SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 10
Downloaden Sie, um offline zu lesen
Top 10 Marketing Mistakes to watch out for
Love it or dread it. Right brain or left. Waste of money or revenue generator. Marketing is
always in question.


Should we do it? Why isn‟t it working? How much should we spend? Can we even afford it?
Why do others do it so much better?


The answers are actually quite simple. Unfortunately, too many people get easily confused over
the real objective of marketing.


Marketing should only be about clearly telling specifically targeted buyers what you have to
offer to them and why they should spend their money to buy it. What makes this tough is that
people get creative. That‟s right, creative. They try to use cool design or complex descriptions
to „wow‟ someone when all the „someone‟ wants is to understand “so what?” Don‟t get me
wrong, I am as creative as they come but pretty for the sake of art isn‟t marketing.


Then we compound the problem when the marketing is driven by the engineers or someone
technical (i.e. lacks professional communication skills) or the worst scenario, when marketing
is driven by the founder (i.e. “Doesn‟t everyone want one of my perfect puppies?”).


Therefore, here are some of the top mistakes software companies make. I offer you the
following lessons based on decades accruing my own marketing scars, together with helping
several dozens of client companies of all sizes and shapes to succeed by doing more strategic,


Mistake#1: Assuming you are your target customer


Let‟s be clear. “Customer” can mean the buyer (person who signs the check for the purchase), the user
(person(s) who actually use the product), and the influencers (people who have a say in whether the company
buys it or not). As such, you can never be all those roles for whatever software you sell. Whether your



© 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
product is business-to-business (B-to-B) or consumer-to-business (B-to-C), there are almost always multiple
customers in each sale and as such,smarter marketing.knowing them is paramount. „Knowing‟
includes nailing down their demographics, their buying cycles, their budget requirements, their
price sensitivity, their experience with other similar products, etc. You can only know these
things by asking and no amount of web research or analysts‟ reports are going to help with
that. You need to do primary research – even if it is on a small scale and done informally with
target customers.


I often get asked to do this on behalf of clients who are too busy, too intimidated or too fearful
of what they may hear from prospective clients. Oftentimes using an outside person (e.g.
consultant) is even better since the outsider can ask the naïve and politically incorrect questions
while the respondent can feel a little less worried about honestly answering about the company
they do business with. That middle layer adds some perceived protection thus often exposing
more the truth than the vendor will get directly. After all, a customer is already in the boat and
as such, doesn‟t want to rock it too much. So whether you use an outside interviewer or not,
just talk to your customers and if you want to get really smart, talk to the people that decided
not to purchase your software – that‟s where the most insightful information lies.


It‟s best to do such research early and often. Like any diagnosis, the worst case is that you find
out that you are off the selling tracks but hopefully can readjust (albeit potentially costly
changes but less so than making the changes later in the cycle). The best case is that you make
new or renewed fans (everyone loves to have their opinion asked and matter). It will probably
grease the sales cycle too when that person interviewed is presented the product now ready that
they actually asked for.


Mistake #2: Asking what users want and not why

If you‟ve been trained on the art of good product requirements gathering, you‟ve learned that
use cases and personas are great tools to ensure that requirements are put into perspective.A
typical use case might say something like, “The user shall be able to change the background

© 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
colors.” This may seem like a nice feature to offer the users but in fact, could make your
product look horrible if they select poor combinations. Therefore, the question is “what value
does it really have to the user?” If the concern is that colorblind individuals may need a
different palette in order to best use the software, then be specific. You can either specify that
the colors used must be visible to someone who is colorblind, or you can offer a handful of pre-
designed palettes that you know will maintain the integrity of your user interface. This is a
simple example but in my work, I see so many product requirements that are nicely packaged
with use cases and even specific details. However, without asking why this feature is required,
you miss a whole lot of understanding as to what you really need to build and how to market it.


Mistake #3: Accepting that not every requirement needs a business justification

An axiom to Mistake #2, part of asking „why‟ helps determine the business case for each
requirement. The revenue related to some requirements may be clear (i.e. “By expanding our
interface to the iPhone, we will increase our target customer base to over 5 million with an
expected penetration of 10% and subsequent revenue opportunity of $400,000.”). However,
more than likely, most requirements don‟t have such a clear ROI. How do you quantify
usability or better code base development? Consider the long term cost savings such as how
much support or other company resource will be saved over time with such product
enhancements.      Customer retention from happier, more successful customers is also
quantifiable. Better competitive positioning is a good thing but only if it helps to really sell
more of your software which is often hard to prove unless you have lost sales or other provable
such experiences. There is also personnel retention. No kidding – there may be features or at
least development projects that are done for the sake of keeping critical internal team motivated
and innovative. It‟s not a great way to justify projects from an ROI perspective, but
nonetheless, a way to think through whether that use of company resources has a decent
justification versus other projects.




© 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
Mistake #4: SEO and social media is critical

Because software companies understand SEO and social media, they assume it is important for
their business as a competitive advantage. Perhaps it is, but in many cases, it is actually a waste
of time and money (Yes, I am a marketing person saying that!). If your target buyers search for
information related to your products on the internet, then yes, you should make it easy to find
your company and content, especially if your keywords are highly competitive or mixed with
other unrelated products. However, often in the b-to-b software business, I hear the need to “get
into the C-suite”. If this is a legitimate need to sell the company‟s software, then think about if
those C-level managers are spending time surfing the internet and reading Facebook pages and
blogs. Most likely not – or at least not for the purpose of you selling them software. Rather
than spend precious resources blogging or Tweeting, consider how to reach your target
individuals in the channels they use for information gathering. If you don‟t know this, ask them
(yes, it‟s that easy). SEO and social media properly done are voracious marketing tactics
requiring constant content feeding and monitoring. As such, if they are important for your
business to reach prospective and existing customers, do it and commit fully. If not, don‟t waste
anyone‟s time.


