Wednesday 29 March 2017

Interactive content - the featured story on the front page


Just to make sure we’re in sync, “interactive content” is content where the audience actively participates instead of just passively reading, watching, or listening. Iterative content includes things like quizzes, assessment tools, calculators, configurators, etc. (As a disclosure, I’m also the co-founder and CTO of ion interactive, a company that provides software to let marketers produce interactive content, which I’ve previously described as marketing apps.)

Now, The New York Times has published interactive content before — a number of interactive infographics, such as How Family Income Predicts Children’s College Chances, and several simple quizzes, such as a Did a Human or a Computer Write This? and political columnist Gail Collins’ satirical Fourth of July Quiz. But as far as I know, this was the first time they’d created an assessment with this much utility and featured it as the top story on their front page.

So what does this have to do with marketing and marketing technology?

Don’t worry, not planning on becoming a media commentator. But there are clearly many parallels between publishers and marketers these days. Primarily, both are struggling in The Great Content Wars — how to grab people’s attention and engage them in some meaningful way, so as to build and maintain a monetizable brand, in a world of essentially infinite content.

To break through the deafening noise, ironically, each has been advised to act more like the other. Native advertising, for better and worse, is one product of that rendezvous.

While there are still fundamental differences between marketers and publishers — underlying business models being the most obvious and important — there is enough overlap in their shared mission to produce and distribute content effectively that there are opportunities to cross-pollinate ideas from one to the other.

Interactive content really started taking off with BuzzFeed’s Which State Do You Actually Belong In? quiz, which has garnered over 40 million page views — and high praise from Mary Meeker of KPCB for the way they’re “reimagining content.” Marketers took the cue of its popularity, and have started producing quizzes as a more regular part of their own content marketing and demand generation programs. For instance, this example of a lead generation quiz by Orbitz for Business.

But simple quizzes only go so far. Most of them have more of an amusing, entertainment bent and offer relatively limited utility to participants. Marketers who have taken Jay Baer’s concept of Youtility to heart have pushed to develop more valuable interactive content for prospects. Two good examples are Dell’s Mobility Assessment and the quiz (which is really an assessment) embedded in this Pearson interactive e-book.

These are not sugary, snackable content puffs for a quick laugh and a share. These are meaty assessment tools that require thoughtful user engagement and deliver in-depth consultative results. (I would also suggest that they are ideal vehicles for improving sales and marketing alignment — but as I’ve already disclosed, I’m biased on this subject.)

The New York Times assessment on their home page is a significant step in that direction in the world of publishers though. I can’t think of any other mainstream news publisher that has built something as sophisticated as this assessment as a way of telling a front-page story.
This is definitely not boilerplate interactive content.

It will escalate more “software thinking” in content marketing design — which is an opportunity for companies to differentiate themselves online and an opportunity for tech-savvy marketers and marketing technologists to demonstrate the relevance and power of their hybrid skillsets.

It’s one more step along in our journey from communications to experiences.


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Rules for marketing like a billion-dollar by Jeremy Epstein


A “unicorn” company is one that achieves a private market valuation over $1 billion dollars. Growing as quickly as we did at Sprinklr helps you realize what’s essential for great marketing and what’s not, particularly if you are a start-up. The same applies even if you’re trying to jump start your marketing initiatives. As a former mentor said to me, “marketing is less about the sexy part and more just rhythm and process.”

Hopefully, you can benefit from our hard-earned lessons to accelerate your own efforts.

It’s critical to note that marketing isn’t all you need. I was fortunate to work for a great CEO, with many extremely passionate and talented people, and have a great product behind us. In other words, it was a serious team effort.

However, as the person responsible for marketing, I found these 14 rules for successful high-growth marketing helpful and hope you will too. I’ll highlight 6 of the 14 here and look forward to your feedback.

Rule #1: Don’t Confuse Activity With Outcomes

Activity feels good. Make a checklist, get the stuff done, check it off. But that’s not what you are paid to do.

If your goal is to lose weight, and you say, “well, I’m going to the gym every day, but the scale says nothing has changed,” then you are focused on activity, not outcomes. It’s critical to be super clear with yourself — and your team — about what you are trying to accomplish.

I’ll give you one example.

