|
In
the early 90's, a couple of advertising guys dreamt up some rules, and had the
audacity to claim they'd found 22 laws that governed the universe of
marketing. Read the book now, and you realize that most of their ideas aren't
really laws and have proved to be quite mutable. But this didn't stop them from selling
zillions of copies to impressionable CEOs.
Me,
I'm doing it a little differently. I'm going to give you what I believe
really is universal and lasting about marketing -- for free. Most of
these apply both to consumer and B2B marketing, and are equally true
internationally and domestically. While I've
entitled this issue "the 10 commandments," because I'm from the
computer industry "10" is in hexadecimal so there are
actually 16 of them. It's ok if you don't get the joke... but I do welcome
your comments and reactions on this issue.
|
|
|
Hot News
The Taber Report is now being re-
published
in ChainLink Research's Parallax
View newsletter.
David Taber is teaching a new course in
Product Marketing this spring at UC Berkeley extension. It's course
number X166462 in S.F.
Sign
up now!
| |
Take-Aways
-
Perception
isn't just reality: in marketing it's more important than reality.
-
Credibility
with customers is your most important asset. Build it, measure it,
but never assume it.
-
Reputation
and size trump most marketing efforts. There are exceptional
circumstances when the smaller player really can have the better
reputation, but these require special nurturing.
| |
Best Practices
Be
humble before the customer and the market's reaction. Really listen to them
in good times and bad.
Have
an ongoing balance between your strategy -- who you are and what you stand
for -- and your tactical delivery -- what you get done, and how you do
it. Both are fundamental to success.
Know
that no advantage or trend is forever. Listen for the undercurrents of
change in the market.
|
|
The 10hex Commandments
1.
You have to look bigger than you really are.
This is true for any company, because even Microsoft looks small in any new initiative.
Perceived
size really matters, to suppliers and partners, as well as customers. To follow this
means focusing on visibility, credibility, influence, alliances, and customer
references. You never succeed alone.
2.
What other people say about you is more
important than what you say about yourself.
Word of mouth -- the good things your customers and
colleagues say about you -- is everything. Following this means making
sure your customers' experience is memorable
and positive, plus further
focus on alliances and customer references. Nothing is as credible as someone who has
nothing to sell.
3.
It is more profitable and easier to sell to existing
customers than to develop new ones. Despite
the thrill of the chase and Wall Street's focus on new customer
acquisition,
new customers are almost never profitable. The real profits come
form upsells, expansions, and the quick sales cycles from working existing
customers. Depending on your industry, repeat business is won with 1/3rd
to 1/10th the time, effort and money. To follow this means
optimizing your cost of customer acquisition, and focusing on long term account
value.
4.
It is more important to be the trusted vendor
than to have the best product.
Build
a better mousetrap, and the world won't beat a path to your door: the
world won't even notice. Be a trusted vendor, and customers will
follow your advice. It's this effect that lets Microsoft release three
versions of products before they get it right. Following this one means to
understand whom your customers trust and why, and to earn trust through quality
product and great service.
5.
If your
channel is not motivated, the product will not sell.
There are lots of examples of great products that were uninteresting -- or
worse, posed problems -- to the channel. Nothing kills a product faster
than a pissed-off sales guy. Whether you've got direct reps or a complex
distribution network, the channel must be explicitly and repeatedly motivated to make sales
happen. Following this means (of
course) money, but it also means removing channel conflict, getting the comp
plan right, making the product fun to
sell, having a strong and memorable message, and living up to your commitments. Sales reps and dealers are coin-operated.
6.
Emotion makes the Sale. Everybody
knows that 80% of decisions are made on an emotional basis, but almost nobody in high
tech markets that way. We're all speeds and feeds, feature / benefit /
advantage. But what actually clinches the deal is how the customer
believes he will feel after he has purchased the product or service. The
emotional drivers -- fear of making a mistake, worry about job security,
trepidation about a security breach or a SarBox compliance problem -- have been
dominating the IT market for several years. To follow this is to be
attuned as different emotions start to come into play, and to make the emotional
drivers at least part of your pitch.
7.
Perfectionism doesn't pay.
Casting
a perfect illusion is absolutely required, whether you're selling a user
interface or a fine hotel. But trying to be absolutely perfect is
at least impractical (costs more than it's worth) and at worst is a huge
distraction. Perfectionists in companies large and small usually over-invest time and
resources on things that really don't matter -- or would be best ignored in the
first place.
What does pay is being really easy to do business
with, flexible yet consistent, and providing customer delight.
Follow this
by practicing value engineering: put resources only into
things that will actually make a difference to the customer.
8.
First movers have an advantage, but the costs
of being too early for a market can kill you.