Mistake #5: Marketing has to cost a lot

Speaking about social media and SEO, many people assume those are good marketing ideas as
they are free. Email, too, for that matter. While the channel may be free to use, there is always
a cost. Someone‟s time to create the content is obvious – but also consider the time to monitor
the impact, plus respond to and refine these marketing tactics. So the issue becomes whether
those same resources could be put to better use doing more effective marketing even if that
appears to cost more.


Take for example, one of my clients that sells global trade management software. Their
customers are any company that imports or exports products from one country to another and
the trade managers in those companies do use the internet to search for information about trade
management and related topics. As such, my client wanted to optimize their site and create
some social media venues to help reach out to their targets. My concern was the amount of
© 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
time and content knowledge that it would take to do this well given the client was a rather small
startup. I recommended that since the VP of Products already did weekly summaries and links
to important industry articles for her own management team, we could repurpose that content
onto a blog and offer that as a service to the external target audience. In 10 minutes, we taught a
junior associate how to post to one of the free blog sites. We created the „sponsored‟ blog
simply by adding the company logo to one of the blog templates that complimented (but didn‟t
replicate) the company‟s look and feel. Now the admin uses the same links from the weekly
internal emails that the VP was sending out already. In a few weeks, the site became quite
popular and now provides a valuable news service to target buyers. With all the rich keywords
created from the newsworthy articles it lists, the blog has terrific SEO and subsequently
generates traffic to the company‟s website. So by using a free blog infrastructure to create a
very professional, valuable social media channel, we created an online magnet for prospective
clients and even media and industry analysts who take advantage of this vendor-neutral (but
clearly vendor-sponsored) clipping service. And each and every time they go there from their
RSS feed or other trigger, my client‟s logo is there associated with the latest and greatest news
about the global trade management industry. “FREE”!


Never lose potential sales using Apptivo‟s Opportunities App

With that said, there are so many other free tools that can help with marketing significantly. Do
you use Google Alerts as your own, free clipping service that reports all the news about your
competition, product, industry or whatever you decide to track? What about Twitterhawk if
your product is something talked about in the Twittersphere? Heck, we already discussed the
importance of talking to customers which is usually a “free” activity that yields the most
precious marketing intelligence and builds sales relationships.


In reality, what costs a lot is misguided marketing and spending money recklessly to promote
your company without the clear knowledge about what your targets need and want from you and
how they want that information delivered to them.


© 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
Mistake #6: Word of mouth happens on its own

If you build it, they may not come. Seriously. Even if some targets said your idea was a good
one, are they willing to pay for it? Many entrepreneurs go to friends and family for funding as
well as confidence that the proposed software is needed. But your friends and family (or even
investors) are probably not your buyers. Don‟t get happy ears and think because someone is
being nice to you means they will open their wallets when you come back with the product
ready for sale. Friends and family won‟t tell you your baby is ugly either so make sure you
have good representation of your real target buyers before, during and after you build the
software. Better yet, go to people who bought from your competition or are accomplishing the
same tasks using a totally different method. Ask them why they didn‟t choose yours. They
have nothing to lose and just may tell you that your breath stinks.


And despite what Malcolm Caldwell‟s Tipping Point implies, if you read the case studies, you
know that word of mouth/viral marketing, isn‟t something that happens from nothing. It
happens because there is a market that has enough information to buy and share among their
colleagues to get a trend going. For software, we use additional tricks like “powered by” and
“read only” ways to get non-licensed individuals to be impressed enough upon receipt of the
„runtime software‟ to want them to seek us out for the rights to be a real part of the club. It can‟t
hurt to do that but let‟s be real – it isn‟t going to make most of us rich. What will is building
software that really does solve a problem that a target group has and letting them know
explicitly that we have the solution.


Mistake #7: If mine is best, they will buy it despite their budget

Just because your target customer doesn‟t have one of your types of products and may need one,
there are tons of other things that are priorities. If you sell to small businesses, for example,
email marketing tools may be very important but so are the computers that create them which
may be competing for the same scant available dollars. “Only $15 per month” can mean either
email autoresponse to online inquiries or printer cartridges to deliver decent brochures. As we
were reminded in the past 2 years, money isn‟t recyclable and as such,


© 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
fighting for a limited budget at your target customers doesn‟t always mean your product or the
competition. It means proving that their business will gain more by buying your product than
any other thing they plan to spend their money on. Therefore, don‟t just consider products „like
yours‟ your competition. Consider anything that is chasing the same budget dollars from your
target customers‟ wallets as competition.


And speaking about chasing budget dollars, it always bothers me when prospective clients
complain that they have no more marketing money in Q4 knowing full well that most of their
target customers budget for the following year in the previous quarter. Therefore, why would
do all your marketing in Q1 to targets that have already made their purchase decisions?


Being the best solution for the problem at hand is key but also making sure the value is greater
than other purchases is critical to get that target spending their precious budgets. And don‟t
forget that just because they budgeted for it, things change. All good intentions from your “hot
leads” may change on the time due to new competitive factors, organizational changes, adjusted
budgets and all the other financial shifts that have tainted the past few years of every company.
That‟s why lead nurturing is so important until the sale is completed. The game isn‟t over until
the checks are cleared and the warranty period is over. And yes, even then, marketing still
probably has a role in retaining customers and buying more.


Mistake #8: Marketing is a science

Because we‟ve become obsessed with measuring marketing, we assume it is a science. Sure we
can quote page views and click-throughs but we still can‟t easily measure reputation and rarely
the customer‟s ROI when using our software. I am a major proponent of planning measurement
and tracking for every marketing program so you can see what is working and how well.
However, I am also a big fan of testing and refining things that aren‟t quite working when we
think they should. Often times we spend marketing dollars on programs such as a direct mail
piece and when it fails, we don‟t take even a moment to find out why. We think because we did
all the homework to ensure its success, it should have had better results but in

© 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
reality, there is too much volatility in the real world for us to predict. Economic factors,
competitive factors, social factors, even environmental factors (e.g. 911, Katrina) are wildcards
as we execute a marketing program. However, when things fail, software companies often
blame it on marketing as an unreliable concept and in reality it may be the product, the people or
the pricing of the offer – things that the marketers may not control. As such, you owe it to
yourselves to debrief on every marketing program that fails.


