Business

Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts

Tuesday 1 July 2014

Using Distributors with Time and Stratergy - Prabhakar


Over the last few years we have carried out a number of surveys to examine the effectiveness of distributors in industrial marketing. There is no doubt that there are many unhappy marriages between manufacturers and their distributors and that the commonest causes of friction are misunderstandings as to when and where this channel should be used and how to get the best out of it.

Distributors, merchants, dealers or factors are characterized by two features. First, unlike agents who take a commission, they buy stock for re-sale. Second, they are usually but not always appointed by the manufacturer to cover a specific geographical area or sector of the market. Typically the distributor is a small company, perhaps with only one or two branches. It may be privately owned and managed by the proprietor, an ex-salesman who has opted for a life of greater independence.

The ideal environment for a distributor is a market with many small customers and where the level of sales service required is high. The spread of customers is difficult and expensive to reach with a directly employed sales force who are more suited to dealing with a limited number of large buyers. Distributors generally aim to win business on sales rather than technical service. Their stock of products means customers can have instant delivery.

A difficult technical problem may require referring to the manufacturer. Simple repair work may be handled by the distributor. Distributors are, therefore, an efficient means of selling car parts to garages, tools to industry or components to electronic companies. They are inappropriate for selling complex industrial plant, computers or castings. If distributors are not performing well, the manufacturer should ask if their job could be better undertaken by a sales force or agency. Distributors will never prove successful if they are used as a cheap alternative to a sales force - they either fit the conditions or they do not.

Even in the correct marketing environment the use of distributors is not always successful. Many distributors make the mistake of expanding their product range to an unmanageable level, with the result that selling effort is dissipated. This gives rise to the commonly voiced complaint of manufacturers that distributors are order takers and not order getters. The product range they carry may be deep as well as wide with a variety of items from high to low value. In a recent interview, the marketing manager of an air tool company complained bitterly that his distributors were more interested in selling expensive compressors than tools which cost on average only a couple of hundred pounds each. Distributors are not necessarily the wrong way to sell air tools but certainly this company had the wrong distributors.
Using Distributors with Time and Stratergy - Prabhakar
After Christmas sale (Photo credit: kevin dooley)

Poor distributors can be recognised by their low level of stocks. Since an important role of the distributor network is to provide immediate access to goods, poor stocks will result in poor service. The same person who carries inadequate stocks is likely to be the one to complain that the manufacturer is letting him down with deliveries which are too slow.

Staff employed by distributors may sometimes leave a great deal to be desired. Counter staff may lack selling experience. A recent survey of packaging distributors asked the proprietors whether they would be prepared to let the manufacturer train their sales staff in one of the product lines. Only a minority were interested in the offer, even though it would have cost them nothing except the opportunity cost of their employees' time.

Distributors do not shrink from criticising manufacturers. They point to the all too frequent practice whereby the manufacturer takes the rich pickings for his own sales force leaving the distributor with the crumbs. Worse, the distributor may be encouraged to build up sizeable accounts only to find this business has been short circuited when it suits the convenience of the manufacturer.

Manufacturers are also accused of being interested only in selling into distributors and providing little help in selling out. Distributors rely on a strong demand puff for their products. Distributors want customers who ask for a product by name and this demands strong branding. Manufacturers should not assume that distributors are interested in switching customers to another brand at the point of sale. Small distributors may lack the time and trained management for planned marketing. Many are glorified shops relying heavily on counter sales. A token entry in Yellow Pages may well be the sum of their marketing effort. ----  The When And How of Using Distributors

It usually falls upon the manufacturer to provide marketing support. This can range from the provision of display material for the showroom through to media advertising or mail shots aimed at drawing a response and directing it to the distributor. A number of distributors in the packaging survey said that not only did they receive little or no support from their principals but they even had to buy their own sales literature!

Territories are a frequent bone of contention. This may be due to the loose definition of boundaries placing one distributor in conflict with another or it could be the result of the carving up of one area into smaller units.

After studying a number of different markets in which distributors are used we have arrived at the conclusion that wherever this sales channel fails it is most likely to be due to shortfalls on the part of the principal. Distributors are, after all, selected by the manufacturer rather than self-appointed. They need a helping hand and may not get it. They can hardly be blamed for placing their own limited time and resources behind products which sell easily and make money rather than those which are hard to sell and provide little profit.

There is no single recipe for the successful appointment and management of distributors but here are some ingredients which are worth considering.

Seek specialists. Distributors who specialize in a narrow field tend to be the most successful. They understand the needs of their customers better and know where in their territory the potential lies.

Treat distributors as part of your own company. In a recent exercise carried out for a manufacturer of solenoid valves it was easy to see that the reason it achieved the lion's share of the market was that it treated its distributors as if they were company employees. Regular conferences bound them together and provided an opportunity for sorting out problems.
Just as a manufacturer would not dream of sending a new salesman on the road without product training, so too should distributors' staff be trained. If the distributors find it inconvenient for their people to visit the principal's factory for this purpose then a scheme should be devised for on the job training.

Set strict codes for merchandising. Contrary to the belief of some manufacturers, distributors are quite prepared to conform to a tightly controlled formula for merchandising goods - as long as they know it works. Snap-on Tools, for example, have hundreds of distributors selling tools to garage mechanics from vans. Snap-on insist that every van is laid out in the same way and that each distributor wears a uniform. And the distributors are happy to comply because they know that this approach sells more tools.

