Friday, September 19, 2014

Very Pinteresting - or is it?

Pinterest is a more recent addition to my social media portfolio and is still very much in the early experimental stage. As a matter of fact apart from setting it up and adding a few pictures I  have done little with it.

What is it?
Wikipedia seems confused. 'Pinterest is a company that provides an Internet service that they describe as a visual discovery tool. People use Pinterest to collect ideas for projects and interests. Users create and share collections (called “boards”) of visual bookmarks (called “Pins”) that they use to do things like plan trips, develop projects, organize events or save articles and recipes. There is also a like feature to save certain pins that may not fit with a board.

How is it used?
Basically you post, or in their terms 'pin' pictures on a 'board' and look at other people's photos. Sounds pretty dull.

What does it do?
Lets you 'pin' images (or videos) on boards. So do a lot of other systems, so why is it so popular? Business Insider reported it was the fastest growing content sharing platform. Another report reckons 80% of users are women.

Does it work?
I ask the question in connection with business and sales leads. So far it's difficult to see how it can.

So one for the back burner I  guess.

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Being your own movie director

YouTube is next up in my review of social media experiments.

I added a YouTube channel to my portfolio of experiments in the social media space in 2009, but have to confess that have made very little use of it since. My own channel that is, not YouTube itself. There are two main reasons for this. First YouTube's benefits were very obvious, so beyond the initial posting experiment I  felt quite confident in recommending it to clients. The second reason was one of time. Putting together even a modest video can be quite a commitment in time and resource. Some of our clients have done this to great effect. We did think about a video blog, but plans to launch this seem to have gone permanently on to the back-burner.

What is it?
YouTube is a video-sharing web site owned by Google which allows the upload of video content and makes use of Adobe Flash Video and HTML5  technology. 

How is it used?
For our clients the most popular videos are customer testimonials, typically conducted on site, production demonstrations and service guides. For these three applications YouTube is a great resource. Since YouTube's debut in 2005 the way we view video and broadcast content has migrated from dedicated  televisions to computers and mobile devices. Consequently user generated content is just as likely to be viewed on the same platform as professionally created content from the legacy broadcasters and judged accordingly.

What does it do?
In a word, YouTube shows and tells without the bother of reading. But in reality it does a lot more than this. For clients who install products and systems it allows prospective customers to view the work and hear and see user feedback. It brings products to life in a way that static, 2D images in a catalogue or on a web site can't do and it can offer step-by-step guides to show how to operate a product, or to service it.

Does it work?
It certainly, in the case of our clients, gets thousands and thousands of visits which are no doubt a positive in search. For clients who track this data 20 or 30,000 views are common, but links on to their web site from this source, likes and subscribers are all just a few.

My view on YouTube
A great marketing tool to better demonstrate your product, to get user endorsement and offer first line service support.


Next time - Pinterest

Tuesday, September 09, 2014

Is LinkedIn linking you up with useful contacts?


Continuing the review of social media, we take a look at LinkedIn.

LinkedIn joined my portfolio of social media experiments in February 2008. At the time it appeared to offer unique networking opportunities through connectivity to current and past work colleagues who via endorsements could vouch for my skills and credibility. It offered more than the local breakfast club, more than a showcase for my CV and the potential to link to people who might have use of my services. Unlike Facebook with hundreds or indeed thousands of 'friends' LinkedIn offered a degree of exclusivity and access via real contacts to fellow professionals. But somehow along the way the original concept seems to have been quietly abandoned as it becomes yet another platform for advertisers and digital marketers.

What is it?
Launched in 2003 LinkedIn is described as a business oriented social networking service. It is about finding a job, discovering sales leads and connecting with business partners.

How do I us it?
Once I had set up my profile I waited for a deluge of enquiries for marketing services. Nothing happened. I am not fond of asking for people to recommend me, but it was apparently necessary to complete my profile. It's a bit like asking friends if they know a good plumber. From time to time I  return to LinkedIn and send invites to people I know, have met, even one or two I  only know via the Internet, to join my connections. So there are waves of new people joining, but in the main all contacts are people I actually know. I don't use it proactively to publish information or news. Perhaps I  should.