We had a telemarketing team (I called them “individual outreach”). Their job was to identify the right people at a target organization (we were going after Fortune 2,000) and secure meetings. A lot of orgs call these people “inside sales.”

Most teams like this send a boatload of emails that are copy/paste saying, “Here’s what we do, can I have 15 minutes of your time?”

It’s “spray and pray.” I know this to be the case because as VP marketing, I was on the receiving end of a ton of these.

While it does work (a bit) and generates some meetings, it doesn’t consider the number of people who now think less highly of your company. It also doesn’t really move the relationship between you and the prospect forward in any meaningful way.

Here’s what we did differently:

Our team would meticulously research people.

We looked at their Twitter profile, LinkedIn, blog posts, etc., until we had as deep an understanding of the person as we could get.

Then, each team member would write a highly customized, personalized email that clearly demonstrated the fact that he had done the research about the prospect (without being creepy — though admittedly, some people didn’t like it).

If you liked baseball, we would comment on it.

If you had just come back from a trip, we would ask about it.

If you recommended a book or an article, we might read it and explore the topic.

The point was: we took the time to get to know you as a person, and we were trying to engage on that personal level.

What happened?

We sent out a lot fewer emails per day than a typical organization, but our response rate was astronomical. People saw that we actually gave a damn about them as people. Not as number, but as real people.

They responded with comments such as:

“This is the best pitch email I have ever received.”
“Anyone who does this amount of work before contacting me is the kind of company I can respect.”
“What a refreshing change from the usual copy/paste!”
And this was a key driver in growing leads by 400% YoY.

The Lesson
This approach of highly personalized emails may not work for everyone and that’s fine, but the key thing we did was just asking ourselves, “What do we need to do?” Drive more initial meetings/leads.

Then we said, “Okay, given the way the world works today, what can we do to increase the likelihood of achieving that outcome?” But always stayed focus on the outcome.

Rule #3: Build Your Community of Advocates

While the advertising on the Super Bowl can be funny, emotional, or sexy, don’t get caught up in the glitz. You’re watching the Alamo of brand advertising and, unlike the really big guys (or people who don’t care about their money as much), you don’t have cash to burn.

The fundamental, earth-shaking shift that marketing has undergone in the past ten years is the explosion in the number of channels and the hyper-connectivity among people-anywhere, anytime, for free. To think that marketing would not change dramatically when the entire structure of modern life has been so upended is insanity.

That’s why our entire marketing effort began and focused almost entirely on our natural communities.

As we’ve all seen during the past election cycle, you’re not going to change people’s minds. Key point here: you’re going to be far better off finding the people who naturally agree with your worldview and turn them into raving fans than pretty much anything else.

I consider myself a disciple of Seth Godin, having become a fan after hearing him speak in New York in 1998. All we did was take his various ideas and put them into practice.

He calls this “First, Ten.”

He’s not alone though. Clay Shirky suggests 100 (I fell in love with his book 9 years ago). Kevin Kelly says it’s 1,000.

Again, the concept is the same. All we did was execute against it.

My personal favorite was our events. We did over 100 meet-up style events around the world, hosted by our clients and prospects, in which the presentations were attendee-driven.

Rule #4: Ask Not What Influencers Can Do for You, Ask What You Can Do For Them

Imagine you had a big social media following or gave a lot of presentations. Then, imagine that every single day, you get an email from some start-up saying, “Hey, will you promote our site, our product, etc., to your entire list?”

Why should they? What’s in it for them?

These “influencers” have built up a reputation as a trusted source of information. If they start flooding their feeds with “noise” instead of “value,” their influence will plummet. That’s not in their interest.

Instead, focus on how you can make influencers even smarter and more valuable.

Do you have proprietary data you can send them? Interviews with clients or early adopters? Cool use case stories?

That’s what they need. Give, give, give and then give some more until it hurts. It will be worth it in the end.

Rule #6: Do Creative Outside; Do PR In-House

You’re a technology start-up, not a creative agency. When you have a contract with a creative agency, you will more easily stop yourself from doing all the stupid things you come up with that you would just do if you had creative in-house.

