Some entrepreneurs feel as if the universe is working against them. It’s a phenomenon called the headwinds/tailwinds effect.
View: ‘Why Does My Business Experience More Obstacles Than Others?’ (Hint: It Doesn’t.)
Some entrepreneurs feel as if the universe is working against them. It’s a phenomenon called the headwinds/tailwinds effect.
View: ‘Why Does My Business Experience More Obstacles Than Others?’ (Hint: It Doesn’t.)
In this video Ingram Micro Cloud takes a look at how Microsoft Office 365 helps small business owner Scott Naucler and his three employees work better together – giving him time to pursue his passion for the wind, at work and in life. Contact us today to find out how we can help you do the same.
View: Office 365 Propels Turbine Test Services to New Heights
A simple, reliable, cost-effective option for backing up customer data to the cloud, Microsoft Azure Backup encrypts and protects backups in offsite cloud storage. This adds a layer of protection in case data loss or disaster impacts customer servers. Azure Backup allows customers to quickly back up and restore files when accidentally deleted or lost. You can even retain old files and data for up to nine years with a cost-effective, pay-as-you-go model and no per-server or data transfer fees. Maintain flexibility and scale as needed for a fast and easy way to meet requirements. Lean more with this e-book!
Read page 8-9 for article my article on IoT.
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Below are just a few of the headlines from 2015. The media industry is seeing a tectonic shift as the bubble of social media pops, online advertising becomes the battlefield for tech giants, and the high expectations of good ol’e Profit and Loss are felt by cash hungry media start-ups.
Infoworld
The Verge
Information Age
USAToday
PC Magazine
Fortune Magazine
New York Times
Wired
Wall Street Journal
TechTimes
The Atlantic
Yahoo Finance
USAToday
And of course, this isn’t even a complete list. For those of us working in the marketing trenches this leaves a lot to be insecure about as we plan for 2016. Of course digital media is here to stay, and strategically there is a place in most portfolios for online digital buys – but its more imperative than ever to weight the risks and the rewards objectively. The cost for many will be depressed sales and diminished brands.
What are the three rules of real estate? Location, Location and Location. Likewise media companies are similarly tied to their content. Content drives audience engagement. In the past few years this has been interpreted to mean that MORE content drives audience engagement…but as we’ve found – this simply isn’t true. GREAT content drives audience engagement. Ask your media partners:
Alarmingly, large companies are purchasing and integrating media companies and editors into their marketing organizations. This phenomenon has created a vacuum of opportunity for companies that traditionally would have engaged objective outlets leading many to actually BUY/SELL editorial.
Over the past few years, the focus has been on numbers. Page views, hits, clicks, opens and downloads. These numbers provide a warm blanket of good feelings for most marketers reporting their performance to superiors.
A recent review of tech industry’s published audience numbers found that a sizable portion of media companies report audiences larger than their target markets. How can this be? Ask your media partners:
The information age has made it possible for information to be available 24/7, but for marketing professionals this means the pendulum has swung. What used to be finite channels to engage has become infinite. Getting real customers to engage in real interactions is, in fact, more difficult than ever. Ask your media partners:
At the end of the day these two tenants of marketing are as universal as ever. Reach the right people at the right time with the right message. Media professionals are experts at creating engaged audiences, and even though the channels through which we communicate have vastly expanded — the basic truths of marketing have stayed the same. Look for partners you trust, with audiences that trust them.
Learn more about how you can optimize marketing and advertising budgets to re-energize your product and brand outreach with The RTC Group – a TRUSTED media partner for 30 years.
WHITEPAPER:
Java is not just a programming language — it is also a platform that includes a well-known set of open source and commercial tools, an extensive ecosystem of experienced developers, and a standardized application deployment platform. Because it is flexible, scalable, cost-effective, and reduces risk, Java helps modern digital businesses to simplify development, reduce overall development costs, and accelerate time to market.
Diary of an Embedded Developer
Arrow electronics requested The RTC Group create content for their technical audience that reflected the core value of Microsoft’s Embedded software platform. Rather than a straight forward technical white paper, it was requested that we provide a creative alternative in the form of a fictional engineer’s journal. Along with managing a team of editorial talent, I also write content when a business focus is required.
I am the publisher of several magazines: RTC magazine, COTS Journal and MEDS. (Industry leading trade journals within the embedded computing industries.) I have also overseen the development and acquisition of several other media properties within The RTC Group’s portfolio of publications and media. Below are active publications:
www.rtcmagazine.com
www.cotsjournalonline.com
www.medsmagazine.com
Earlier this summer I wrote about general lead ROI (Diminishing Lead ROI). I want to thank everyone for his or her kind feedback and overall support. Out of that conversation, came more specific questions about event ROI.