What does it do?
My home page tells me my 152 connections somehow links me u to 5.4 million professionals in my network. You can join groups, you can publish stuff and it is this ability to publish that is making it look more like Facebook as the days go by. And because digital marketing companies are pushing the same stuff out to all the social media channels, there is a repetition of content. Via email I  regularly receive prompts to congratulate a contact on the occasion of an anniversary,  to endorse their skills simply by checking a box (not by writing a contact specific endorsement) or inviting someone to be a contact

Does it work?
Has it brought me in work? No. But neither did the breakfast networking clubs where you actually met people, but generally people like myself offering services, not people requiring them.

My view on LinkedIn
Kind of a background tool to provide anyone who does want to talk about marketing services the references to my experience, work and general professional environment.

Next time - YouTube.

Thursday, September 04, 2014

Are tweets cheap news headlines or lead generators?

For the second in a short series putting popular social media channels in the spotlight, we take a look at Twitter.

According to the Technical Marketing  home page (@technicalmarket) we signed up for Twitter in March 2009 - so four and a half years and 612 tweets ago.

What is it?
Launched in July 2006 Twitter is sometimes described as a micro-blogging site. Basically the headlines without the body copy. In fact the messages are limited to 140 characters which sounds little, but is surprisingly adequate for sending concise messages, even embodying short form url links to redirect to the meat of the story. Well if there is a story. The Twitter universe is divided into people tweeting and people following. Popular discussions are said to 'trend'. In short it is ephemeral gossip and chatter of the moment.

How do I use it?
As with blogs, it started life as a trial which I  have mainly used to send out news headlines with a link (using a shortening tool) that readers can click on to reach the full story or reach more detailed information, even pictures. For me it is another news channel and indeed is clearly used and monitored by leading news organisations. However. I don't follow anyone other than our clients any more because the sheer volume of tweets rapidly became unmanageable and frankly overwhelming.

What does it do?
Various features have been added, but in essence it enables 140 character messages to be sent to 'followers' and also be read by people who are not signed up. In some ways it is kind of a replacement to the now largely defunct RSS news feed service.

Does it work?
Like other social media it depends what expectations you have. It certainly delivers messages but whether it delivers sales leads is entirely another matter. Writing a tweet is a skill if you want customers and prospects  to engage or at the very least to be aware of your business. Do you want readers to read a tweet and want to know more? For example a tweet such as "England win third test by 200 runs" tells cricket fans all they might want to know about a match result and not bother to visit a web site for a ball by ball analysis. But a tweet such as "ABC Engineering's new machine cuts energy bills by half" might start a sales prospect checking out the link to your web site.


As regards our Twitter account - well I  have not tweeted for sometime!

Next time - LinkedIn

Friday, August 22, 2014

A personal look at blogging

When social media first became classified as social media I set up some accounts to explore what they could do and more importantly what they could achieve.

I started with blogging (using Blogger) in August 2006 - 8 years ago! The Blogger account was followed by Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn and Facebook. Pinterest and Instagram have followed since.  We expected clients to expect us to know about these new communication channels and advise accordingly. Some enthused. Some didn't. As social media matures it is timely to review them and where they fit in what is now commonly called a digital marketing strategy. With 7 different channels to feed with content, the experiment could easily absorb most of the day.

The next few blogs will take a personal view of these 7 social media channel starting here with blogging..

Blog - what is it?
The term is an abbreviation of 'weblog' and its name suggests it is a personal log or diary on the web. It is in essence a personal web site. More recently digital marketers are referring to web site news modules as a 'blog'. From its personal origins, a blog tends to be less formal in content style than company web news rooms such as a Virtual News Office.

How do I use it?
For Technical Marketing this blog is a series of articles about marketing, encompassing simple pieces on marketing theory and comments on marketing issues of the day. I limit myself to writing one article a week because finding something pertinent to say, not  to mention the time to write more is too big a commitment. Each week the Technical Marketing blog is syndicated with ET Express which comes out every Friday.