With that said, don‟t get mislead that lots of views and clicks mean lots of sales. Marketing
success isn‟t about open links and eyeballs, it‟s about wallets opened. I can stand outside on the
street corner and get lots of people to hear me yelling a message. Getting the target buyers to
pay for my software is the only relevant metric.


Mistake #9: More information is better

If you can‟t convey what you do to whom and why they care in two sentences or less, something
is wrong. I am not suggesting that you can explain your entire offering or competitive value in
two sentences but a good positioning that makes it clear who, what and why separates the
targets from the others quickly. As humans (particularly us girls), most of us are fearful that we
may offend or reject potential friends. In marketing, filtering the market is actually good! If I
can separate wheat from chafe, targets from uninterested, I don‟t waste sales time and marketing
resources. Ideally, if your positioning is clear and specific for those who care, those who don‟t
will politely say, “That‟s not for me”. Good, then both of you can move on.


Now, once you have the target person intrigued, you do need to provide more information to
convince them that your product is not only right for them but the best one for them and
something they absolutely must buy (ideally now!). Doing this should be done in incremental,
meaningful steps. That is, providing a 20 page datasheet may be too much for the buyer to
invest at the early stage of the buying cycle. However, offering digestible amounts of
information to the buyer is really important so they continue to seek more and are willing to



© 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
invest their time knowing your offering seems to be a good solution for something there are
needing. Slamming them with a folder full of datasheets, brochures, article reprints, case
studies and press releases probably is a bit overwhelming to most any customer in any business.
The same applies to your website that probably contains much of this content. Unless it is well
organized (much like your software itself), it may say more about your company before it is
even read.


Mistake #10: Your mother doesn’t need to understand what you do

Don‟t assume that writers (me included), analysts or other “thought leaders” understand your
product, let alone your specific target customers. Even with industry experience, chances are
we all have our own baggage and unique perspective that may or may not help us know what
your software does. Throwing in acronyms doesn‟t impress us but rather often confuses us and
we won‟t tell you that because our egos won‟t let us.


To know if your positioning and sales message works, try it on mom or the neighbors and even
your kids. If they can understand it well enough to paraphrase it back to you, you‟ve
succeeded. Don‟t assume it‟s too complex for them because if it is, most likely it‟s not the
product but your words that are complex.


Heck, your mom probably is your best evangelist and just may surprise you. I wouldn‟t believe
that myself except it literally did work for me. While I was working on customer relationship
management (CRM) software and writing articles and whitepapers for my own company years
ago, I had explained the topic very generally to my mother who had sold promotional products
during her career. She understood enough about what I did that she connected me to her friend
who was in a bind with a regular CRM section in BusinessWeek. Guess who got the
gig…your‟s truly. See, you never know unless you make the effort to get your marketing
speaking for you in a way that everyone around you can easily help promote your product to
target buyers – even mom.



© 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
Alyssa Dver is the CEO at Mint Green Marketing (www.mintgreenmktg.com) which offers
affordable, expert marketing consulting and classes (live and online). Her books, “No Time
Marketing” and “Software Product Management Essentials” continue to be best sellers and she
is   a   frequent    speaker    at   conferences   and       corporate   events.   Contact   Alyssa
at alyssadver@mintgreenmktg.comor508-881-5664            .


**Published with permission from Alyssa Dver**




© 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Andere mochten auch

Bullet boy film poster analysis
Bullet boy film poster analysisBullet boy film poster analysis
Bullet boy film poster analysisAmymedia123
 
AAPS2011 Oral--Analytical Techniques To Characterize Excipient Stability &amp...
AAPS2011 Oral--Analytical Techniques To Characterize Excipient Stability &amp...AAPS2011 Oral--Analytical Techniques To Characterize Excipient Stability &amp...
AAPS2011 Oral--Analytical Techniques To Characterize Excipient Stability &amp...mzhou45
 
Argazkien diapositibak
Argazkien diapositibakArgazkien diapositibak
Argazkien diapositibakSara_99
 
Samsungtt 110520085932-phpapp01
Samsungtt 110520085932-phpapp01Samsungtt 110520085932-phpapp01
Samsungtt 110520085932-phpapp01mobilers3d
 
We are cell 기능2
We are cell 기능2We are cell 기능2
We are cell 기능2Heysu Kang
 
Bai11 quan ly-kiemtra-ktrpm@softtesting-nntu
Bai11 quan ly-kiemtra-ktrpm@softtesting-nntuBai11 quan ly-kiemtra-ktrpm@softtesting-nntu
Bai11 quan ly-kiemtra-ktrpm@softtesting-nntuJenny Nguyen
 
Bahasa arkaik
Bahasa arkaikBahasa arkaik
Bahasa arkaikazwawawa
 
Pdf ospedali
Pdf ospedaliPdf ospedali
Pdf ospedalidramella
 
Ativ1 4 jarlete-1
Ativ1 4 jarlete-1Ativ1 4 jarlete-1
Ativ1 4 jarlete-1jarletepsr
 

Andere mochten auch (13)

Bullet boy film poster analysis
Bullet boy film poster analysisBullet boy film poster analysis
Bullet boy film poster analysis
 
мельникова
мельниковамельникова
мельникова
 
AAPS2011 Oral--Analytical Techniques To Characterize Excipient Stability &amp...
AAPS2011 Oral--Analytical Techniques To Characterize Excipient Stability &amp...AAPS2011 Oral--Analytical Techniques To Characterize Excipient Stability &amp...
AAPS2011 Oral--Analytical Techniques To Characterize Excipient Stability &amp...
 