Provide assistance with Marketing. Marketers take it for granted that everyone knows which directories to look in for a list of prospects, how to organise a direct mail campaign and where to place ads. Distributors are likely to be managed by good salesmen and poor marketers. Any assistance that the principal can provide in marketing the products will improve the relationship and help both parties sell more products.

Make the business worthwhile. If a manufacturer decides to use distributors rather than another marketing channel, he should not begrudge the distributor his margin. This margin saves the manufacturer from having to invest in cars, salesmen, depots and expensively high stock levels. The margin he provides should be sufficient to cover the distributor's costs and provide a profit incentive.

Keep the distributor interested. Distributors are under constant pressure to take on a new range or a new supplier. Any manufacturer who becomes complacent about its distributor network is putting it at risk. If it is good there will be many who want to steal it. Distributor incentives and prizes, newsletters and constant support in the form of visits are essential to keep the distributor interested and stop it being tempted away.

{{ The Guest Post Blogger organization was not involved in the creation of this content. - Dalvi Prabhakar B., Founder & Digital Manager (SEO,SEM,SMO) }}

Wednesday 25 June 2014

How Valuable Is the Data Economy with SAAS - B2B


In business, data has quickly gone from being a mere asset to being a potential revenue stream—a substantial one. The result: a burgeoning market for data. Capturing its scope and opportunity, though, isn’t easy.

Like other financial assets, data can be created, accessed, traded, transferred and monetized. For this reason, it’s increasingly being viewed as a commodity. Unlike other commodities, though, its value is “TBD.”

New CRM Capabilities in Microsoft Dynamics - InsideView
B2B Marketing Globilization knowledge share with John - Part 3
B2B Marketing Globilization beyond knowledge with John - Part 2
Inbound Marketing Plans for Understanding Customer Pain Points
"When people say data is a commodity, it's because they see statistics about huge pools of data out there," says Randy Giusto, an analyst with Outsell Inc., a research and advisory firm focused on media, information and technology. "It feels like a commodity because of the huge number of companies in this space.” However, estimates on the actual value of that commodity can be tough to pin down.

The Data-Value Disparity 
For example, last year, a data analytics company serving the auto industry used software code to track websites visited by consumers. Using a technique called “history sniffing,” the data company tracked user browsing histories. It transferred the data—400,000 consumer names, phone numbers, e-mail addresses and vehicle preferences—to a data broker for a mere $2,500 payoff (which would eventually go to a $400,000 settlement to the State of New Jersey, since “history sniffing” is illegal).

On the flip side, a survey of large companies last year, conducted by Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), found that those selling their digitized data earned, on average, a hefty $21.6 million in 2012. The survey also revealed that telecoms and utilities, in particular, are likely to monetize their data, while insurance companies get the biggest return.

Getting a true handle on the value of data as a commodity is made even more difficult because most data isn't sold: TCS discovered that only 27% of its survey respondents were selling their digitized data (though that number is expected to jump to 43% by 2015). Plenty of companies still barter their data, swapping with other companies to mutual advantage—something not considered in most valuations of the data economy.

Where the Growth is
So for many companies right now, the core of the data economy is a small but growing segment—the information two billion-plus global Internet users create when they click "like" on a social media page or take action online. Digital customer tracking—the selling of “digital footprints” (the trail of information consumers leave behind each time they surf the Web)—is now a $3 billion segment, according to a May 2014 Outsell report. At the moment, that's tiny compared to the monetary value of traditional market research such as surveys, forecasting and trend analysis. But digital customer tracking "is where the excitement and growth is," says Giusto.

Real-time data that measures actions consumers are actually taking has more value than study results that rely on consumer opinions. Not surprising, businesses are willing to pay more for activity-based data.

Striking it Richer
Outsell Inc.'s analyst Chuck Richard notes that the specificity of data has a huge affect on its value. In days past, companies would sell names, phone numbers, and email addresses as sales leads. Now, data buyers have upped the ante. They want richer data—names of consumers whose current "buying intent" has been analyzed through behavioral analytics. Beyond the “who,” companies want the “what” and “when” of purchases, along with “how” best to engage with prospects.
"Some companies are getting a tenfold premium for data that is very focused and detailed," Richard says. "For example, if you had a list of all the heart specialists in one region, that’s worth a lot."

Tapping into New Veins
Moving forward, marketers will increasingly value datasets that they can identify, curate and exploit. New technology could increase the value of data by gleaning insights from unstructured data (video, email and other non-traditional data sources); crowdsourcing and social media could generate new types of shareable data; predictive modeling and machine learning could find new patterns in data, increasing the value of different types of data.

Given all this, the data economy is sure to keep growing, as companies tap into new veins of ever-richer and more-specific data.


NARRATIVES by WSJ. Custom Studios for SAS

The Guest Post Blogger organization was not involved in the creation of this content.

Monday 16 June 2014

B2B Marketing Globilization knowledge share with John - Part 3


B2B Marketing Globalization knowledge share with John - Part 3

Pricing & Value Research - B2B

There are three ways of increasing profits: sell more, cut our costs, or raise existing prices.  Raising prices, in principle, is very easy indeed - change the price ticket and price list and tell the sales force to raise prices by 5%. Of course, once we increase prices, customers may start to look elsewhere for a better deal.

