Archive for August, 2010

Marketing Roadmap: What Happens Next?

Monday, August 30th, 2010

Six Drivers Shaping the Next Phase of B-to-B Marketing
Joel Goldstein, President
Goldstein Group Communications, Inc.
www.ggcomm.com

Anyone wishing for 2008 to return?  For most companies, 2008 was a year of strong performance, and many of us are anxious for those marketing patterns and programs to return.

But they won’t.  The financial collapse and global recession hasn’t been just a momentary pause in the way we do business – it’s led to a significant change in how companies operate.  It’s certainly led to a change in how they go to market.  The way we built marketing campaigns for business-to-business companies has changed structurally and permanently.  Things will not get “back to normal.”

In developing an approach for marketing going forward, there are several structural factors we’d suggest applying to b-to-b and technology marketing: 

  1. The idea that marketing is shifting from traditional to online methods is so well-documented now that it’s become an inadequate and even incomplete explanation for what’s taking place in marketing today.   Online is here.  It’s where engineers live.  Embrace it in every way you can.
  2. The structure of trade media that has existed for 60+ years is irrevocably splintering.  Once the dominant path to customer communications, it has now been replaced by more than a dozen other new avenues.
  3. The few media outlets that survive will be stronger, not weaker, and they will remain a viable partner for gaining access to customers and prospects, although in new ways.
  4. Marketing is math.  The role of analytics and ROI performance tracking will assume a greater priority for the successful b-to-b marketer, and anything created will have metrics and analytics attached to it that measure its impact.  Google is driving this movement, as the adoption of Google Analytics takes hold and spreads to dozens of other marketing automation and analysis platforms.
  5. The philosophy of mass lead generation and low cost-per-lead programs will be replaced by “engagement.”  Companies will use technology more effectively to target and cultivate relationships with customers and prospects in ways that don’t generate a lead, but foster relationships and experiences with individuals.  There will be some high-tech/high-touch moments connected to this, which explains the growth of video and face-to-face event marketing in the past 12-18 months.  Content, particularly for technical companies, will be critical for creating meaningful engagements.
  6. The velocity of marketing will increase.  It will be faster to build a brand, as well as easier to harm it.  The risks in marketing for b-to-b companies have increased along with the greater transparency inside companies that new social media networks have created.  (Example:  Twitter post on 4-30-10 from rickyg_sco – “Woohoo no longer an Acme employee)

Search Tools and PR Drive Furniture Site Traffic

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

It’s a beautiful desk, built of fine hardwoods and a contemporary design that makes it a perfect fit for a den, home office or workplace.  But even more compelling, its sophisticated design hides ugly tangles of wires and cables caused by all the wireless routers, monitors and workstations that crowd a typical workspace.  So Goldstein Group was hired by Caretta to create a new brand for the young furniture manufacturer as it moved from development to full-scale production.  With new messaging, literature, a series of PR announcements and a re-imagined web presence, Caretta traffic doubled every month during the first four months following the company’s brand launch.  Strong PR announcements and aggressive search engine marketing drove ever-higher web visits with metrics that showed visitors remained on the site for remarkably long periods.

Data Driven Insights

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

Marketing is all about nuances.  The gap between a message that resonates with a customer and one that falls flat can be difficult to close, but is at the core of marketing success.  When Avtron came to us with an idea for a new brochure for its Metals market segment, it was clear even to their marketing executives that the message was undefined.  Do we focus on the core offering, motors and drives?  Or do we have enough credibility to position the company as a broader system integrator?  Because the question went to the heart of customer perception, Goldstein Group went to the source – Avtron customers – with a detailed customer interview process to measure perceptions, competitive strengths and probe for successful positioning platforms.  The system integrator theme won out – but only after research analytics showed the market perception would support that position going forward.

Squeezing More Efficiency From Paid Search

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

Paid search programs, or pay-per-click, have come under scrutiny (what hasn’t?) during the past 18 months as marketing budgets were squeezed.  We all know from personal experience and see the data in web analytics reports that organic rankings generate a higher portion of click traffic – and quality.  One study at an industry conference indicated 88% of Google clicks come from organic listings, with paid receiving 12%.  But that doesn’t mean paid search has no role, or that its performance can’t be improved.  One technique used by Goldstein Group involves positioning ads not on the #1 spot, but on the #3.  We’ve seen all the studies showing that the #1 spot gets all the attention, but we don’t really believe it.  Our theory:  there’s so much focus spent on bidding for the #1 paid search position, that there’s often a large cost gap between the top and #3 slot – with no loss in visibility, we feel.  And the experience of one GGC client bears that out.  In April, its paid program generated about 1300 clicks for $4400.   By lowering its bids to the #3 position on the page, its cost the next month was 25%, or $3200 – and they generated the same 1300 clicks.  Bidding for #3 is one of our five Paid Search Strategies deployed by Goldstein Group to boost performance.  Contact us to learn more.

Brand:Scan August eNewsletter

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Our latest eNewsletter has been published.

http://www.ggcomm.com/ggc/Ideas8-10/index.htm

Enjoy.