Argazkien diapositibak
Argazkien diapositibakArgazkien diapositibak
Argazkien diapositibak
 
Samsungtt 110520085932-phpapp01
Samsungtt 110520085932-phpapp01Samsungtt 110520085932-phpapp01
Samsungtt 110520085932-phpapp01
 
We are cell 기능2
We are cell 기능2We are cell 기능2
We are cell 기능2
 
Bai11 quan ly-kiemtra-ktrpm@softtesting-nntu
Bai11 quan ly-kiemtra-ktrpm@softtesting-nntuBai11 quan ly-kiemtra-ktrpm@softtesting-nntu
Bai11 quan ly-kiemtra-ktrpm@softtesting-nntu
 
Bahasa arkaik
Bahasa arkaikBahasa arkaik
Bahasa arkaik
 
Pdf ospedali
Pdf ospedaliPdf ospedali
Pdf ospedali
 
Ativ1 4 jarlete-1
Ativ1 4 jarlete-1Ativ1 4 jarlete-1
Ativ1 4 jarlete-1
 
Student BusinessWise
Student BusinessWiseStudent BusinessWise
Student BusinessWise
 
Gegevensbescherming & IT
Gegevensbescherming & ITGegevensbescherming & IT
Gegevensbescherming & IT
 
Cities photos
Cities photosCities photos
Cities photos
 

Mehr von Puneet Yamparala

Tax extension just in case
Tax extension just in caseTax extension just in case
Tax extension just in casePuneet Yamparala
 
Upcoming small business events
Upcoming small business eventsUpcoming small business events
Upcoming small business eventsPuneet Yamparala
 
How mobile apps help boost your business
How mobile apps help boost your businessHow mobile apps help boost your business
How mobile apps help boost your businessPuneet Yamparala
 
5 ways to grow sales through renewed channels
5 ways to grow sales through renewed channels5 ways to grow sales through renewed channels
5 ways to grow sales through renewed channelsPuneet Yamparala
 
Creating a simplified business plan
Creating a simplified business planCreating a simplified business plan
Creating a simplified business planPuneet Yamparala
 
5 tips for selling a business
5 tips for selling a business5 tips for selling a business
5 tips for selling a businessPuneet Yamparala
 
Staying one step ahead of the competition
Staying one step ahead of the competitionStaying one step ahead of the competition
Staying one step ahead of the competitionPuneet Yamparala
 
How to determine the geographic market area of your business
How to determine the geographic market area of your businessHow to determine the geographic market area of your business
How to determine the geographic market area of your businessPuneet Yamparala
 
5 things to consider to ensure you are choosing legitimate suppliers
5 things to consider to ensure you are choosing legitimate suppliers5 things to consider to ensure you are choosing legitimate suppliers
5 things to consider to ensure you are choosing legitimate suppliersPuneet Yamparala
 
10 ways to motivate your employees
10 ways to motivate your employees10 ways to motivate your employees
10 ways to motivate your employeesPuneet Yamparala
 
Creating a simplified business plan
Creating a simplified business planCreating a simplified business plan
Creating a simplified business planPuneet Yamparala
 
Data security, a growing concern among sme
Data security, a growing concern among smeData security, a growing concern among sme
Data security, a growing concern among smePuneet Yamparala
 
Apptivo Project Apps Milestone
Apptivo Project Apps MilestoneApptivo Project Apps Milestone
Apptivo Project Apps MilestonePuneet Yamparala
 
5 innovative businesses launched by veterans
5 innovative businesses launched by veterans5 innovative businesses launched by veterans
5 innovative businesses launched by veteransPuneet Yamparala
 
Why small businesses, consultants and freelancer need project management
Why small businesses, consultants and freelancer need project managementWhy small businesses, consultants and freelancer need project management
Why small businesses, consultants and freelancer need project managementPuneet Yamparala
 
12 questions to ask before requesting a guest blogger
12 questions to ask before requesting a guest blogger12 questions to ask before requesting a guest blogger
12 questions to ask before requesting a guest bloggerPuneet Yamparala
 
Cloud computing and its risks
Cloud computing and its risksCloud computing and its risks
Cloud computing and its risksPuneet Yamparala
 

Mehr von Puneet Yamparala (20)

Tax extension just in case
Tax extension just in caseTax extension just in case
Tax extension just in case
 
Upcoming small business events
Upcoming small business eventsUpcoming small business events
Upcoming small business events
 
How mobile apps help boost your business
How mobile apps help boost your businessHow mobile apps help boost your business
How mobile apps help boost your business
 
5 ways to grow sales through renewed channels
5 ways to grow sales through renewed channels5 ways to grow sales through renewed channels
5 ways to grow sales through renewed channels
 
Creating a simplified business plan
Creating a simplified business planCreating a simplified business plan
Creating a simplified business plan
 
5 tips for selling a business
5 tips for selling a business5 tips for selling a business
5 tips for selling a business
 
Staying one step ahead of the competition
Staying one step ahead of the competitionStaying one step ahead of the competition
Staying one step ahead of the competition
 
Small business profile
Small business profileSmall business profile
Small business profile
 
How to determine the geographic market area of your business
How to determine the geographic market area of your businessHow to determine the geographic market area of your business
How to determine the geographic market area of your business
 
Google
GoogleGoogle
Google
 
5 things to consider to ensure you are choosing legitimate suppliers
5 things to consider to ensure you are choosing legitimate suppliers5 things to consider to ensure you are choosing legitimate suppliers
5 things to consider to ensure you are choosing legitimate suppliers
 
10 ways to motivate your employees
10 ways to motivate your employees10 ways to motivate your employees
10 ways to motivate your employees
 
Creating a simplified business plan
Creating a simplified business planCreating a simplified business plan
Creating a simplified business plan
 