It is, however, useful to broaden the discussion on price and think about value – the trade-off between the benefits a customer receives from a product or service and the price they are willing to pay for it.

My Previous Post for B2B Marketing to improve ROI

Product Development

No company can survive without product development. As soon as you release a new or improved product or service onto the market, your competitors are ready and waiting to emulate it and improve it for their own purposes. However, product development does not have to be revolutionary. Indeed, most products evolve continuously over time; product development must be regarded as a continuous process, not an occasional event.

The key to successful product development research lies in exploring what the market values. Our job as researchers, marketers and product developers is to convert these issues into a package of benefits that appeals to the market.

Segmentation & Needs

Segmentation is at the very heart of marketing. A segment is a group of individuals or companies with a common attribute that causes them to share similar needs. Marketers tailor their products, services and communications to these common attributes in order to ensure that their offering meets market requirements.

Segmentation is a means of capturing value – customers receive and pay for benefits they value; conversely they neither receive nor pay for benefits they do not value.

Supply Chain & Distribution

As one of the most important parts of the marketing mix, the "place" or route to market of b2b goods and services is vital to understand. Increasingly, products and services are distributed through a complex network of supply chain partners, joint ventures and intermediaries. Accordingly, research can act as a window onto how organisations can better leverage their routes to market for maximum profitability.

Wednesday 11 June 2014

What is derivative trading - Simplus Information Services


Stock market and speculation are almost synonymous. Many believe that stock market trading is speculation. Some even call it a casino. Stock market prices today are a reflection of tomorrow’s prospects. They rise and fall in tandem with profits of businesses. Indians love to speculate.

The market was introduced to modern ‘derivatives’ trading recently. Stock futures and options or derivatives are used extensively in India for speculation.

Here are five things you need to know about derivatives trading:

1) What are they: A derivative is a security that derives value from an underlying asset. An underlying asset could be an equity share, debt instrument, a currency or a commodity. Derivatives deal with an agreement to trade at a future date or at a certain price.

2) Types of derivatives: There are two types of derivative instruments. Futures and options. Futures allow you to bet on future trends in prices of an underlying instrument at a fraction of the cost of that instrument. Options give you an option to buy or sell the stock, commodity or a debt instrument at a target price. If the price of a stock is Rs 100, you expect it to go up to Rs 110 in a month’s time, then you buy a contract at Rs 100 today and agree to sell it at Rs 110 at the end of the month.

3) Why derivatives: There are many advantages of derivatives trading. Most use it to hedge their losses or safeguarding their investments from fluctuations in the market. So if you have bought Reliance Industries shares and suddenly due to an external event not related to Reliance Industries its share price is likely to fall, you could use derivatives to sell Reliance stock futures and hedge your loss in the equity market. Importers and exporters often hedge their currency risk.

So when they import goods, they pay in foreign exchange. If the rupee value falls against the US dollar, imported goods get expensive. Hedging in currency derivatives helps in cutting these losses. Traders also use the secondary market for arbitrage – buy cheap in one market and sell at a higher price in another or vice versa. There is always a price difference in markets.

4) How do I start: Derivative instruments are available with registered trading members of stock exchanges like brokerage firms. You will have to fill the Know Your Client (KYC) form if you are a first time investor, along with other forms for purchasing the contract you wish. You are allotted a client identification number, after which you must deposit cash to initiate trade.

5) How it works: Trading is a simple ‘buy and sell’ process

The only difference is that you will not have to pay the entire sum, but just a margin. For example, if you are buying 100 contracts of Nifty 50 October futures with a value of 5000, and if the margin is 5%, then you don’t have to pay Rs 5,00,000, but just Rs 25,000. All such transactions are settled at the end of every trading day. Investors are not required to hold any stock of the underlying asset for trading in the derivatives market.

Monday 9 June 2014

How to Get the Results You Want Using Email Marketing Lists


How to Get the Results You Want Using Email Marketing Lists


One really great thing about using Email Marketing Lists is that you are given the ability to track the results of your marketing campaign. You’ll be able to see how many people actually opened the email, how many people actually used any of the links included in the email, and possibly even which links they chose to use. Now you can take these results and use them when it comes time to create your next Email Marketing List.

Email Marketing Lists vs. SEO

According to the Email Marketing Census of 2012, a little more than 70% of business owners that currently use Email Marketing Lists state that their email marketing campaigns have so far proven to be highly effective. In fact, the high majority of these business owners would like to increase their spending on this marketing method for their next year of business. The fact that organic SEO scored a little higher than Email Marketing Lists doesn’t take away from the many benefits that an Email marketing List can, and does, provide for their business.

Why Marketing Lists Work

Marketing Lists work because this type of marketing method is one that speaks directly to those who are interested in any particular business niche. Marketing Lists allow a business owner to directly target their specific audience because the List is derived from lots of intensive and detailed research. By sending out marketing emails to those who are known to have an interest in a specific niche, business owners are not only driving their sales and getting more leads, they are also building relationships with both their current and potential customers. Relationship building is critical when it comes to wanting your customers to trust and be loyal to you, and you only. Find out more by contacting us today!

Tips for Building Email Marketing Lists

Instead of using the typical message, “Join our Email List”, try to get a little more creative and add some extra information that will really grab the attention of prospective customers. For example, “Subscribe today so you can stay current with any and all information about (your niche here)”, or “When you join our email list, you’re going to receive lots of great tips and tricks, as well as valuable coupons!”.