The “Shiny New Object Syndrome” is real, especially at start-ups looking to move fast. You protect yourself from questionable creative ideas (and there are many) by putting the costs of paying them as a stop-valve. This creates the natural checks and balances that you need.

Without this built-in protection, you increase risk because you’ll end up burning a lot of time and money on the debatable creative ideas since the resources (your employees) are already paid for.

That being said, having a junior designer on staff who is just polishing PowerPoints so your sales guys and execs don’t put up total garbage does pay for itself.

On the flip side, PR agencies are great when you need surges of attention. For big “moments in time” (e.g., funding rounds or major product announcements), call in the reinforcements.

But the real value of PR comes from patience, focused storytelling, and non-transactional, external relationship-building. That’s how you climax to a series of great featured articles. You need someone with sustained attention and loyalty to your company. Plus, it’s almost always way cheaper.

Bottom line: in the very early stages, particularly in a disruptive market, you’re going to pay an agency a ton to educate them. The ROI isn’t there.

Key caveat: every now and then, you find an agency that really gets an industry, but they are few and very far between.

If you want to get super-technical, this is an extension on Coase’s Nature of the Firm.

Rule #10: Don’t Let the Perfect Be the Enemy of the Good (or the Corollary from Steve Jobs: “Real Artists Ship”)

Your job is to put items in market. What’s true for developers is true for marketers. You must be sensitive to the needs of the company and larger market trends. Respect your brand, yes, but you can’t wait forever. You need to move the market.

“Ship it!”


Rule #13: Communicate the Strategy

Write your strategy statement. Use the framework in this article. Make sure everyone knows it.

You will know if you are failing by doing an occasional pop quiz on your team. Ask them, “What’s our strategy statement?” Have them write it down for you right there. If everyone doesn’t write the same thing, you’re not doing your job.

Conclusion

I was a history major in college, so perhaps I’m biased, but I believe that learning from the mistakes of others is one of the cheapest ways to get ahead.

This is by no means an exhaustive list, but it might get you going in the right direction, save you time, money, and headaches, and free you up to make other errors.

Good luck, and never stop marketing.




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Tuesday 7 February 2017

Todays Stock Market Summary Chart Of Friday February 7, 2017


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Will India grow at 7%? The government and the RBI still think so.  I think the 'official' GDP forecasts must be taken with a pinch of salt. The fact is that government does not know how much of an impact demonetisation had on the economy. Yet the official estimate of GDP growth is 7.1% for FY17.

Today's Loss for - SUN pharma ( 680-668-669)

The RBI's two-day monetary policy meeting is under way. Expectations are that the RBI will officially lower its growth estimate. This wouldn't surprise or worry us.

We would be more interested in what the RBI will do tomorrow on the policy front now that it has the data from the demonetization exercise.

Remember that banks did cut rates when they received a flood of demonetised notes. They are highly unlikely to cut rates without a repo rate cut from the RBI. Stay tuned for our analysis on the policy tomorrow.

Chart of the Day  

Speaking of the monetary policy, everyone and their uncle seem to be expecting a rate cut tomorrow. But no one seems to in agreement about the amount.

The repo rate (i.e. the rate at which the RBI lends to banks) stands at 6.25%. This level is quite reasonable we believe.

However, corporate India does not think so. As always before any RBI policy meeting, they have started clamoring for a rate cut. We even read a suggestion for a 0.75% reduction!
As today's chart shows, the repo rate has fluctuated in a range over the last six years. It is back to where it was in November 2010. The last change was a cut to 6.25% last October.

Repo Rate is Trending Down



So where to from here? It is entirely possible the RBI could reduce the rate a bit more. However, it cannot lose focus on inflation. With commodity prices showing signs of moving higher, the central bank will have to walk a fine balancing act without giving in to the whims of corporate India.

After opening the day flat, the Indian share markets traded on a negative note. Sectoral indices are also trading on a negative note with stocks in the metal sector witnessing maximum selling pressure.

The BSE Sensex is trading down 134 points (down 0.5%) and the NSE Nifty is trading down 38 points (down 0.4%). The BSE Mid Cap index is trading down by 0.3%, while the BSE Small Cap index is trading down by around 0.2%.  