Marketing survey after survey identify events as a key source of sales leads, and any B2B marketing manager worth their salt knows that wrapping their annual efforts around a few key event anchor-points provides strong context for all their other activities. So I’ll attempt to unwrap and share what I’ve learned about event marketing ROI over the course of the past two decades – and as an event producer with over 650 individual events under my belt.
First, lets start with the basics. What do events do for B2B marketers? Events offer three key features in varying degrees, and generally with one dominant focus:
Education
Events are a wonderful way for communities of professionals to come together and discover new innovations, ideas and upwellings of knowledge. It’s important to note that the education is often a multi-directional street. I’m often amused when asking exhibitors about their experience at a particular event, that rather than talking about attendance numbers or a particular prospect opportunity – they list the competitive information they gleaned, or the partnership opportunity they were made aware of, or the connected technology that will help them penetrate their market even further. “Knowledge is power.” Events provide one of the most cost-effective means of expanding industry knowledge.
Education is a powerful tool.
Events provide fundamentally fertile ground for all sorts of marketing activities. Large (inter)national tradeshows provide a platform for companies to present their brands in highly controlled and impactful ways. Reach and frequency require event-marketing strategies to diversify to be most effective, but when optimized the right calendar-of-events can bring a mix of marketing support unique and highly effective.
Events are also inevitably a focal point for industry press and media. When done properly, a seasoned PR manager can influence a year’s worth of editorial coverage in just few days of meetings.
Finally, events provide a focused audience, that I find is rarely exploited to its fullest by marketing managers. Whitepapers, product announcements, directories, social media engagement, direct marketing all converge to expand a company’s reach within an already qualified audience. Pure magic.
As I keep mentioning, the end goal of all these activities is to create commerce. Without sales every organization – no matter how great the idea or execution – dies. Many smaller regional events provide specific and highly intimate interactions with key components of your organization – be it verticals, channel configuration or funding mechanisms. All geared toward moving sales forward. Event programming is designed to provide a neutral ground for ALL phases of the sales cycle to be realized. It’s one of the few marketing activities that can boast this feature.
Hopefully, you didn’t get to this point without figuring out that knowing what any particular event is designed to accomplish is the MOST IMPORTANT valuation you can make about your organization’s participation.
Every event – whether large or small, focused or broad, regional or international, highly attended or highly intimate is designed to accommodate some mixture of these three qualities.
Now, few events are going to specifically spell out which features they are focusing on – but there are telltale guideposts to help you navigate these murky waters. The good news is once you’ve identified a particular event’s DNA you can compare it to your own priorities to create strong opportunities.
So what are you looking for?
Education dominant events are all about the program. Look for events with highly focused and deeply engaging content. You’ll often think “training” when participating in Educational events. Generally, there is a focus on a highly specialized audience, depth of content, and a very specific progression for most attendees. Because of its ability to draw attendees, Education is often a secondary goal of many events.
Pros
Cons
Marketing dominant events are all about the energy. Look for events with a diverse program, multitudes of avenues for both sponsor and attendee to participate. You’ll often look at large national events when looking for a marketing dominant event. These events are typically larger in scale and format. Sponsors are qualified by the footprint of their brand and their ability to create the broadest impact possible.
Pros
Cons
Sales dominant events are all about the relationships. Look for events where contact information is widely shared and interaction is maximized. You’ll often find these events to be regional in nature, allowing diverse sales channels the ability to reach local markets. Generally, sales events rely on cooperative marketing models and highlight a program as defined by host sponsors rather than predefined to maximize event energy.
Pros
Cons
I would guess, that you’re probably thinking about that must-attend event in your space and trying to measure your perception of their formula against your own organization’s goals. Although every event has a dominant arm, rarely do they focus on only one or even two of these inclinations. As you plan your participation – take advantage of the benefits that each facet provides. But as always, the best strategy is to optimize the mixture.
I hope this will help give you a blueprint for evaluating which events are right for you, or even how to create your own unique DNA for successful internally developed events. Whatever your priorities, event marketing is still one of the best tools B2B marketers can use to develop, engage and retain clients.
Make it great.
For the better part of two decades I’ve been in the lead development, cultivation and delivery business. As the marketing guy behind one of the longest running and most successful lead development activities in the embedded computing space, I’ve seen first hand the power of providing quality leads to organizations across diverse verticals and technology functions. I was preaching cheap lead generation, before it was cool — so for me to come out against lead generation is a change in orthodoxy that would turn heads among my colleagues.
What’s wrong with lead generation today? Two things.