Include a place for people to sign up for your email list in your emails. Offer them some kind of benefit in order to gently persuade them to join, such as a free gift with their first purchase or being able to get all the latest news by simply signing up for your email list today.

Remember, asking permission is crucial! You don’t want people complaining to you that they never wanted to receive your emails in the first place.
Ask everyone you come into contact with if they would like to join your email list. Yes, everyone!

Growing Your Marketing Lists

Even though you may already have a few extensive Marketing Lists, eventually you’re going to need to think about making your List grow so you can get more business.

The following are 5 things you can do that can help your Marketing List continue to grow so you can continually market to new people.

1. Social Media – Join a few Social Media Networking websites so you can add an email subscription form that makes it really easy for people to sign up.

2. Blogging – Doesn’t it seem that everything comes back to blogging? Blogging keeps your website rankings up, which means more people are going to find your website, which means more people are going to see and hopefully sign up to receive your emails using your email subscription form.

3. Offer Incentives – Offer new buyers a discount or free item w/purchase. They will be more apt to buy your product or service, and accordingly are much more likely to sign up for more information using your email subscription form.

4. Mobile Apps – Use one of the many email marketing apps so you can easily enter someone’s information while you’re out and about.

5. Tradeshows – Attend a tradeshow with a goal of collecting email subscriptions. Simply place a large glass bowl on your table to hold all the new leads.


Although these are all completely legitimate ways for you to grow your Marketing Lists, it’s going to take a good bit of time to gather and collect the information you need. When you purchase one of our Marketing Lists, you are given immediate access to hundreds and even thousands of prospective customers so you can start marketing your products immediately. Call us today for more information.

We Specialize in Offering Some of the Best Marketing Lists Available

Business ListsEmail ListsInvestor ListsMailing ListsExecutive ListsDiscount ListsNon-USA ListsCollege Student Lists

When it comes to creating Marketing Lists, remember that quality exceeds quantity.

When it comes to getting Marketing Leads for your business, every single one of them counts. Now, in order to find the right and oh-so-crucial Marketing Leads (from our extensive selection of Marketing Leads Lists, of course) you’re going to first have to know who your audience is. Firstly, so you can choose the right Marketing Leads List and secondly so you can create a marketing plan that’s geared directly to your specific audience. You’re also going to need to know anything and everything there is to know about your particular niche so these potentially new customers will see you as a professional who really knows what they’re talking about so they will trust you and accordingly will be much more apt to do business with you.

Once a Marketing Lead is found, the work is not over. Now this lead needs to be converted into a sale with a goal of turning them into a repeat customer.

Did You Know…

When email marketing is used, the average ROI for every $1 spent is $43.52. Wow!
Email marketing shows no signs of slowing down and in fact is said to grow into a 2 billion dollar industry by 2014.

42% of consumers like receiving promotional emails

More than half of the consumers who receive a marketing email go on to make a purchase because of that email.

Social Media is more and more proving to be a great platform for gathering more leads.

Customer Profiles/How to Find the Ideal Customer

First of all, you’re going to have to know who your audience is. If you don’t, you’ll be wasting your time as not everyone is going to want to buy what you have to sell. Sorry, but that’s just the way it is. In order to find the ideal customer, you have to have an idea of what your customer profiles look like. Otherwise, you’re marketing words will simply be falling on deaf ears.

So what it is exactly that you need to know so you can find your ideal customers? Collecting the following information is a good place to start:

Lifestyle/Hobbies
  • Age
  • Race/Ethnicity
  • Employment Status/Income Level
  • Gender
  • Location
  • Shopping Behavior/Habits

Email Marketing Made Simple with Important Tip with Prabhakar


Using Email Marketing Lists to market your business is not only highly efficient, it can help save you lots of money. Email Marketing Lists have the potential to reach hundreds or even thousands of potential customers very quickly. You get lots of flexibility when it comes to creating your email message by formatting it in any way you wish so that your email can relay your message exactly how you want it to come across.

One of the reasons why using an Email Marketing List work so well is because using a targeted List allows any business to market directly to its target audience. Your time is not being wasted on marketing to people who have no interest in your particular service and/or product because you already know that the people who are on the receiving end of your marketing emails are people that actually have a real interest in what you have to offer them.

Email Marketing Lists work because the Lists are created using data that was derived from lots of intensive research, which helps in the overall construction of the message being sent. This research can be used to formulate the entire email, which the email recipients will greatly appreciate because they are your target audience and therefore look forward to receiving your well-thought-out and well-constructed emails.

The bottom line comes down to the fact that Email Marketing is a highly efficient way of marketing your business that will save you money. And who doesn’t want that? Be sure to contact us today with any questions you may have.

If you are ready to either be or remain competitive in a marketplace where the competition can be quite fierce then you’re definitely in the right place. We are here to help you in your marketing efforts by providing a large number of helpful Lists. Whether you’re trying to target businesses or consumers we are able to offer you some of the absolute best Email Marketing Lists available on the market today.

We’re so glad you decided to visit our website today! If you have any questions we would love to hear from you! Simply contact us by using our simple form to request a free quote or call our toll-free number.

Are You a New Business That Needs Help Generating Leads?