Data security, a growing concern among sme
Data security, a growing concern among smeData security, a growing concern among sme
Data security, a growing concern among sme
 
Apptivo Project Apps Milestone
Apptivo Project Apps MilestoneApptivo Project Apps Milestone
Apptivo Project Apps Milestone
 
Apptivo project app
Apptivo project appApptivo project app
Apptivo project app
 
5 innovative businesses launched by veterans
5 innovative businesses launched by veterans5 innovative businesses launched by veterans
5 innovative businesses launched by veterans
 
Why small businesses, consultants and freelancer need project management
Why small businesses, consultants and freelancer need project managementWhy small businesses, consultants and freelancer need project management
Why small businesses, consultants and freelancer need project management
 
12 questions to ask before requesting a guest blogger
12 questions to ask before requesting a guest blogger12 questions to ask before requesting a guest blogger
12 questions to ask before requesting a guest blogger
 
Cloud computing and its risks
Cloud computing and its risksCloud computing and its risks
Cloud computing and its risks
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

Regression analysis: Simple Linear Regression Multiple Linear Regression
Regression analysis:  Simple Linear Regression Multiple Linear RegressionRegression analysis:  Simple Linear Regression Multiple Linear Regression
Regression analysis: Simple Linear Regression Multiple Linear RegressionRavindra Nath Shukla
 
Lucknow 💋 Escorts in Lucknow - 450+ Call Girl Cash Payment 8923113531 Neha Th...
Lucknow 💋 Escorts in Lucknow - 450+ Call Girl Cash Payment 8923113531 Neha Th...Lucknow 💋 Escorts in Lucknow - 450+ Call Girl Cash Payment 8923113531 Neha Th...
Lucknow 💋 Escorts in Lucknow - 450+ Call Girl Cash Payment 8923113531 Neha Th...anilsa9823
 
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...Paul Menig
 
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023Neil Kimberley
 
VIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Jamshedpur
VIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service JamshedpurVIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Jamshedpur
VIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service JamshedpurSuhani Kapoor
 
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 40 Call Me: 8448380779
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 40 Call Me: 8448380779Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 40 Call Me: 8448380779
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 40 Call Me: 8448380779Delhi Call girls
 
Monte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSM
Monte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSMMonte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSM
Monte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSMRavindra Nath Shukla
 
Mysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best Services
Mysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best ServicesMysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best Services
Mysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best ServicesDipal Arora
 
VIP Call Girls In Saharaganj ( Lucknow ) 🔝 8923113531 🔝 Cash Payment (COD) 👒
VIP Call Girls In Saharaganj ( Lucknow  ) 🔝 8923113531 🔝  Cash Payment (COD) 👒VIP Call Girls In Saharaganj ( Lucknow  ) 🔝 8923113531 🔝  Cash Payment (COD) 👒
VIP Call Girls In Saharaganj ( Lucknow ) 🔝 8923113531 🔝 Cash Payment (COD) 👒anilsa9823
 
GD Birla and his contribution in management
GD Birla and his contribution in managementGD Birla and his contribution in management
GD Birla and his contribution in managementchhavia330
 
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 MayIt will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 MayNZSG
 
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101 - Basics on Growth Marketing
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101  - Basics on Growth MarketingTech Startup Growth Hacking 101  - Basics on Growth Marketing
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101 - Basics on Growth MarketingShawn Pang
 
Cash Payment 9602870969 Escort Service in Udaipur Call Girls
Cash Payment 9602870969 Escort Service in Udaipur Call GirlsCash Payment 9602870969 Escort Service in Udaipur Call Girls
Cash Payment 9602870969 Escort Service in Udaipur Call GirlsApsara Of India
 
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman Leech
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman LeechRE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman Leech
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman LeechNewman George Leech
 
Grateful 7 speech thanking everyone that has helped.pdf
Grateful 7 speech thanking everyone that has helped.pdfGrateful 7 speech thanking everyone that has helped.pdf
Grateful 7 speech thanking everyone that has helped.pdfPaul Menig
 
M.C Lodges -- Guest House in Jhang.
M.C Lodges --  Guest House in Jhang.M.C Lodges --  Guest House in Jhang.
M.C Lodges -- Guest House in Jhang.Aaiza Hassan
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (20)

Regression analysis: Simple Linear Regression Multiple Linear Regression
Regression analysis:  Simple Linear Regression Multiple Linear RegressionRegression analysis:  Simple Linear Regression Multiple Linear Regression
Regression analysis: Simple Linear Regression Multiple Linear Regression
 
Lucknow 💋 Escorts in Lucknow - 450+ Call Girl Cash Payment 8923113531 Neha Th...
Lucknow 💋 Escorts in Lucknow - 450+ Call Girl Cash Payment 8923113531 Neha Th...Lucknow 💋 Escorts in Lucknow - 450+ Call Girl Cash Payment 8923113531 Neha Th...
Lucknow 💋 Escorts in Lucknow - 450+ Call Girl Cash Payment 8923113531 Neha Th...
 
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
7.pdf This presentation captures many uses and the significance of the number...
 
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
Mondelez State of Snacking and Future Trends 2023
 
VIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Jamshedpur
VIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service JamshedpurVIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Jamshedpur
VIP Call Girl Jamshedpur Aashi 8250192130 Independent Escort Service Jamshedpur
 
Nepali Escort Girl Kakori \ 9548273370 Indian Call Girls Service Lucknow ₹,9517
Nepali Escort Girl Kakori \ 9548273370 Indian Call Girls Service Lucknow ₹,9517Nepali Escort Girl Kakori \ 9548273370 Indian Call Girls Service Lucknow ₹,9517
Nepali Escort Girl Kakori \ 9548273370 Indian Call Girls Service Lucknow ₹,9517
 
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 40 Call Me: 8448380779
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 40 Call Me: 8448380779Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 40 Call Me: 8448380779
Best VIP Call Girls Noida Sector 40 Call Me: 8448380779
 