What does it do?
Generally it is used as vehicle for news and comment and because of its relative simplicity of use is quick and easy for anyone to use. But clients tend not to use a blog in any real way; those who do can offer an interesting insight to the company.

Does it work?
Unlike Facebook or Twitter this is set up as open to read, so there is no real need to sign up. So signed up followers are few. However there are significant page views each month and even some comments. It is more a broadcast medium in my case and not a 'conversation'.

My view on blogs
A useful free platform for broadcasting messages, views and comments to a target audience, so include in the PR Plan.

Next time - Twitter

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Is most news we receive just disposable chatter?

The Internet and social media in particular has made feeding news to customers and prospects easy. But is this news overload welcome?

The ability for everyone to be their own publisher has bypassed the editorial review of traditional publications with the result that 'news' is published in volume, but really very little of it is actually news.

Consider why businesses want to keep in touch with their customers in the first place. Essentially it is that when it is time to buy a new product they are well disposed towards the brand and also there may be accessories or related products they can also sell them.  So you need to keep in touch, both to keep the customer/prospect database informed of new products and to make them feel good about the brand.

Question. Is a daily bombardment of so called news going to make them feel positive about the brand? Well - probably not. The risk is they will simply switch off by unsubscribing or more typically just directing your communications to trash. And the problem with that is the really important news gets missed in amongst all of the chatter.

Then there is another consideration, some news channels are trusted more than others. For an example a favourable product review in the leading industry magazine is more likely to have greater credibility than the same news on Facebook. But here is yet another dilemma. What platform do your customers turn to for news? It is traditional media - for B-2-B printed magazines - or desk top computers, or mobile devices?

And given this matrix of news v chatter, trusted sources v trivial and traditional publication platform v  mobile or other connected devices is anyone researching what their customers actually prefer and trust.


Thursday, August 14, 2014

Market leaders turn to apps to address mobile device users

Apps are emerging as a new frontier for market leadership.

Demonstrating market sector credibility is  important in gaining thought leadership.  A company that demonstrates its expertise in their market opens the route to sales. Customers figure if they are that knowledgable, then buying their products is a safe bet. Traditionally there have been several routes to make this land grab for the moral high ground of the sector. For example through presenting conference papers, publishing white papers, guide books and giving lectures. Or by having an industry guru who is expert in the state of play, of say the technology deployed , the current thinking and best practice. Now into the marketing communication mix comes the company app for mobile devices.

As momentum shifts from desk top to mobile devices like iPhones and iPads, so customers want access to company information through an app, not necessarily through a mobile version of the company web site either. Research conducted by Forbes Insights - The Connected Marketer:How Apps are engaging Customers, Partners and Employees - suggests that "A compelling mobile strategy requires that marketers design, develop and deploy apps that are capable of delivering a range of online services, from product communications to fresh content, unique specials and even gaming."

Forbes Insights survey identifies a number of trends:-


  • Customer-facing apps are on the rise - 78% report increases in their mobile app audiences.
  • Internal apps are driving efficiency.
  • Marketers are not all relying on IT departments to develop apps.
  • User experience is the greatest challenge for marketers - the ability to design user-friendly interfaces, to keep users interested and returning to their apps.
  • Many marketers are not measuring app usage, but those that do look at number of downloads or content views rather than metrics measuring navigation, pathing and time spent.

B-2-B marketers should be figuring out how to design apps that have value to their customers and prospects, value that will translate into sales.

Wednesday, August 06, 2014

Advertising - the big concept idea

With software and apps providing creativity tools available to everyone, is the creative concept for a campaign the last frontier?

Digital and video cameras,  publishing apps and a whole host of productivity tools give affordable access to pretty much anyone to create their own web sites, sales brochures, videos, advertisements - in fact most marketing communication collateral. And yet even if well executed, which many are not, to stand out and succeed need that extra spark of creativity. The creative concept.

Because we are exposed to messages everywhere we look - television, radio, newspapers, billboards, transport and on our mobile devices - we become oblivious to them. Many free apps can be upgraded to have an advertisement free version, plus usually additional features. But those I  use occasionally I can live with the ads. In fact after a while I  don't notice them, or more worryingly for the advertiser, even recall what they are for. And that is the problem. How to create a message that is noticed and recalled.