Do you have a great business idea? Fantastic! Do you have a List of people who you’re going to market your business to once it’s up and running? Uh oh. We know that lots of businesses will start out with a look of promise only to fall flat because they weren’t able to get the word out to their target audience about who they are and what they have to offer. That’s why we made this website. We knew that both new start-ups as well as businesses that have been around for a while we’re going to need help when it came to generating the leads they need to either stay in business or grow their business. All you have to do is select one of the many Lists we have available today. Contact us now with any questions you may have.

Email Marketing Lists Are:

  • Cost-Effective
  • Highly Efficient
  • Simple to Create
  • Instant Feedback Possibility


Wednesday 4 June 2014

Web content management system - The hub for multichannel pipeline growth


Web content management system - The hub for multi-channel pipeline growth

Today, WCM ( Web content management system) platforms incorporate a host of capabilities that expand their original scope. Next-generation platforms combine Web content management system with integration services for digital asset management and social collaboration. 

Together, these capabilities empower CMOs to deliver media-rich, community-oriented customer experiences that increase brand awareness, drive customer engagement, and build customer loyalty and campaign success. Serving as the marketing hub for CMOs, next-generation WCM platforms provide one central location for permission-based access and publishing of marketing messages and programs across all types of digital channels. In this way, these platforms have evolved into systems that help CMOs grow their pipeline of qualified buyers across different channels. 

One look under the hood of these next-generation WCM platforms leads to instant appreciation for the extra content control and interactive capabilities that they afford. CMOs should consider the following key components when seeking a next-generation WCM platform.

Multi-channel marketing

—Those CMOs that succeed with multichannel marketing do so by developing strategy for each channel that enables them to maintain brand equity while satisfying customer expectations. The most essential tool for pursuing such a strategy is an online marketing platform that enables CMOs to deliver multichannel customer experiences and campaigns. Look for capabilities to perform permission-based publishing across a range of output channels, including email, mobile, social networks, web, and print. This helps ensure that customers are fully engaged, independent of the channel, device, or geography.
Standards-based repository

—Unlike stove piping, which can result from using proprietary solutions, advanced, standards-based solutions help stave off obsolescence. Perhaps more importantly, they ensure platform viability across and outside your organization. Make sure that the WCM platform you choose supports standards such as Content Management Interoperability Standards (CMIS), Representational State Transfer (REST), and the Osage framework. Adherence to these standards future-proofs, and even enhances, your investment by providing access to a rich ecosystem of applications and utilities that are prebuilt to interoperate with the multichannel engagement platform.

WCM agility

—A short ramp-up time is a major factor in digital marketing. Tools should be intuitive and require little training so that they can be used quickly and widely across your organization. In addition, the WCM should feature easy-to-use workflows to create the parent-child relationships necessary for the multisite management that is typical in online marketing.

Digital asset management

—On today’s websites, rich media—including images, video, and online presentations—is what most attracts and engages audiences. As you repurpose digital assets to address multiple devices, formats, encoding rates, and metadata, you’ll find yourself dealing with an explosion of assets. Uneasy-to-use system helps tame this chaos and enables syndication of assets across multiple channels.

Social collaboration

—Every brand has a fan base, but not every CMO is leveraging it. Next-generation wallows you to create a network of relationships between prospects and the loyal customers that can influence potential customers’ purchasing decisions. These online communities also serve other benefits. They help build brand loyalty, which in turn leads to more repeat sales, and they potentially offload customer support functions. Features to look for include a shared calendar, the ability to comment, reviewing functions, rich media, and document sharing.

Search engine optimization (SEO)

—Most site visitors find you via search engines. Tuning content to keep pace with top search terms is critical, but it can be a chore. Next-generation WCMs are built with hierarchical architectures that support the generation of search engine friendly (SEF) links out of the box to boost page rankings in search results. In addition, look for platforms that provide APIs to databases like Alchemy for keyword enhancement and are involved in efforts like the Interactive Knowledge Stack that aim to make content more visible to search engines.

Content targeting

—Unlike old media, digital channels offer a range of information that marketers can use to better target their messages. Whether it is as simple as geography or as complex as past buying behavior, a solid marketing platform enables you to tap into critical data and customize messages so that every experiences engaging and optimal.

Campaign optimization

—Sense and respond is the mandate for today’s CMOs. With support for A/B testing in a platform, marketers can sense audience preferences and promote or pull campaigns based on response rates.

Analytics

—Because CMOs live (and die) by reports, gaining an instant and historical view into campaign performance is critical. Best-of-breed solutions include integrated analytics that can interface with leading standalone analytic offerings.

Localization


—Marketing has no geographic boundaries and, like online commerce, is global. As a result, younger to adjust to local audience needs without compromising your brand. An advanced WCM solution allows single change to be proliferated across sites without delays.

How Today Digital Marketing Organization on Turning Point for Big Changes


How Today Digital Marketing Organization on Turning Point Changes

The explosive growth of digital marketing is driving a significant organizational transformation in which chief marketing officers (CMOs) can redefine and elevate their role as never before. Today’s CMOs now have a broadest of tools to impact and optimize customer experiences and ultimately drive revenue for their company And thanks to recent advances in closed-loop marketing, CMOs can measure and demonstrate the effectiveness of their digital marketing efforts in terms of customer acquisition, customer retention, and revenue growth. His level of measurement is transforming the role of the CMO within organizations, paving the way for“21st-century CMOs” whose tenure is on the rise as they become an indispensable asset to companies.