Monte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSM
Monte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSMMonte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSM
Monte Carlo simulation : Simulation using MCSM
 
Mysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best Services
Mysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best ServicesMysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best Services
Mysore Call Girls 8617370543 WhatsApp Number 24x7 Best Services
 
Forklift Operations: Safety through Cartoons
Forklift Operations: Safety through CartoonsForklift Operations: Safety through Cartoons
Forklift Operations: Safety through Cartoons
 
VIP Call Girls In Saharaganj ( Lucknow ) 🔝 8923113531 🔝 Cash Payment (COD) 👒
VIP Call Girls In Saharaganj ( Lucknow  ) 🔝 8923113531 🔝  Cash Payment (COD) 👒VIP Call Girls In Saharaganj ( Lucknow  ) 🔝 8923113531 🔝  Cash Payment (COD) 👒
VIP Call Girls In Saharaganj ( Lucknow ) 🔝 8923113531 🔝 Cash Payment (COD) 👒
 
GD Birla and his contribution in management
GD Birla and his contribution in managementGD Birla and his contribution in management
GD Birla and his contribution in management
 
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 MayIt will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
It will be International Nurses' Day on 12 May
 
KestrelPro Flyer Japan IT Week 2024 (English)
KestrelPro Flyer Japan IT Week 2024 (English)KestrelPro Flyer Japan IT Week 2024 (English)
KestrelPro Flyer Japan IT Week 2024 (English)
 
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101 - Basics on Growth Marketing
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101  - Basics on Growth MarketingTech Startup Growth Hacking 101  - Basics on Growth Marketing
Tech Startup Growth Hacking 101 - Basics on Growth Marketing
 
Cash Payment 9602870969 Escort Service in Udaipur Call Girls
Cash Payment 9602870969 Escort Service in Udaipur Call GirlsCash Payment 9602870969 Escort Service in Udaipur Call Girls
Cash Payment 9602870969 Escort Service in Udaipur Call Girls
 
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman Leech
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman LeechRE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman Leech
RE Capital's Visionary Leadership under Newman Leech
 
Grateful 7 speech thanking everyone that has helped.pdf
Grateful 7 speech thanking everyone that has helped.pdfGrateful 7 speech thanking everyone that has helped.pdf
Grateful 7 speech thanking everyone that has helped.pdf
 
Best Practices for Implementing an External Recruiting Partnership
Best Practices for Implementing an External Recruiting PartnershipBest Practices for Implementing an External Recruiting Partnership
Best Practices for Implementing an External Recruiting Partnership
 
M.C Lodges -- Guest House in Jhang.
M.C Lodges --  Guest House in Jhang.M.C Lodges --  Guest House in Jhang.
M.C Lodges -- Guest House in Jhang.
 