Today's Investing Mantra         

"Everyone has the brainpower to follow the stock market. If you made it through fifth-grade math, you can do it" - Peter Lynch

Friday 3 February 2017

Todays Stock Market Summary Chart Of Friday February 3, 2017


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  • 12 April 2013. Infosys corrected by a remarkable 22%, wiping off Rs 357 billion in investor wealth. The reason: disappointing revenue guidance.
  • 17 October 2014. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) corrected by 8.5% in a single session. The reason: disappointing revenue guidance.
  • In Trump's first month as president, Infosys and TCS corrected by 8% and 7% respectively. The reason: prospects of disappointing revenue guidance.

 Do you see a pattern?

The recent correction of IT majors, though substantial, is nothing new for the sector. Nor is the reason for the correction.

The world is speculating on a Trump crash. So naturally, every correction to Indian IT is branded as a fallout from the Trump crash.

But is this so-called Trump crash a reason to act on Indian IT stocks? Of course, the answer does not depend only on stock prices. Other factors are relevant.

So we put three key questions to our in-house IT sector expert. Incidentally, they're the same three questions we asked in 2013 and 2014.

Is the business model affected? The immigration bill seeks to double the minimum salary for IT hires to US$1,30,000 from the current US$60,000. It also seeks to make a master's degree compulsory, among other requirements. And of course, the cost of the visa would go up.

Now, unlike what Trump would like to believe, Indian IT firms are no longer just back-offices to the world. Higher-value contracts have been critical to companies for several years now. And changing the mix of employees to comply with the requirements does no permanent damage to their business model.

Can the risk be hedged? Companies would need to adopt various counter measures, like hiring more locals, getting more work done from India or other offshore locations, cutting down on low-margin clients, and stepping up automation.

None of this is impossible to execute. And if done with long-term interests in mind, the onetime effort may be well worth it. So perhaps what some now perceive as a negative development will actually be a boon for certain Indian IT players.

What's the actual impact on fundamentals? If passed into law, the bill would put pressure on Indian IT firm margins inFY18. The actual impact, however, may differ from company to company. Several of them have reduced their exposure to the US in recent years. And even the companies that would hit hardest likely have enough cash on their books to recover from the shock.

Indian IT companies will need to rise to Trump's challenges. But fortunately, most were already gearing up for this. Trump may have only accelerated their defence.

So as long as you aren't worried about the revenue guidance in the coming quarters, you need to do just one thing: Stay vigil on valuations.

And you never know, the Trump crash may be an opportunity to act on not just IT but lots of other safe stocks as well.

Chart of the Day  

Large Indian IT companies, on an average generate more than 50% of their revenues from the US clients. They have built a strong client base over the years in the US market. If the suggested changes for immigration get cleared, the cost component for the Indian IT companies will go up. The need to reduce their US exposure and move to other geographies is a given.

Will Trump Mania Impact IT Companies Revenues from US?

But we believe that it is unlikely that the companies will substantially bring down their focus on the US. Instead companies may look out for other means to reduce costs or protect margins.

If you have been with us for long, you know that we have played the gentleman's game of value investing...and we have a solid track record of success there.

But you pay a price for this gentlemanly approach to investing. You have to patiently wait for the bulls to come to you. And you have to let go of many fast, raging bulls.

 Substantial part of the of central government expenditures are undertaken by state and local governments. Most states in India like the Centre run budgets where expenditure is higher than revenue, leading to deficits.

As reported in today's Business Standard, the fiscal responsibility and budget management (FRBM) review committee believes India's debt to GDP ratio will be 60% in 2023. This comprises 40% for the Centre and the balance 20% for state governments. As per the current available data, the outstanding debt positions of the Centre and state governments show the combined liabilities at 69.5%.

So containing this burgeoning debt is certainly a tall task for the government.

Generally, when the country's growth is soaring, some portions of debt is reduced. But that is nit excatly the case for FY17-18. The economy may continue to see impact of demonetization for months to come. Thus the nominal GDP growth may actually be much lesser than the projected11.75%.

The Budget has laid down large allocations towards social welfare. But it is important for the government to realize that while public spending is necessary, it will be important to keep its borrowings in check. Even the RBI has warned the government about this. 