In fact, according to a 2010 Spencer Stuart survey, the average CMO tenure has risen nearly 50% in the past two years, from 23.2 months to over 34 months. Today’s 21st-century CMOs are pursuing digital marketing across a large number of channels simultaneously.

As they do, they leverage the capabilities inherent in next-generation web content management (WCM) platforms to strike a balance between two conflicting goals: to spread branding and messaging as widely as possible, and to maintain control over their content as they deliver branding and experiences appropriate teach unique channel.

His paper highlights the advances in closed-loop marketing that enable measurement and optimization of digital marketing efforts. It also describes the challenges that CMOs face when pursuing digital marketing strategies and how next-generation WCM solutions help CMOs overcome those challenges.

Demonstrating CMOs top-line contribution

As recently as 2008, the average CMO tenure was less than two years, due in large part to the inability of Cost clearly identify and articulate marketing’s role and to prove its value to the organization (from Brand week ), “CMOs Are Staying in Jobs Longer,” June 25, 2010). This shortcoming has helped fuel the popular belief that marketing is not as critical to business operations as sales, engineering, or finance. In fact, the results of recent Forrester Research survey, “Corporate Marketing: Does It Matter?”, reveal that fewer than 50% of marketers view themselves as responsible for increasing top-line growth or increasing profitability.

But recent advances in closed-loop marketing are enabling CMOs to significantly raise the level of understanding regarding the origin and quality of sales leads developed by marketing, providing organizations with quantifiable business results that can either indemnify or indict a CMO. The following capabilities provide MOs with a wealth of data for measuring digital marketing results—everything needed to engage a prospect and move them through the sales funnel:

• Multichannel campaign management
• Campaign and email analytics, such as opens, bounces, click-through
• Multivariate testing
• Landing page optimization
• Email marketing and analytics with results in hand, CMOs have begun to step into the spotlight., As more and more organizations recognize the growing impact of CMO performance on their bottom line, CMOs are seeing their performance evaluations aligned more tightly to revenue.

Digital marketing: Addressing and re-addressing customers

Digital marketing essentially transforms marketing from a transaction-based monologue to an interactive conversation with customers and prospects taking place on any digital media, be it a smartphone, table device, kiosk, computer, or television. If done in an integrated and methodical manner, digital marketing can help marketers grow their pipelines with more of today’s savvy digital channel customers who seek to be engaged, rather than merely sold to, by vendors.

Addressing and re-addressing the customer is key to success. 

For digital marketing efforts to succeed, cozened to focus on the manner in which they address their customers across the differing online channels. Not all channels are the same. For example, customers using tablet devices might be drawn to an interactive, game-styled promotion while computer-centered customers seek in-depth educational materials.

The challenge for CMOs is to maintain consistent branding and messaging while delivering channel-appropriate experiences that engage each distinct audience. Having the right tools and processes in place to control and improve the user experience in each channel is essential. In essence, a multichannel engagement system—or next-generation WCM—is required to fulfill the digital marketing goals of 21st-century CMOs.

CMOs that do not embrace the benefits of interactive and closed-loop marketing will struggle to compete with their peers and can expect short tenures. Jeff Bell, vice president of global marketing at Microsoft’s Interactive Entertainment Business, foresaw this trend years ago. According to Bell, “The shorter tenure is in part reflection of the change from failing traditional-marketing approaches to less-defined and more dynamic approaches. Clearly the skill set of CMOs is changing from ‘TV, TV and more TV’ to interactive media.”


But even the savviest CMOs face tremendous challenges when implementing digital marketing programs. Firsthand foremost, they are charged with numerous responsibilities that detract from digital marketing efforts, namely the critical activities listed in the following table. 

Marketing must usually manage the applications and external vendors that support these activities, which means overseeing a disparate set of systems and vendors to get the job done. The list can be quite daunting, and includes everything from marketing automation and business intelligence software to providers of customer data and event-triggered marketing.

Digital Marketing Guidelines for who want to Increase Sales ROI


In simplistic terms, digital marketing is the promotion of products or brands via one or more forms of electronic media. Digital marketing differs from traditional marketing in that it involves the use of channels and methods that enable an organization to analyze marketing campaigns and Understand what is working and what isn't – Typically in real time. 


Why is digital marketing so important?

Digital marketers monitor things like what is being viewed, how often and for how long, sales conversions, what content Works and doesn't work, etc. While the Internet is, perhaps, the channel most closely associated With digital marketing, others include wireless text messaging, mobile instant messaging, mobile apps, podcast, electronic billboards, digital television and radio channels, etc.

Because it is not only a rapidly growing force in the current marketing playing field, it is set to be the future of marketing, and it seems likely that digital media will soon replace more traditional forms altogether. Digital marketing is infinitely more affordable than traditional offline marketing methods. An email or social media campaign, for example, can transmit a marketing message to consumers for the merest fraction of the cost of a TV ad or print campaign, and potentially reach a wider audience. 

But one of the main benefits of conducting your marketing digitally is the ease with which results can be tracked and monitored. Rather than conducting expensive customer research, you can quickly view customer response rates and measure the success of your marketing campaign in real-time, enabling you to plan more effectively for the next one. 