Top 10 marketing mistakes to watch out for

  • 1. Top 10 Marketing Mistakes to watch out for Love it or dread it. Right brain or left. Waste of money or revenue generator. Marketing is always in question. Should we do it? Why isn‟t it working? How much should we spend? Can we even afford it? Why do others do it so much better? The answers are actually quite simple. Unfortunately, too many people get easily confused over the real objective of marketing. Marketing should only be about clearly telling specifically targeted buyers what you have to offer to them and why they should spend their money to buy it. What makes this tough is that people get creative. That‟s right, creative. They try to use cool design or complex descriptions to „wow‟ someone when all the „someone‟ wants is to understand “so what?” Don‟t get me wrong, I am as creative as they come but pretty for the sake of art isn‟t marketing. Then we compound the problem when the marketing is driven by the engineers or someone technical (i.e. lacks professional communication skills) or the worst scenario, when marketing is driven by the founder (i.e. “Doesn‟t everyone want one of my perfect puppies?”). Therefore, here are some of the top mistakes software companies make. I offer you the following lessons based on decades accruing my own marketing scars, together with helping several dozens of client companies of all sizes and shapes to succeed by doing more strategic, Mistake#1: Assuming you are your target customer Let‟s be clear. “Customer” can mean the buyer (person who signs the check for the purchase), the user (person(s) who actually use the product), and the influencers (people who have a say in whether the company buys it or not). As such, you can never be all those roles for whatever software you sell. Whether your © 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 2. product is business-to-business (B-to-B) or consumer-to-business (B-to-C), there are almost always multiple customers in each sale and as such,smarter marketing.knowing them is paramount. „Knowing‟ includes nailing down their demographics, their buying cycles, their budget requirements, their price sensitivity, their experience with other similar products, etc. You can only know these things by asking and no amount of web research or analysts‟ reports are going to help with that. You need to do primary research – even if it is on a small scale and done informally with target customers. I often get asked to do this on behalf of clients who are too busy, too intimidated or too fearful of what they may hear from prospective clients. Oftentimes using an outside person (e.g. consultant) is even better since the outsider can ask the naïve and politically incorrect questions while the respondent can feel a little less worried about honestly answering about the company they do business with. That middle layer adds some perceived protection thus often exposing more the truth than the vendor will get directly. After all, a customer is already in the boat and as such, doesn‟t want to rock it too much. So whether you use an outside interviewer or not, just talk to your customers and if you want to get really smart, talk to the people that decided not to purchase your software – that‟s where the most insightful information lies. It‟s best to do such research early and often. Like any diagnosis, the worst case is that you find out that you are off the selling tracks but hopefully can readjust (albeit potentially costly changes but less so than making the changes later in the cycle). The best case is that you make new or renewed fans (everyone loves to have their opinion asked and matter). It will probably grease the sales cycle too when that person interviewed is presented the product now ready that they actually asked for. Mistake #2: Asking what users want and not why If you‟ve been trained on the art of good product requirements gathering, you‟ve learned that use cases and personas are great tools to ensure that requirements are put into perspective.A typical use case might say something like, “The user shall be able to change the background © 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 3. colors.” This may seem like a nice feature to offer the users but in fact, could make your product look horrible if they select poor combinations. Therefore, the question is “what value does it really have to the user?” If the concern is that colorblind individuals may need a different palette in order to best use the software, then be specific. You can either specify that the colors used must be visible to someone who is colorblind, or you can offer a handful of pre- designed palettes that you know will maintain the integrity of your user interface. This is a simple example but in my work, I see so many product requirements that are nicely packaged with use cases and even specific details. However, without asking why this feature is required, you miss a whole lot of understanding as to what you really need to build and how to market it. Mistake #3: Accepting that not every requirement needs a business justification An axiom to Mistake #2, part of asking „why‟ helps determine the business case for each requirement. The revenue related to some requirements may be clear (i.e. “By expanding our interface to the iPhone, we will increase our target customer base to over 5 million with an expected penetration of 10% and subsequent revenue opportunity of $400,000.”). However, more than likely, most requirements don‟t have such a clear ROI. How do you quantify usability or better code base development? Consider the long term cost savings such as how much support or other company resource will be saved over time with such product enhancements. Customer retention from happier, more successful customers is also quantifiable. Better competitive positioning is a good thing but only if it helps to really sell more of your software which is often hard to prove unless you have lost sales or other provable such experiences. There is also personnel retention. No kidding – there may be features or at least development projects that are done for the sake of keeping critical internal team motivated and innovative. It‟s not a great way to justify projects from an ROI perspective, but nonetheless, a way to think through whether that use of company resources has a decent justification versus other projects. © 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 4. Mistake #4: SEO and social media is critical Because software companies understand SEO and social media, they assume it is important for their business as a competitive advantage. Perhaps it is, but in many cases, it is actually a waste of time and money (Yes, I am a marketing person saying that!). If your target buyers search for information related to your products on the internet, then yes, you should make it easy to find your company and content, especially if your keywords are highly competitive or mixed with other unrelated products. However, often in the b-to-b software business, I hear the need to “get into the C-suite”. If this is a legitimate need to sell the company‟s software, then think about if those C-level managers are spending time surfing the internet and reading Facebook pages and blogs. Most likely not – or at least not for the purpose of you selling them software. Rather than spend precious resources blogging or Tweeting, consider how to reach your target individuals in the channels they use for information gathering. If you don‟t know this, ask them (yes, it‟s that easy). SEO and social media properly done are voracious marketing tactics requiring constant content feeding and monitoring. As such, if they are important for your business to reach prospective and existing customers, do it and commit fully. If not, don‟t waste anyone‟s time. Mistake #5: Marketing has to cost a lot Speaking about social media and SEO, many people assume those are good marketing ideas as they are free. Email, too, for that matter. While the channel may be free to use, there is always a cost. Someone‟s time to create the content is obvious – but also consider the time to monitor the impact, plus respond to and refine these marketing tactics. So the issue becomes whether those same resources could be put to better use doing more effective marketing even if that appears to cost more. Take for example, one of my clients that sells global trade management software. Their customers are any company that imports or exports products from one country to another and the trade managers in those companies do use the internet to search for information about trade management and related topics. As such, my client wanted to optimize their site and create some social media venues to help reach out to their targets. My concern was the amount of © 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 5. time and content knowledge that it would take to do this well given the client was a rather small startup. I recommended that since the VP of Products already did weekly summaries and links to important industry articles for her own management team, we could repurpose that content onto a blog and offer that as a service to the external target audience. In 10 minutes, we taught a junior associate how to post to one of the free blog sites. We created the „sponsored‟ blog simply by adding the company logo to one of the blog templates that complimented (but didn‟t replicate) the company‟s look and feel. Now the admin uses the same links from the weekly internal emails that the VP was sending out already. In a few weeks, the site became quite popular and now provides a valuable news service to target buyers. With all the rich keywords created from the newsworthy articles it lists, the blog has terrific SEO and subsequently generates traffic to the company‟s website. So by using a free blog infrastructure to create a very professional, valuable social media channel, we created an online magnet for prospective clients and even media and industry analysts who take advantage of this vendor-neutral (but clearly vendor-sponsored) clipping service. And each and every time they go there from their RSS feed or other trigger, my client‟s logo is there associated with the latest and greatest news about the global trade management industry. “FREE”! Never lose potential sales using