The
corollary to "There's nothing more powerful than an idea whose time has
come," is "Nothing is more tragic than an idea whose time hasn't yet
arrived." Timing -- being in synch with demand -- is critical. To
follow this is to listen very carefully to how customers and non-customers are
responding to your marketing, to note what they actually buy vs what they
flirt with, and to never invest ahead of demand. "If we build it they
will come" is usually an expensive fantasy --
particularly with a direct sales force.
9.
No customer buys because of your logo or your
tag line: they buy because of the value they believe you'll provide.
Branding
and ad campaigns are nice, but awareness and visibility will take you only so
far. Purchase decisions are made because the customer believes your
product or service will deliver better value than the alternatives. Following this means
having a very clear target customer, making sure prospects have a clear
sense of what you can do for them, and consistently delivering to expectations.
A.
Price is almost never the problem. Unless
you are selling a complete commodity -- and therefore by definition not
practicing marketing -- price is not the issue getting in the way of
sales. Of course you can't charge $50,000 for a $5,000 product, but I've
found that reducing the price from $50k to $5k doesn't make sales go up much even
on a unit basis. The issue at work here: does your product
provide so much value in the customer's mind that its price is an economic
bargain? Does the product pay for itself with savings? To
follow this is to make sure you have a tight definition of who the customer is
and a clearly expressed value proposition for them. Keep perceived value
greater than perceived cost.
B.
You don't position yourself: the market
positions you. Many
CEOs and Sales guys take repositioning way too lightly: all you have to do
is dream up a new story, right? But the customer won't buy it:
changing their
opinion requires that you provide a new value proposition. A new value
proposition for a
product requires new features, and if you need to reposition an entire company -- well even
Steve Jobs can't do that without a bunch of hot new products. Follow this one by
realizing that positioning is
like a reputation, which must be built through the right behaviors and
consistently superior products and services. The market's positioning of
you will lag reality by at least a year.
C.
Everybody wants to be cool. Every
market niche has a different definition of "cool," but people are willing
to sacrifice a lot to fit whatever they think cool is. People will do
almost anything to be admired or envied, to feel smart or part of an avant
garde. Cults really work. They are part of human nature, and being part of a special community with its own set of beliefs and practices is an
important psychological impulse. This works just as well for geek products
(think "O-O" in the 90s or "open source" now) as it does for cosmetics,
so don't ignore this one! To follow this is to create a sense of
exclusivity or importance about your product or company. Read The
Tipping Point to learn more.
D.
Being #3 doesn't matter if it's a
two-horse race. All
too often, customers will really only support a "main vendor" and one
alternative. A key indicator of this is when market share numbers for the
top two are 65% or more. Unfortunately, there are an awful lot of markets
with 10 competitors, and in the long run,
GE's Jack Welch was right about exiting markets if you can't be #1 or
#2. Following this one means finding market niches that aren't
overpopulated, yet are substantial enough to make your business happen.
There's nothing wrong with being the leader of a small, profitable niche market.
E.
It's going to be much easier to change your
product, or even your company, than to change customer behavior. Any
product strategy requiring a change in customer behavior is doomed to a long uphill battle.
If you can make that shift, though, as Sony did with the VCR and the Walkman,
the gains can be enormous. For most mortals, however, following this one
means customer-focused product
design. It's not a bad thing to design your whole company around the target
customer and the channel needed to get to them.
F.
Timeliness, responsiveness, and flexibility
count for a lot in getting and keeping customers.
Making
the customer feel attended to -- attentively listening and rapidly responding -- is a key part of
building trust and long-term relationships. In IT customer support, for
example, it's
been shown over and over again that actual quality and time- to-fix are
less important than the speed, frequency, and courtesy of the support
team. To follow this is to know that form is as important as
function: style and content are equally important in making people
feel good about your company and its offerings.
10.
Commerce is a Conversation. The
best and most profitable customer relationships are continuous and
two-way. If you don't want to believe the Cluetrain
Manifesto, look at the way business is done in Japan and China:
tight, long-term relationships are what drive their most profitable
businesses. Follow this by finding ways to actively listen in
every department of your company. Make sure the customer's message gets up to
high enough levels so you take action. Further, open up your "outbound" conversation so that
customers
are in the loop on important decisions and can tell that you've been listening.
Finally, know that in conversation nuance
and style are key elements to success.
Why
Do Customers Buy? -- coming in
February
Contents copyright 2005 by DOTnet Consulting, Inc,
all rights reserved.
Feel free to forward this mail, but you must include this copyright notice.
All trademarks and graphics are the property of their respective owners.
This newsletter was mailed to you because our records show you asked to receive
it.
Click
here to opt-out of future newsletters, although that will make us feel very sad.
|