The facts are that digital methods of communication and marketing are faster, more versatile, practical and streamlined, so it is perhaps unsurprising that once the technology became available we began quickly moving into the digital age. 

The good news is that digital offers just as much potential to marketers as it does to consumers. The bottom line is, the digital age is here, and those businesses that fail to adapt to the new marketing climate are at great risk of going extinct sooner rather than later.

The importance of using digital marketing channels, The use of digital marketing channels is key if you want to reach your clients, says Dez Derry. Law firms are still not using social media properly Article by asking you a simple question. When did you last go online? Being online is not just about checking social media, reading news stories or shopping.  

Your emails came to you online, the text messages on your phone may well have been transferred in part via an online system, and your TV broadcaster can use the internet to update your listings or subscription to your set top box. My point is online digital channels are everywhere, yet there are still a lot of law firms lacking any Desire to embrace digital channels fully. 

We’re now at a stage where an entire generation of young adults do not remember what the world was like before the internet. For them it is something that has simply always been there and in turn they’re influencing other generations to use digital channels to find the services they need. 

The legal sector needs to start acting now and make the most of what is no longer a digital revolution but is now a digital normality. Other business sectors have embraced digital marketing and it has done wonders for them. Looking at retail, it ’s hard to find anyone that’s not at least once purchased something online via Amazon or had their weekly supermarket shopping delivered. 

In fact the UK’s online retail association IMRG and consultants Cap Gemini predict that this year online retailers will earn over £10bn for the first time ever, and that’s just in December, so why shouldn’t law firms also Take a cut? Different digital channels offer different solutions for growing your business and using them together can make a massive difference.

Telling people who are:

Website: This is your most important digital channel and the place where your online clients will learn the most about you. Easy to understand content needs to be updated regularly with the whole site mobile optimized too, meaning it can be viewed on any device. This is increasingly important with figures published by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) showing that globally 1.2 billion people access the web via mobile broadband.

Video: A video on your website gives your firm a personality and allows you to get across information that isn’t always easy with text alone. It also keeps people on your homepage for longer which means your clients are more likely to get in touch and become a paying client. Showing how professional you are in your videos will also reflect how professional you are in the services you offer.

Search Engines: Following the previous steps will help your website appear above your competitors in the results of search engines like Google, when a potential client is searching for a service you offer. You can increase this further by looking at pay-per click (PPC) campaigns to refine exactly where you appear when certain search keywords are used. A full service digital agency can assist you in creating a PPC campaign so you’re able to generate good leads and analyses how well the campaign is working.

Reaching a wider audience:

• Social Media: Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and LinkedIn are where peer recommendation come into play. Being on social media allows current clients to talk about how great your service independently. It also gives you a chance to add links to your blog and your website, while also interacting with potential new clients.

• Blogging: As explained earlier, writing a regular blog helps keep your website higher up in search engine results. But as experts in law, writing short articles on legal matters, offering basic advice, or opinions on recent sector changes show that if the reader ever needs a lawyer you’re the one to contact. It also gives you another chance to point your social media channels to your website.

• Email: Offering an email newsletter is a great way of keeping in touch with previous clients for repeat business. According to the Direct Marketing Association email marketing ROI was £21.48 for every £1 spent in 2012, proving it’s a fantastic investment.

Using digital channels does not mean you have to stop the traditional methods used to interact with new and current clients. But as more and more people look for services online, the importance of not accessing the market via digital channels become clear.

Challenges Facing Digital Marketers

Proliferation of digital channels. Consumers use multiple digital channels and a variety of devices that use different protocols, specifications and interfaces and they interact with those devices in different ways and for different purposes. Intensifying competition. Digital channels are relatively cheap, compared with traditional media, making them within reach of practically every business of every size. As a result, it’s becoming a lot harder to capture consumers’ attention.

Exploding data volumes. Consumers leave behind a huge trail of data in digital channels. It’s extremely difficult to get a handle on all that data, as well as find the right data within exploding data volumes that can help you make the right decisions.

Three Keys to Digital Marketing Success 
So, what does it take to do digital marketing right? Here are three keys to digital marketing success:
1. Manage complex customer relationships across a variety of channels – both digital and traditional. 
2. Respond to and initiate dynamic customer interactions. 
3. Extract value from big data to make better decision

Thursday 29 May 2014

How to Creating And Managing Leads with B2B Lead Generation Company


 One of the most peculiar problems for any B2B lead generation company is to strike a balance between creating new sales leads and managing the existing ones in the sales pipeline. It’s true that creating loads of new leads is necessary for a B2B lead generation company, yet qualifying these generic leads is equally important. 

Even if you have a steady flow of new sales leads coming in, you will find it difficult to discern the qualified leads from the unqualified ones unless you have a proper system in place to manage these leads. This could present a twin disadvantage. 

On one hand, you will miss some really promising opportunities to turn good leads into closed deals and on the other hand, you will have to go back to your lead generation effort to create more sales leads. 

This will require the B2B lead generation company to spend a lot of time and resources, causing huge losses in terms of reputation and profitability.

If you don’t manage your existing sales leads efficiently and take the sales process forward smoothly, you will keep spinning your wheels without producing anything worthwhile. A lot of productive time will be wasted in unearthing new leads when you could have spent that time in following up more promising prospects and setting up appointments with them.