Apptivo‟s Opportunities App With that said, there are so many other free tools that can help with marketing significantly. Do you use Google Alerts as your own, free clipping service that reports all the news about your competition, product, industry or whatever you decide to track? What about Twitterhawk if your product is something talked about in the Twittersphere? Heck, we already discussed the importance of talking to customers which is usually a “free” activity that yields the most precious marketing intelligence and builds sales relationships. In reality, what costs a lot is misguided marketing and spending money recklessly to promote your company without the clear knowledge about what your targets need and want from you and how they want that information delivered to them. © 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 6. Mistake #6: Word of mouth happens on its own If you build it, they may not come. Seriously. Even if some targets said your idea was a good one, are they willing to pay for it? Many entrepreneurs go to friends and family for funding as well as confidence that the proposed software is needed. But your friends and family (or even investors) are probably not your buyers. Don‟t get happy ears and think because someone is being nice to you means they will open their wallets when you come back with the product ready for sale. Friends and family won‟t tell you your baby is ugly either so make sure you have good representation of your real target buyers before, during and after you build the software. Better yet, go to people who bought from your competition or are accomplishing the same tasks using a totally different method. Ask them why they didn‟t choose yours. They have nothing to lose and just may tell you that your breath stinks. And despite what Malcolm Caldwell‟s Tipping Point implies, if you read the case studies, you know that word of mouth/viral marketing, isn‟t something that happens from nothing. It happens because there is a market that has enough information to buy and share among their colleagues to get a trend going. For software, we use additional tricks like “powered by” and “read only” ways to get non-licensed individuals to be impressed enough upon receipt of the „runtime software‟ to want them to seek us out for the rights to be a real part of the club. It can‟t hurt to do that but let‟s be real – it isn‟t going to make most of us rich. What will is building software that really does solve a problem that a target group has and letting them know explicitly that we have the solution. Mistake #7: If mine is best, they will buy it despite their budget Just because your target customer doesn‟t have one of your types of products and may need one, there are tons of other things that are priorities. If you sell to small businesses, for example, email marketing tools may be very important but so are the computers that create them which may be competing for the same scant available dollars. “Only $15 per month” can mean either email autoresponse to online inquiries or printer cartridges to deliver decent brochures. As we were reminded in the past 2 years, money isn‟t recyclable and as such, © 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 7. fighting for a limited budget at your target customers doesn‟t always mean your product or the competition. It means proving that their business will gain more by buying your product than any other thing they plan to spend their money on. Therefore, don‟t just consider products „like yours‟ your competition. Consider anything that is chasing the same budget dollars from your target customers‟ wallets as competition. And speaking about chasing budget dollars, it always bothers me when prospective clients complain that they have no more marketing money in Q4 knowing full well that most of their target customers budget for the following year in the previous quarter. Therefore, why would do all your marketing in Q1 to targets that have already made their purchase decisions? Being the best solution for the problem at hand is key but also making sure the value is greater than other purchases is critical to get that target spending their precious budgets. And don‟t forget that just because they budgeted for it, things change. All good intentions from your “hot leads” may change on the time due to new competitive factors, organizational changes, adjusted budgets and all the other financial shifts that have tainted the past few years of every company. That‟s why lead nurturing is so important until the sale is completed. The game isn‟t over until the checks are cleared and the warranty period is over. And yes, even then, marketing still probably has a role in retaining customers and buying more. Mistake #8: Marketing is a science Because we‟ve become obsessed with measuring marketing, we assume it is a science. Sure we can quote page views and click-throughs but we still can‟t easily measure reputation and rarely the customer‟s ROI when using our software. I am a major proponent of planning measurement and tracking for every marketing program so you can see what is working and how well. However, I am also a big fan of testing and refining things that aren‟t quite working when we think they should. Often times we spend marketing dollars on programs such as a direct mail piece and when it fails, we don‟t take even a moment to find out why. We think because we did all the homework to ensure its success, it should have had better results but in © 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 8. reality, there is too much volatility in the real world for us to predict. Economic factors, competitive factors, social factors, even environmental factors (e.g. 911, Katrina) are wildcards as we execute a marketing program. However, when things fail, software companies often blame it on marketing as an unreliable concept and in reality it may be the product, the people or the pricing of the offer – things that the marketers may not control. As such, you owe it to yourselves to debrief on every marketing program that fails. With that said, don‟t get mislead that lots of views and clicks mean lots of sales. Marketing success isn‟t about open links and eyeballs, it‟s about wallets opened. I can stand outside on the street corner and get lots of people to hear me yelling a message. Getting the target buyers to pay for my software is the only relevant metric. Mistake #9: More information is better If you can‟t convey what you do to whom and why they care in two sentences or less, something is wrong. I am not suggesting that you can explain your entire offering or competitive value in two sentences but a good positioning that makes it clear who, what and why separates the targets from the others quickly. As humans (particularly us girls), most of us are fearful that we may offend or reject potential friends. In marketing, filtering the market is actually good! If I can separate wheat from chafe, targets from uninterested, I don‟t waste sales time and marketing resources. Ideally, if your positioning is clear and specific for those who care, those who don‟t will politely say, “That‟s not for me”. Good, then both of you can move on. Now, once you have the target person intrigued, you do need to provide more information to convince them that your product is not only right for them but the best one for them and something they absolutely must buy (ideally now!). Doing this should be done in incremental, meaningful steps. That is, providing a 20 page datasheet may be too much for the buyer to invest at the early stage of the buying cycle. However, offering digestible amounts of information to the buyer is really important so they continue to seek more and are willing to © 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 9. invest their time knowing your offering seems to be a good solution for something there are needing. Slamming them with a folder full of datasheets, brochures, article reprints, case studies and press releases probably is a bit overwhelming to most any customer in any business. The same applies to your website that probably contains much of this content. Unless it is well organized (much like your software itself), it may say more about your company before it is even read. Mistake #10: Your mother doesn’t need to understand what you do Don‟t assume that writers (me included), analysts or other “thought leaders” understand your product, let alone your specific target customers. Even with industry experience, chances are we all have our own baggage and unique perspective that may or may not help us know what your software does. Throwing in acronyms doesn‟t impress us but rather often confuses us and we won‟t tell you that because our egos won‟t let us. To know if your positioning and sales message works, try it on mom or the neighbors and even your kids. If they can understand it well enough to paraphrase it back to you, you‟ve succeeded. Don‟t assume it‟s too complex for them because if it is, most likely it‟s not the product but your words that are complex. Heck, your mom probably is your best evangelist and just may surprise you. I wouldn‟t believe that myself except it literally did work for me. While I was working on customer relationship management (CRM) software and writing articles and whitepapers for my own company years ago, I had explained the topic very generally to my mother who had sold promotional products during her career. She understood enough about what I did that she connected me to her friend who was in a bind with a regular CRM section in BusinessWeek. Guess who got the gig…your‟s truly. See, you never know unless you make the effort to get your marketing speaking for you in a way that everyone around you can easily help promote your product to target buyers – even mom. © 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 10. Alyssa Dver is the CEO at Mint Green Marketing (www.mintgreenmktg.com) which offers affordable, expert marketing consulting and classes (live and online). Her books, “No Time Marketing” and “Software Product Management Essentials” continue to be best sellers and she is a frequent speaker at conferences and corporate events. Contact Alyssa at alyssadver@mintgreenmktg.comor508-881-5664 . **Published with permission from Alyssa Dver** © 2011 Apptivo Inc. All rights reserved.