This is where the creative concept makes the difference, encapsulating the core proposition into a distinctive idea that stands out and is memorable.

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Perceived value, intrinsic value and price

Why are some products so desirable that price has little connection to the cost of the item?

In consumer markets people will cheerfully pay premium prices for a clothing item not because of the functionality, not because of what benefits the product offers, but because of what it says about the person who owns it. A discrete logo on an item of clothing (remember when labels were discretely inside a coat?), the type of car you drive, the watch you wear, even the supermarket you shop at for groceries. All these reflect on how the lifestyle of the owner is perceived by others. 

Apple has created huge loyalty amongst its 'early adopters' not by traditional reward schemes, loyalty cards, discounts and the like. No, Apple raises the desirability to fever pitch, getting the hard core afficianados to queue half the night outside their stores, helped by rumours of shortage to ensure a good crowd who are themselves the marketing campaign! 

Unlike the fashion industry, Apple actually market serious technical products, but at a level of high margins that most engineering b-2-b companies would love to reach. Pricing of b-2-b industrial products is another matter and generally is related to cost. Marketing theory says price is what the market is prepared to pay. Great - so just how much is that? As a product manager for lighting fixtures for commercial and industrial applications I spent a lot of time focussing on the cost of a new product. Generally this involved a lot of work with the factory that was to build it. Buyers, engineers, production management, tool makers and planners. Cost was a function of quantity, not just in negotiating component costs, but the type of tooling and it's amortisation as well as factory overhead contribution. So product managers put a lot of effort into forecasting sales volumes and negotiating unit costs - cost to sales - with the factory. At this point a formula took over which inserted the CTS and target Gross Margin, discount for stocking wholesaler and cover for them to sell on to installing contractors. Yes and this was before calculators. The end result was a 'List Price'. Or a 'Trade Price' or a 'Contract Price'. Once committed to a published price, scope for change was limited - either up or down. Computer sheets of sales volumes and gross margins were avidly scanned to see how well the forecasts stood up in the real market and was the product out performing or under performing. Of course there would be competing products out there which is where brand differentiators and product benefits came into play.

But while lighting fixtures had scope for differentiation, due to the need for comparability and standardisation lamps were all really the same product. As a young apprentice I spent 6 months working in a lamp factory in North London in a plant manufacturing fluorescent tubes of various lengths.My role was in Quality Control and one small job was to change the brand. How did that work then? Well the gold looking label on tubes and indeed ordinary light bulbs started off with something like a John Bull printing outfit (if anyone remembers those) which comprised a rubber stamp and an ink pad. It started black, but turn golden during the baking progress. I never really figured out the brand strategy, but as a company we had several brands; I think I counted over 20. Some brands I had heard of, some were for premium markets, others for trade or export, but the ones that surprised me most were for our competitors! Price in the market place was all about discounting - everyone had the same list price. Keeping the lines running at capacity was vital. During discount wars the production team scrutinised marginal costs. And sales managers stepped up discount, even 90 per cent at times. So generic product pricing was a game well distanced from the premium driven markets where necessity not desire drove the purchase decision.

Pricing sets a benchmark for the market, but is rarely the price paid. The relationship between realised price and cost is gross margin which in turn relates to net margin and profit. And at the end of the day that is what the marketing is all for - not just selling a smart product, but making the best profit that can be achieved. That is what product managers work on, a great product helps, but a great product well priced is the goal. 

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Making the case for experience

Is there a place for experience in the marketing team, or are older employees out of date and holding things back?

With Prime Minister Dave Cameron's recent cull of senior ministers - and it has to be said of mainly male and 'pale' older men - those  in marketing jobs must be wondering whether their time is up in a marketing space currently in thrall to social media. Although there is plenty of marketing focus on demographics and the power of the 'grey pound' as Britain's population ages, does it extend to employment in marketing? According to a recent report the grey pound accounts for nearly 50% of consumer spending and the over 50's account for 76% of the nation's wealth. And of course many specifiers and decision makers in the engineering and technology field are male - the recent Industrial Technology research found the average age of its readers to be mid forties - so it kind of makes sense to have someone on the team who can relate to that demographic.