In the meanwhile, after opening the day on a flat note, the Indian share markets have continued to trade on a weak note and are trading marginally below the dotted line. Sectoral indices are trading on a mixed note with stocks in the pharma sector and realty sector witnessing maximum buying interest. Auto stocks are trading in the red. 

At the time of writing, the BSE Sensex was trading down 68 points (down 0.2%) and the NSE Nifty was trading down 24 points (down 0.3%). BSE Mid Cap index was trading up by 0.6%, while the BSE Small Cap index was trading up by 0.8%.


 Investing mantra  


"Over the long term, the stock market news will be good. In the 20th century, the United States endured two world wars and other traumatic and expensive military conflicts; the Depression; a dozen or so recessions and financial panics; oil shocks; a fly epidemic; and the resignation of a disgraced president. Yet the Dow rose from 66 to 11,497". - Warren Buffett

Thursday 2 February 2017

Todays Stock Market Summary Chart of the Day Thursday February 2, 2017


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The markets reacted strongly with a near 500-point gain for the Sensex yesterday. But how should smart investors react to this budget? The dust settles and we take a closer look at it, one conclusion is unavoidable: Despite all of the speculation, hype, and hoopla in the days leading up to the budget, there's nothing really earth-shattering about it. It's just business as usual on most counts.

Yet, the kind of attention this exercise gets here in India, especially in stock market circles, it is only to be expected that the markets react strongly.

But from personal experience, I can tell you this: For many on D Street, it has become an outright excuse for speculation. The surrounding hoopla makes it difficult for investors to see through it. And easy to believe that they must 'do' something in response to it.

It is at times like these that it is most important to rise above the noise. Make no mistake, it is an important exercise and does affect some businesses more than others. But these differences in most cases are marginal and incremental. And seldom of the 'make or break' variety.

All put together, the annual budget exercise is very much a part of the 'normal' business landscape of companies. The multitude of tweaks made in it either help or harm the cause of a given company ever so slightly. But then again, that's true for all the continuous developments, both global and domestic, throughout the rest of the year.

Its collective approach to stock picking, its devotion to large safety margins in the purchase prices, and its dynamic debt component (fixed deposits/bonds) renders most developments that the economy throws at the business world, government budgets included, trivial.

MCM strategy as a sort of 'Chinese Wall' between the rough and tumble of the business world and our subscribers' returns. It ensures that over the longer term, our returns remain not just protected, but well ahead of the general market's returns.

Chart of the Day  

The Union Budget for 2017-18 was presented by finance minister, Mr Arun Jaitley yesterday. 

The markets seem to give a thumbs up to the budget, the Sensex closed up 486 points for the day. Does the budget play a crucial role for a serious long term investor? What role if any do the valuations play in prospective returns. We looked at the price to earnings ratio of the Sensex on the budget day as a proxy for valuations and noted the following 3 year compounded annual return going forward.

Budget or Not - It is the Valuation That Counts  -       

We found that the market returns are agnostic to the budget in the long run. What mattered more was the valuations at that point in time. Cheap valuations are a big driver of future returns.

Be it the Union Budget, GST or a great monsoon, you always got to ask the all-important question: Everything said and done, am I paying too much for the stock in relation to its intrinsic value?

For even though the budget may be path breaking and the economy may have some great years ahead of it, when you pay too much, even a good stock can quickly turn into a bad investment.

 After opening the day on a flattish note, the Indian stock markets fell below the dotted line. At the time of writing the BSE-Sensex was trading lower by about 42 points (down 0.2%), while the NSE Nifty was trading lower by 15 points (down 0.2%). Sectoral indices are trading on a mixed note with stocks in the metal sector and auto sector witnessing maximum selling pressure.     

                    Today's Investing Mantra         


"Whether we're talking about socks or stocks, I like buying quality merchandise when it is marked down" - Warren Buffett

FM Arun Jaitley said creating oil giant for compete with gloabl majors


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India's FM Arun Jaitley said on Wed, 1st Feb 2017 on Budget, planning for  creating giant oil company combine with state-owned firms for compete with global majors in acquiring foreign assets.