Try to separate the short term sales leads from the long term leads. Identify the prospects that are highly motivated and decisive, and put in your best efforts to win them over. Assign the task of following up with the long term leads to the reps who are more patient and can keep in touch with the less decisive or motivated customers for months without complaining.

Creating new business leads is of course very important, but the real success of a B2B lead generation company lies in managing the existing leads more efficiently and taking them to their logical conclusion.

B2B Lead Generation Companies by Relationships of Creative Management


The entire business scenario has changed over the past few decades and B2B lead generation companies need to adopt new innovative methods and techniques to stay ahead of their competitors. The fact is that the decision makers virtually live on the edge today with so many fires to put out, B2B lead generation companies cannot hope to win them over using the same old cold calling techniques. The entire process of getting to that all important people has become far more complex now with the technology and the habits of the key decision makers undergoing a sea change. Traditional cold calling techniques need a significant make over in the present day business scenario in order to make an entry into the sales cycle.

To make a meaningful contact with the key decision makers in the present day sales environment, cold calling requires a creative management of relationships and building of thoughtful approaches based on innovative sales strategies.

Some of the basic fundamentals of cold calling that B2B lead generation companies can adopt in today’s complex and maddening business environment are as follows:

Moving slowly up the hierarchy ladder:

The top level decision makers are so busy putting out a thousand fires of their own everyday, they put up several layers of barriers around themselves in call screeners and administrative assistants. It’s best to start from the lower level executives in an organization and be known to the top bosses before you actually approach them.

Don’t be too greedy:

Don’t be in a hurry to grab a sales opportunity, decision makers have a natural aversion to greedy salespersons. Make your call sound like a business intelligence call, not a sales call. Try to strengthen your social networking with every call and prepare the groundwork for the sales cycle to follow. Empathize with the prospect, know about their needs and pain points, so that you can offer them a good solution.

Learn to use referrals:

Making a short list of useful referrals is very handy while cold calling. Use these referrals while approaching the key decision makers, this can open a few gates for you and let you in with minimum resistance.

The realities of the business world have changed, so B2B lead generation companies should also adopt new methods and approaches if they want to succeed in this fiercely competitive world.

Tips For Sales Survival & Recovery - Prabhakar


One of the most unpleasant situations to be in as a sales person is when the client blames you for what the client perceives to be a failure or shortcoming of your product or solution. Clients might go from being happy and reliable, to being angry and threatening to cancel their contract. 
Tips For Sales Survival & Recovery - Prabhakar, SMARTe inc


“Getting thrown under the bus” in this way by clients can be demoralizing, to say the least. You have invested many hours in building a business relationship, only to find out that the client doesn't trust you as much as you thought. 

As a vendor, we are often the easiest people to throw under the bus. We work outside the client’s organization, and so there is rarely any internal political cost to blaming the vendor when something goes wrong. Vendors are also (wrongly) seen as expendable, since the company can always go put the project out to bid and find some new vendors and solutions. 

If you want to salvage the business relationship, or better yet, avoid getting thrown under the bus by a client in the first place, here are a few tips for what to do and what to avoid. 

Here are a few ways to identify clients who are likely to be “bus throwers.” Often there are several of these factors in play, and the more there are, the more of a toxic mix you have:

1) Clients who are new to their positions. They might not have encountered a situation like the one they’re hiring you to help solve, or they might not have been responsible for implementing this type of solution before.

2) Clients who are new to their jobs and “in way over their heads.” If a client is inexperienced or lacking in management skills, this raises the risk that they will blame you first when things go wrong.

3) Clients who are in their jobs and “in way over their heads” and who were hired by bosses who are also “in way over their heads.” This situation multiplies the risk. Clients who feel insecure in their positions will want to make themselves look better and make their bosses look better – and they will protect their own reputations even if that means throwing you under the bus.

4) Company culture of “micro management.” If your client and your client’s company aren’t good at delegating and letting people do their jobs, this is another risk factor for an unpleasant client experience.

5) Companies in new industries where there is no previous operational or marketing path to follow. These folks are making it up as they go along. They have “great” new ideas that they ask you to execute, but any mistakes will soon become your blunders.

6) Clients who come from other industries where they have been very successful and are now taking over a new business segment and begin to apply rules that worked in their previous experience – without knowing whether the rules will work. 

What happens if you get thrown under the bus by a client?

First, keep in mind that it’s not personal, it’s just business. Even though you might feel frustrated, angry, or even betrayed, try not to let your emotions get in the way. 

Instead, try to salvage what you can. Find out what parts of the contract can still be upheld. Try to talk to other allies or key decision makers within the company and find out if there are other opportunities to serve other parts of the company away from your bus-throwing client. 

If the business relationship cannot be saved, look to minimize the damage to your company’s reputation. Deal with the situation gracefully. Don’t give the client any ammunition to use against you by bad-mouthing you and your company in the marketplace. 

Closing a sale can be tough enough, without having to worry about the deal blowing up in your face. Getting thrown under the bus by a client is never fun, and once it happens there isn't always much you can do to minimize the damage. Instead, prevention is the best medicine. Try to avoid the clients who are most likely to throw you under the bus. Watch out for potentially toxic situations. Try to work with clients who are secure in their jobs, who are trusted by their bosses, and who communicate with candor and authenticity (without seeming to have any hidden agendas).