Thursday, November 20, 2008

Connect the Dots

Going along with my thoughts about COI (Communities of Interest) is a good summary from Seth Godin.

http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2008/11/how-to-make-mon.html

It is always impressive to be able to say that "I have 'x' number of members in my community", but that is not really the goal. I like the idea of smaller communities with passionate people. For instance, saying that there are thousands of contributors to Wikipedia is not as impressive as saying that there are a few people passionate about a lot of small subjects on Wikipedia. Think about how small the actual Wikipedia communities are. Each subject has its own community of maybe 2 or 3 people (in some cases more), but they are knowledgeable and care about their subject.

The question is how can you get the right people, no matter how many, to actively participate in your community to build or fix or change something?

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

win-win-win-win

SaaS solutions are continuing to be more attractive as companies are faced with the challenge of continuing their operations with tightening budgets.

"Do more with less!"

Certain software solutions are critical to the ongoing management of the business, but can be cost prohibitive, especially in these tough times. This is even more the case with SMBs. SaaS solutions change the game, enabling businesses to deploy mission critical applications in a timely and cost effective manner. ERP and CRM solutions are great examples.

There is an inherent demand for these types of solutions, but a challenge for the SaaS vendors in building an effective channel to market. But with a focus on customer driven solutions, NetSuite is enabling the channel and providing them with the opportunity to build value-added integration and implementation services. NetSuite has partnered with HP to enable HPs channel partners to resell the NetSuite SaaS solution, creating a win-win-win-win scenario.

* NetSuite gains access to the vast HP reseller community
* HP drives demand for the NetSuite services, which enables HP to sell more servers into the data center
* VARs enhance their customer relationship by providing a cost effective solution specifically addressing an immediate need. They also are empowered to build new services around the SaaS solution.
* The customer can now implement a quality CRM solution at a lower cost and in a timely manner

A community of interest has been created. It will be interesting to see if NetSuite, HP, and their resellers engage their customers in a dialog to continue the innovation.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Do You Want Fries With That?

I used to be an advocate of developing a channel structure that created a kind of franchise feel. My reasoning was that if you were a partner of mine, I wanted the end user to have a certain expectation about you. My analogy was McDonald's. No matter where you go across the globe, you can be reasonably sure that the fries will taste the same at any McDonald's franchise. There is a certain level of comfort in knowing that I will get the same quality of product and be able to eat in a similar environment in virtually any McDonald's restaurant.

This level of standardization is no longer valid when what the customer wants is a solution to their specific issue or problem. A generic product (no matter how good) becomes average when you, as the vendor, try to push that product to all customers. This works great in a fast food franchise, but not when your customer challenges vary literally by customer. The McDonald's fries example is one of a vendor driven solution being pushed on the market.

Today, we can change the model. Using collaboration tools, we can leverage our channels market expertise and customer knowledge to develop individual solutions for each of our mutual customers. The channel can help us define the customer need. They can provide the implementation and integration services to match that need and we can offer the product or suite of products to the solution. The fries will not always tasted the same, but that is precisely the point. Customers do not want a generic solution that is "good enough". They want a great solution to their specific problem.

Instead of bundling a bunch of generic widgets together and calling it Solution A, it is better to let the customer define the problem and work backwards from there. The benefit is that you will be offering more value and can price at a premium, the channel will be able to develop advanced services to drive their business and the customer problem is resolved.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

The Election

There are a lot of great things that happened with the presidential election yesterday, regardless of your political views. One of the great things that I am going to miss was being able to witness the "power of the story" in the campaigns. It was fascinating for me as a marketer to watch all of the candidates, from local and national campaigns, try to frame their stories. Obviously, some were more successful than others. What it came down to was "connections". The candidate that "connected" to their constituency won. Those that couldn't find the connection...lost.

Connections are about relationships and the successful campaigns build relationships through emotional connections with their audience. These didn't happen overnight, but rather through a sustained and deliberate process of storytelling. Many candidates who couldn't find the story to make the connections and build relationships were scrambling in the final weeks of the election cycle to find the right story. Too late. It takes time, perseverance, and authenticity to connect your story with your audience.

Think about your candidate(s) of choice, whether they were successful yesterday or not, and look at their story. Was it SIMPLE, COMPELLING, and RELEVANT? Most important, however, is "was it AUTHENTIC"? Maybe it is too soon to tell, but if their story lacks authenticity it will eventually fail to maintain the connections and relationships.

As a marketer, your job is very similar to that of a political campaign. you need to make connections and build relationships with your customers. You do this through the art of storytelling. Just like with successful political campaigns, your product/service/company story needs to be simple, compelling, relevant and authentic.