Struggling for raise local oil production and import about 80 percent. Prime Minister Modi try cutting to 67 percent by 2020. India is replacing China for consumption of Oil demand. India have oil companies like IOC, ONGC, HP etc.,

Tuesday 24 January 2017

Todays Stock Market Summury - Chart of the Day 24 Jan 2017


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So exporting our way to prosperity is out of the question. As per the latest trade data, exports are flat (i.e. up 0.75% YoY) in the first nine months of FY17. This, after a steep fall over the last two years. 

So what about domestic investments. Unfortunately, today's chart does not present a happy picture. For 'Make in India' to succeed, speedy clearances are a must. In fact, this was one of Modi's main election promises. 

It was widely believed, if stalled projects could be cleared, India's GDP growth would get a boost. We will never know because they are still stalled! 

As per CMIE data and reported in the Mint, the total number of stalled projects are still rising. Surprisingly, four out of the last five quarters with the highest stalling rate on record, have been during the Modi government's tenure. A fifth of stalled projects are held up because of lack of government clearances. 

A deeper look at the data shows that there are three primary culprits: lack of funds, lack of promoter interest, and lack of environmental clearances. 

Lack of environmental clearances is holding up 14.48% of all stalled projects. This is about two-thirds of all projects stalled due to lack of government clearances. 

A lack of funds is an easy problem to explain. Banks are loaded with bad loans and are not likely to provide more funds without all clearances in place. Equity financing is also very difficult because of a high risk aversion to such projects. There's not much the government can do about this. 

A lack of promoter interest is a fascinating subject. It could be a reflection of disillusionment with either the Indian economy's prospects or with the government... or both. 

Whatever the case may be, one thing is clear to us; corporates are in no mood to make big investment commitments. This was true even before demonetisation. Now the wait will get longer. 

Thus, we believe only patient investors who can wait for a revival in the investment cycle, will be the ones to benefit from any positive surprise on this front.

Now that US plans to pull out, the deal may not happen. Even if it does without US, it would lose much of its significance as US alone accounts for a giant share.

Anyway, that's good news for India. This is because TPP could pose a serious blow to India's trade ambitions, especially when it comes to exports.

India is among the top textile exporters. A lot of companies in the organized and unorganized sector get a lion's share of their revenues from supplying to member nations of TPP.

With Trump abandoning the TPP, Indian textile manufacturers will heave a huge sigh of relief. A textile stock Richa recommended in 2015 in Hidden Treasure, holds good upside potential for long-term investors. This niche player has created a name for itself and is the preferred supplier to top quality shirt manufacturers around the world. Its unparalleled quality controls enable it to stay well ahead of competition. However, the stock crossed its maximum buy price today. 

Here is the lesson that should be learned. We may never be able to predict geopolitical events like Trump's election or his policies. But by buying fundamentally strong stocks for the long-term when they are available cheap, you can put the odds of winning in the market, firmly in your favour.
 
After opening the day in the green, the Indian stock market indices moved further into positive territory. Auto and capital goods, stocks were leading the gains. 

At the time of writing, the BSE Sensex was trading higher by 222 points (up 0.82%) and the NSE Nifty was trading higher by 73 points (up 0.86%). The BSE Small Cap and BSE Mid Cap indices are trading higher by 0.6% and 0.7% respectively.

Is India ready for Make in India? 

The India story is India. Not the world. 

If we look at some basic data - say, the per capita consumption pattern across the world - India stands in the lowest cadre. 

Consider the following:
  • Autos - India: 18 cars per 1,000; US: 800 cars per 1,000
  • Footwear - India: 1.66 pair per annul; developed nations: 6-7 pairs p.a.
  • Broadband - India: 1.4% of the total population; US: 28% of the total population
  • Airports - India: 464; US: 15,079

The above data clearly shows India is an 'India story'. The opportunity to catch up to global counterparts across sectors is huge. 

However, it is important to note that make in India for India will only succeed if it is at competitive prices compared to the world. 

Lead generation Marketing - change your view for Digital world


In this blog, we discuss revolutionary lead generation tactics for better double-figure ROI. We focus global trend, techniques on social media like Facebook, twitter etc.

We give advertise on newsletter named paper advertising /classified and telemarketing it’s outdated for business.

In this post, we make the strategy for three tried-and-true lead generation tactics ( direct mail, trade show, and cold calling) and four emerging digital lead generation tactics ( email marketing, SE marketing, display advertising, and SMO Advertising).