First, valuation of leads changes greatly as you move through time and penetrate your total available market (TAM). More accurately put, the more leads you generate — one of two things becomes true:
A.) New leads are generally less valuable because they require more cultivation to close.
B.) New leads are generally more expensive to acquire because they are more difficult to find.
The dawn of the information age means there are a myriad of tools at a savvy marketing or sales manager’s fingertips to cultivate new leads. Whether reaching out on LinkedIn or posting new whitepapers to one’s website and collecting contact information — leads will vary greatly in their value, timeliness and cost to close.
Second, no two leads are created equal. I manage a team of excellent sales professionals. One of the interesting phenomenon that I often see with them is that they will go after the big deal with lower close potential rather than service multiple smaller, more certain sales prospects. Those familiar with the sales funnel instinctively know that the closer the contact is to buying — the better the lead.
Marketing managers must always keep their lead generation goals in the context of proximity to close. Of course, more leads sounds better. But where does a marketing manager with limited resources draw the line in terms of chasing their TAM?
This graph is a visual representation of a general principle. The closer to your TAM, the more it costs to develop and cultivate new leads. Its almost always true that within any given campaign, it takes more resources, frequency and exposure to generate the next lead. When clients come to us asking about lead generation campaigns, inevitably the first question is “How much is your Cost Per Lead?” And of course the answer, “It depends,” rarely hits home with clients.
Part of what confuses marketers is — what constitutes a lead? Here are mistakes marketers make when making lead-gen decisions:
Mistake 1 – Impressions aren’t valuable. There is a trend in B2B markets that impressions don’t count. Impressions with focus and frequency make a huge difference in cultivating new leads. Branding is a catalyst for enhancing lead generation efforts. Marketers that aren’t hitting at least 10% of their TAM every month with impactful messaging are putting their brand, product and company at risk. Lay the foundation before you build. Don’t expect leads without company and product recognition.
Mistake 2 – Leads should cost a fixed amount. Marketers are notorious for our numbers. We like to count and measure everything. “Our average lead costs $50.” The reality is that lead costs should be calculated in relation to the size and proximity to conversion. Generally, the smaller your TAM – the more you will pay per lead. Each additional lead will cost more than the next. Averages provide a nice benchmark, but they don’t give you a real sense of a leads value to your organization in the short, mid or long term.
Mistake 3 – Leads should be sale ready. As a marketing service professional I always profess to my clients that you don’t want me to get you too close to the sale. If I could guarantee that X% of my leads would bring your organization $X,XXX,XXX – trust me, I’d charge you for it. Sometimes the best lead values are those more easily attained, and only partially qualified. I find the best balance for marketers is to create a pool of potential that can be refreshed and refined over and over again. Think of your lead pool as a swimming pool. Leads are evaporating at a regular rate. Job changes, and industry shifts ensure that leads evolve dynamically. Good marketing knows that refreshing the pool with clean (qualified) leads provides a fertile environment for sales to do its job. Sometimes the best leads are already in your pool, and just need to be refreshed properly.
Mistake 4 – The best leads are ready to buy. If you have a lead that is ready to buy without much effort, chances are good that you’re leaving money and margin on the table. The best deals always require some friction. Its what separates a good salesperson from a great salesperson. Its what separates good marketing from great marketing. Creating additional value for the prospect has to be a core feature of lead generation and qualification. I always warn marketers, that our job is to break down enough barriers that a client is comfortable talking to us, but not so much that the salesperson doesn’t have room to create additional value for the client and our company.
Mistake 5 – Lead conversion can be tracked and measured. I’m going to create a lot of enemies in the marketing and sales SaaS industry, but its time to put this myth to bed. Automated metrics provide a lot of data, but they cannot anticipate the buying behavior of your clients. If I (or anyone) could orchestrate a sale, I’d be the richest person on the planet. Qualified lead sources provide the necessary fuel for good sales engines to stay running. The reality is that most companies know they need X,XXX number of leads per month to keep the sales channel full. But as the old adage goes, I know my marketing works — I just don’t which part. If you’re spending more than 0.25% of your revenue measuring marketing and sales leads – you’re spending too much.
As a marketing service provider I always tell my clients…
I can provide you an industry specific impression for $0.14. I can provide you an industry specific buying-behavior lead somewhere between $100 and $300. And I can provide you a sale ready lead for 10% of revenue. Where would you like to buy in?
As a marketer you should always be considering what features are most important to your sales goals?
Lead Generation is an incredible tool, that when used in context and with clarity of purpose can supercharge an organization sales channel. It can also constipate and confuse everyone looking to do business with your company and your sales pipeline.
Every company needs a lead generation strategy.
Make sure your strategy makes sense…
And good luck.