this is the one area where the metrics are not immediate and require active participation throughout the whole business to be effective. Social media is effectively table stakes in 2007, which until recently I was the only guy who was interested in anteing up, but wasn’t very effective previously on previous efforts.

So I’m in the midst of a cultural change in the company I’m in and I look forward to this Web 2.0 cultural revolution, but as will all revolutions it takes passion and action to be successful.

As a middle manager, this is the type of change you can help bring to your company as a leader/sponsor, contributor or supporter. Using social media can drive increased value for your shareholders and improved customer intimacy which will drive sustainable relationships for current and future customers.

Remember, the revolution will not be televised, but it will be searched on.

Top 12 Update and feedburner

So I’m providing an update on the [tag]Top 12[/tag] alerts as promised – ZERO! So the next alert I’ll do is Top 7.

On another note, readership continues to grow and thanks – but no comments.  While the graph is going right way on [tag]FeedBurner[/tag], I don’t really know what it means and their online help is not very intuitive.  The google acquisition should help in respect to user interface and general usage.  So here it is:

feed.gif

 

Thanks bunches, will update you on the [tag]Top 7[/tag].

Genius! The iPhone coupon – a market maker

“Customers aren’t going to have an issue with this price move.”

Clearly Apple didn’t overlook this fact, it has become a holiday promotional activity.   This is like a captain obvious situation for a promotional event!  So Apple has effectively created a $100 coupon for a holiday purchase (additional iTunes, a new laptop….).

Apple has essentially created a compelling market event to purchase more Apple stuff. More people on the iPhone may help establish apple as a new mobile computing leader and people that may have been just been introduced to the Apple brand, will need to spend more in-store. A n typically spend beyond the credit, I’ve always spent more money than I have ever had on a gift card. Store credit/Gift cards are just a catalyst for incremental spend.

This also increases the consumers investment into the Apple platform guaranteeing an increased share of wallet within the iPhone community across the product porfolio.

It benefits both Apple and every iPhone user to get as many new customers as possible in the iPhone ‘tent’. We strongly believe the $399 price will help us do just that this holiday season….

Therefore, we have decided to offer every iPhone customer who purchased an iPhone from either Apple or AT&T, and who is not receiving a rebate or any other consideration, a $100 store credit towards the purchase of any product at an Apple Retail Store or the Apple Online Store.

More people with iPhones will extend the apple platform and drive an i-centric application developer community. Apple has the opportunity to be the “on-the-go OS” for the next generation of computing. This market seeding event will help justify AT&T’s upgrade which is sorely needed for high speed wireless.

to balance the thought a little – another view below from bold investors friday round up:

I give AAPL a thumbs up and advice people to buy Apple shares AAPL while its still down since Wall st. simply gets it wrong, as American Technology Research analyst Shaw Wu thinks the price cut on 8GB iPhones to $399 from $599 to be both positive and necessary.
“We have had reservations with its high price point and are glad to see Apple address this problem,” he explained. “In addition, we believe this lower price is necessary to reduce cannibalization with the new iPod touch, which is essentially a thinner iPhone without the cell phone, e-mail, and Bluetooth.”

The 4 P’s of blogging

So here are Steve Rubel’s version of the 4 P’s of blogging:

Passionate – Write about issues that are near and dear to your heart
Purposeful – Make sure you keep the end in mind; why are you blogging?
Present – Keep an eye on what’s topical today
Positional – Take a stand on an issue and follow it

I read it and thought – isn’t that just the big P product? So I figured I would look around a little on his [tag]blog[/tag] and he seems a little interesting:

Biography

[tag]Steve Rubel[/tag] is a senior marketing strategist with over 15 years experience. He currently serves as senior vice president in Edelman’s me2revolution practice. Edelman is the largest independent global PR firm.

He is charged with helping Edelman identify, test, incubate and champion new forms of communication. He also explores this on his well-read Micro Persuasion weblog and in a bi-weekly column for AdAge Digital.

Steve is often sought out as a speaker and appears frequently in the press. He has been named to several prestigious lists, including: Media Magazine’s Media 100, the AlwaysOn/Technorati Open Media 100 and the CNET News.com Blog 100. Prior to joining Edelman in 2006, Rubel spent five years at CooperKatz & Company.

Regardless of Steve’s curriculum vitae, the [tag]4 P’s[/tag] above are only attributes of the Product and how to find niche. At some levels, this is the YOU segment a theoretical concept which I have no experience in, but am currently executing in my [tag]blogging[/tag] efforts.

So know your [tag]affinity[/tag] attributes and blog away.