Lead generation Marketing - change your view for Digital world
Lead generation Marketing - change your view for Digital world

Marketer, who want achieve target like business ROI doubled in short period, using all seven of these tactics for predictable future.

Some marketer frequently asks what a difference between brand awareness and lead generation is.

Brand awareness Vs Lead generation

In general, the marketing world is ruled by Brand awareness and Lead generation marketing.  The two disciplines are big brothers of marketing and they have kind of relationship with each other. We just target in a post how to attract customer with a technique of lead generation marketing.

Difficult to measure the exact percentage of companies who use lead generation marketing technique. Most of the organization use traditional lead generation technique like the trade show, direct mail and cold calling) without taking help of online measures (nos.)

Lead generation – specifically target set of customer who has need product and services.

In brand awareness/marketing creative and instinctive (easy to use and understand) and for the lead generation we used mathematics and analytics.

In brand marketing, we create imagination like bright idea OR think outside of box kind of discipline. With this create the impression in prospect’s and customer’s mind with displaying and broadcasting.  With approx. no’s we finalize our branding going success.

Lead generation marketing is all about the science of approach. Creativity is involved but small.

In next post, we will deep dive into ….. Product and quality measure with two disciplines and how to save every penny from wasting.



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Tuesday 17 January 2017

Make Big Money in Cyclical Stocks in Intra, BTST, Client Mode, short Term


Cyclicals are the most misunderstood of all the types of stocks. It is here that the unwary stock picker is most easily parted from his money, and in stocks that he considers safe. - Peter Lynch 

Cyclical Stocks in Intra, BTST, Client Mode, short Term
Cyclical Stocks in Intra, BTST, Client Mode, short Term


But it's certainly prevalent in the stock market, isn't it? 

The excitement-to-fear rollercoaster ride is exactly what investors feel when they put their hard-earned money in cyclical stocks. 

As Peter Lynch rightly points out, they are the most misunderstood stocks in the market. Many of them are large caps, which are easy to confuse with bluechips. So unwary investors think cyclicals are fairly safe bluechip-like stocks. , But they aren't. 

Cyclicals, no matter how big or small, must be seen as a separate category. 

latest Hidden Treasure recommendation... Cyclicals are of two types.

The first type are companies directly related to the economy - i.e. any contraction or expansion in the economy affects them. Auto companies, capital goods, and banks fall under this category.

The second type of cyclical is a business where pricing, earnings, and cash flows are dependent on the demand-supply of their products or raw materials. Metals, sugar, and chemicals fall under this category.

So why should these stocks give investors the goosebumps? It is almost impossible to accurately predict the cycles for either of the two types.

So, while a low PE ratio would be attractive for most stocks, it is not always true for cyclicals. When a cyclical stock's PE ratio is very low, it's usually at the end of a favourable period. This is because of the disproportionate expansion in the earnings in the upturn of the cycle.

This is often a signal of cycle reversal. And once the cycle reverses, the stock falls quickly and the PE ratio adjusts higher.

This is why Peter Lynch said the worst time to buy a cyclical stock was when the past financial performance was at its best. In another words, when the trailing PE ratio of a cyclical stock is low, it usually means the stock is nearing the end of the cycle. 

This is where investors get on the wrong ride. They think they are buying a cheap stock. Then the cycle turns and the price falls. They're stuck on a train going down fast, and it could be years before the cycle turns up again. 

So how do some investors (including Peter Lynch) make big money on these stocks? 

There are two methods. Pick the one you are more comfortable with. 

The more common of the two is the timing method. Basically, you try to pick the bottom of the cycle and ride the stock all the way up to the top of the cycle. 

This is very difficult to do. Even if you are successful, you will have to endure a rollercoaster ride on the way up. That's because the markets are wary of any sign of a change in the cycle. 

Remember, everyone wants to sell at the top. So these stocks tend to react more to negative economic news than the rest of the market. This makes them extremely volatile even on the way up. 

The second method is less popular but more effective. Here's what you should do...

Pick an industry that's coming out of a major capex binge, so that more capacity won't likely be added at a fast pace.



Avoid industries where competition from new entrants is heating up.

