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Marketing is Geography

So this post has been sitting in my drafts folder for quite some time and I thought I was time to let it free from the dreaded draft existence it’s had for a while. The biggest challenge this the topic is it can go anywhere, no pun intended. With most marketing leaving the landed consumer experience, how can geography be related to marketing. The simplest way to look at it is sales and how to get a meaningful ROI from your marketing dollars – traditional and social.   Where are you selling stuff?  Where are you trying to sell?  What are the barriers to success in a given region?

Let’s face it – some patches have higher transaction rates than others and you can only effectively cover N% of the market at any given time based on resource capacity so it might not be that much of a stretch that sales execution/focus is often geographic.  Anecdotally, that’s probably why most businesses carry a geographic sales orientation, which Marketers need to be able to understand and how to best support tactical execution in focused geographies.  Another way to link geography is that Place(ment) is one of the 4 P’s of the Marketing Mix?

Geo based Business Development

So why is sales based approach a reasonable way to validate that marketing is geography? It’s the transactions – when people give you money for stuff it is a great event to look at to see if there are relationship. What do we know about transactions?

Every transaction has a location. Every business seeking transactions has access and capacity constraints which require some mechanism for the prioritization of opportunity pursuit, new to old – small to large. Since place is an inherent attribute of a transaction, an organization’s access/site and where their resources are/situation, it might make sense. Effective corporate marketing is understanding your company’s site and situation.

Businesses have place as a core attribute – a central location/site from where transactions are managed and pursued.  A business’ location typically provides for a focus on their immediate geography – less travel/cost, more likely to have a personal relationship and able to play the local card. This assertion assumes that you have an actual good to sell – software, hot sauce or widget.  This sweeping generalization doesn’t apply to an indpendant consultant type since they can travel anywhere and support any single engagement, so long as there is capacity and support from a schedule perspective.  To that end, let’s just constrain this discussion to businesses where labor bound service delivery or unused capacity isn’t reality, so the rest of this piece may not resonate with social media experts.

..so with that particular constraint in place…

As you look at the growth of a company, the majority of early revenues are geographically bounded by where you can get to in a day on a train or car, with some airplane based outliers or small phone based/online transactions.  Just a gravity model…

Gravity models are used in various social sciences to predict and describe certain behaviors that mimic gravitational interaction as described in Isaac Newton‘s law of gravity. Generally, the social science models contain some elements of mass and distance, which lends them to the metaphor of physical gravity.

F_{ij} = G * \frac{M_i * M_j}{D_{ij}}

Geographic management constructs are common place for sales and marketing folks.  Conceptual sales coverage is a key attribute for sales leaders to manage and lowering the the cost of transaction is the domain of marketing. Early stage companies traditionally focused most of the marketing locally and regionally, outside of trade rags, trade shows in Vegas or niche online communities.  Marketing’s focus can transition outside of a localized place with a single win of a national account. If you can embedd your product in a national value chain then a spatial transition takes place for marketers which allows them to abandon the more localized focus on place.

A kitschy way to look at it is you can displace place with space at the primary geo based demand focus if you have access to a significant value chain without much effort.  Space also supports traditional gravity transactional models, but the space oriented approach isn’t about the location of the business.  The concentration of customers becomes the center, not the business or product.

Starting to feel like social media is just one big gravity model.

In a space based gravity model, marketers are empowered to leverage all the assets in the portfolio – sales coverage/capacity, customers and products.  Place based marketing is more about product, price and promotion.

A maturing business

As a business exits the hyper-local stage and expands beyond a region, not all geographies are created equal despite cliche’s such as “There is no bad patch, only bad sales people”. Alas, that just isn’t true.

Certain geographies have the right industries, median household income or other attributes such as weather or infrastructure which drive the demand for a given product.   Another example, a company sells software for managing the inventory of containers for large ports, there are probably only 6 or 8 real geographic opportunities. If this company started in NYC, they would probably expand south to Newport News, Savannah or New Orleans or to west with LA or Seattle.  Not too complicated.   Even if you latch on to a huge value chain you may stay extremely regional, think retail – if you win Menard’s or Mejier you have a horribly Midwestern distribution and transaction model for the most part.  In social media or a spatial model, you might not use Facebook to sell a NASCAR beer can sculpture – myspace is probably best.

Back to Marketing

So if a business’ growth could easily be based on a gravity model, then marketers as geographers need to support the growth with a focused plan to extend the reach of a company and their products.  So you have to look at all the 4 P’s and start prioritizing investment of the marketing to support both space and place.

Boundaries for Marketing Investment

So if geography influences growth, success and viability in a market, then how do you take a regional approach and transition into marketing into larger geographies or spaces?  Customer clusters and their value chains is the easiest way to extend. Let your transactions be your marketing compass.