Identify the best companies in the industry using fundamental analysis.

Find stocks that cater to a large set of clients to avoid client concentration risk.

Narrow down the ones with the healthiest balance sheets and cost-conscious managements.

Eliminate those with debt to equity higher than 1.

Don't pay more than 1.5 times book value.

Invest for the long term (3-5 years) to let the cycle play out.

This is not an exhaustive list. But it is more than enough to place you head and shoulders above most investors. 

Investing Mantra
"A prediction about the direction of the stock market tells you nothing about where stocks are headed, but a whole lot about the person doing the predicting." - Warren Buffett


Note : Any blog OR content suggestion you have , please mail me on prabhakara.dalvi@gmail.com

Todays Stock Market Summury - Chart of the Day 17 Jan 2017


Note : Any blog OR content suggestion you have , please mail me on prabhakara.dalvi@gmail.com

Talking about cyclical industries, commodities are the first thing that come to our mind. Commodity prices can have a huge impact on inflation data as well. As per the latest wholesale price index (WPI), WPI inflation accelerated to 3.39% in December 2016 as compared to -1.06% during the corresponding month of the previous year. For November 2016, WPI stood at 3.15%. 

The rise in WPI inflation is mainly on the back of rising global commodity prices and an unfavourable base effect. 

Can Inflation Come Back to Haunt the Economy?
   
Fuel and Power index rose sharply (on YoY Basis) on the back of the recent decision by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to reduce crude oil output. Even oil producers outside the group led by Russia agreed to reduce the output. The low base effect of last year also contributed to a sharp increase of fuel and power index. 

Manufactured products inflation, which largely contributed to the uptick in December 2016 WPI came in at a 14 month high of 3.37%. However, food inflation has turned negative for the first time since August 2015 at -0.7% in December 2016 as against 1.54% in the previous month. 

In the coming months, it looks like WPI could inch up and CPI might soften. The RBI is scheduled to hold the next meeting of the monetary policy committee on 8 February and is likely to keep a close watch on these numbers.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has cut its GDP growth forecast for India by a full percentage point to 6.6%. This is on the back of disruption caused by demonetisation. With this, India may lose the 'fastest growing major economy' tag to China in 2016-17. 

Todays Stock Market Summury -  Chart of the Day 17 Jan 2017


In its World Economic Outlook (WEO) Update, the IMF said India is likely to grow 6.6% in FY17. The IMF also expects India's growth to pick up at a slower pace in FY18, at 7.2%, against its earlier estimate of 7.6%. 

As per the IMF, the growth forecast trimmed for the current and next fiscal year primarily due to the temporary negative consumption shock induced by cash shortages and payment disruption associated with the recent currency note withdrawal and exchange initiative. 

Earlier, the World Bank has lowered its economic growth forecast for India to 7% after taking into account the impact of demonetisation and the fall in private investments. Similarly, the growth projection by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) released earlier, has lowered economic growth to 7%. This is mainly due to an industrial slowdown and this doesn't include the impact of demonetisation. 

With GST likely to be rolled out from 1 July 2017, it will be interesting to see how economic growth estimate pans out for FY18. 

Talking about GST, as per the latest development, GST is set to be rolled out from 1 July instead of 1 April after the centre and the states struck a consensus on the contentious issue of sharing of administrative powers. The deferred implementation date gives some time for the industry to prepare after the shock of demonetisation. Immediate rollout of GST would have created disruption and discontinuity in the system. 

What remains now are the rates for various goods and services which will be decided in the near future. The real benefit of GST comes from a 'level playing field'. A common floor tax across India means that the most efficient producer will win the consumer. 

If you would like to dig deeper into the practical implications of GST, I strongly recommend you download Vivek Kaul's free report, What the Mainstream Media DID about NOT TELL YOU GST.
After opening the day in the green, the Indian stock market indices slipped into the red around noon time. IT, FMCG, and capital goods, stocks are leading the sectoral gains. 

The BSE Sensex is trading lower by 37 points (down 0.14%) and the NSE Nifty is trading lower 11 points (down 0.13%). The BSE Small Cap and BSE Mid Cap indices are trading higher by 0.4% and 0.16% respectively.

( Reported by Equitymaster)