Overtime natural geographic clusters or affinity based spaces develop based on sales execution and/or customer communities, not unlike the initial gravity model which often creates a cluster in a region or locality where a company was founded.

I guess it just comes down to the right marketing mix in the end.  Can a coordinated social media initiative allow an organization to not only transition from place to place from a transaction perspective, but also to support space based interactions which directly engage consumers where they congregate?

So perhaps Social Media can save the world or it might just minimally allow a widget purveyor access and coverage of markets which previously could not be accomplished with a total place based geographic market focus.

So I guess this wasn’t more than observations which represent the shameless propogation of the importance of geography or social media, you pick. Feel free to substitute social media is geography as the title.

Fun on the road?

This post clearly has the opportunity to be a whoa is me post, but I’ll try and not make it one of those.

So I’m officially immersed in the my spring speaking tour, 3 speaking gigs this week and at least another 12,000 air miles and additional 3 pitches before June 10 and various and sundry trips in between. I just received an email from a colleague informing me to have fun in Boston and I thought about it and I think folks who don’t travel much don’t necessarilly understand that travel isn’t fun.

The Essence of Business Travel

No matter what the location – Pheonix, Maui or Amsterdam it is still work! Typically you travel somewhere because you have stuff to do and places to be. You may be staying at the Pheonician, a four seasons or resort in some place like Banff Springs – you rarely get to enjoy the ammendities. OK sometimes you DO get to golf…

Ultimately I try my best to weave in friends and family in as possible, but it is normally a 1 out 10 type of thing since the paid gig comes first – priorities. You have to make sure your up for a keynote, customer meeting or prospect meeting at 9, so you can’t do bars with your fraternity brother until 3 AM. So while I appreciate Ed’s well wishing and fun recommendation, it is gonna be difficult.

But wait, I should have a good meal at least right?

Good Food Must Mean Good Times, Right?

A man’s got to eat and not every meal on the road is good, there is a whole lot of airport McDonald’s, more than I like.  That being said, admittedly I have had some GREAT meals on the road, both on and off the expense account, but that doesn’t mean that it was fun. The general rule is that the better the meal, the more likely it is NOT on an expense account, since I’m a foodie I try and get the best local food possible.  I acutally spend a good deal of time investigating place to eat, since this is typically the only thing which you can ultimately count on when on the road, since a man’s got to eat.

At the end of the day, no matter what the restaurant is – it is business if you aren’t able to eat alone. You’ll typically have customers, partners or staff members and you still have to talk supply chain or technology all night long, remain sober and not unveil your real interests. I gotta be work Jon who likes wine, boring stories and is just facinated by your latest project which has no relationship to the deal I’m trying to position or close.

Not that I’ve done the math, but I think there is actually an inverse relationship between food quality and fun on the road. The better the restaurant the more mundane the discussion – karma punishment. Too often you are forced to fain interest in stories about a kid’s tee ball league, football or the latest cool thing they did with a Seibel integration.

So while you may get good food, you’re ultimately stymied by the atmosphere.   How many people who you work with or who you are selling to are people you would actually hang out with?

In closing, I do have to say the event I’m at and speaking to are some of the most interesting folks I know. The people that participate at NEECOM are as innovative as anyone in the industry and significantly improve my understanding of the stuff I do every time I attend. I am ultiamtely blessed by the opportunities I have and the people I meet, so Ed – I guess I will have fun in Boston since I will learn from the folks I see.

Please Note: Feel free to forward this to your spouse if you have the same type of discussions I have when I say good night as I leave Morton’s. If you have these discussion you know what I mean and you need to forward this as independent validation of life on the road.

Pangea Day – Super Continent, Super People

I just Just found out that yesterday was the first ever Pangea day. Plate techtonics and subduction will continue to change the morphology of the earth and is an unstoppable force, so is compassion.   What is subduction, it’s a geology thing, but it is also could be a metaphor for things that suck up time and energy – the forces that move us every day.  Formal definition:

Subduction is the process in which one plate is pushed downward beneath another plate into the underlying mantle when plates move towards each other. The plate that is denser will slide under the thicker, less dense plate. Faulting occurs in the process. It is the process in which rocks break and move or are displaced along the fractures. The subducted plate usually moves in jerks, resulting in earthquakes. The area where the subduction occurs is the subduction zone. A long, narrow, deep depression forms in this area. It is called an oceanic trench.

I try my best to not put long videos on my site, but I’ve been watching this 25 min piece and it’s worth it for a geologist, geographer or just the plain person.   Pangea day is a great concept that we are all sisters and brothers on a single planet.  So you don’t have 20 mins?  Well, carve it out, any video which opens with Desmond Tutu has to be good.

Want to find out more about Pangea Day? It’s a day of film and sharing, so find a way to put this concept in action,  Be more empathetic and more understanding of the diversity and adversity that exists on our planet. Find a way to give back.