Another survey - Age before beauty - claimed 66% regarded over 60s just as effective as their younger colleagues and 21% rated them more useful as team players. Older employees may not salivate in the same way over the latest gadgets or apps, but many probably have a more informed comprehension of how products are made and code is written - it's not that new. Don't forget the important mentoring role older employees can provide too. A former colleague of mine, someone much older than me - assessed a company's stability and capability by means of a straw poll count of how many 'grey heads' he saw in the building.

Although there is a tendency for older employees to subscribe to the 'told you so' school of conversation, the reality is that they have lived through changing times. seen boom times and recessions, seen what worked and what failed and hopefully understood why. It is, in short, experience. With that comes knowledge,  competence, reliability and a 'steady hand'. Surprising then that ex PR man Dave Cameron is sending out the opposite signals. Seems a bit like age discrimination. In marketing terms he has taken the hatchet to a group
of people who are most representative of his party's target audience. Is that wise?

Monday, July 14, 2014

Will advertising agencies need their own algorithms next?

An article in this morning's CityAM  - Beyond digital: What will the future look like for marketing services? -  looks at the role of advertising agencies as buyers are bypassing intermediaries to go direct to manufacturers.

Disintermediation it says raise new challenges for the sellers who don't have the customer relationship expertise. Maybe in future advertising agencies may need to develop their own algorithms just as Google has done which automates much of the advertising space buying and planning role to meet customer needs and responsive to customer data. Isn't that what the stock brokers have done for automatic trading and look what happened.


The City AM piece prompted by Sir Martin Sorrell's - The 10 Trends Shaping the Global Ad Business published on LinkedIn where power still centres on New York but shifting, East, South East and South and a shortage of talent is flagged up. The head of WPP  must know something to warrant a proposed 70% salary hike to £70million p.a.!




Wednesday, July 09, 2014

Andy Collier …

Today’s diary is dedicated to the memory of Andy Collier.


Andy Collier was a friend, colleague, a fellow director and business partner in the enterprise we started together in 1999, trading under the name of Technical Marketing Ltd. This weekend marks the first anniversary of Andy’s untimely death on 12th July 2013. He was on his way to a meeting of the Association of Lighting Designers (the ALD). Andy’s particular involvement in the ALD was as editor of the Association’s magazine –Focus –a publication which Andy succeeded in elevating to global prominence within the theatre lighting community  thanks to his editorial and design skills . As well as writing and editing, the honorary role brought together two of Andy’s great loves  –lighting and the theatre.V

I first met Andy in late 1985 at Strand Lighting’s premises on the Great West Road in Brentford, in a building Fred Bentham  mischievously referred to as ‘the toothpaste factory’ owing to its former ownership by Colgate. I was about to take on the role of Marketing Director and had asked to meet the marketing team. Andy had somehow found china tea cups and a teapot, pouring tea for us all with a casual elegance that marked out his attention to detail in everything he did. To say he was multi-skilled would be an understatement. He was a great communicator and his new product launches were legendary. Perhaps Steve Jobs took some tips from Andy when he performed his famous launches for Apple some years later. Andy was also technically knowledgeable both on the theory and hands on making things, but most of all he related to people.

In the year that has gone by I find myself thinking Andy is still at the end of the phone. Perhaps to run an idea past him, to help with some computer problem, or just to pass on something I thought might interest or amuse him. Of course Andy’s finger-prints are all over Technical Marketing not least in the systems he set up and his detailed instructions for operating them. Andy would from time to time say, “I am documenting this in case I am run down by a bus”, or latterly “perish at the hand of a mad cyclist”. It was neither bus or cyclist that took Andy. It was at Leicester Square underground station his heart was to fail him. Fittingly maybe in the centre of theatre land and a station to and from which I  myself commuted  when I  worked at Thorn House many years before. 


So, on this sombre anniversary we remember Andy and his contribution to our lives His memory will live on and we recall the celebration of Andy’s life in words and music on that bright sunny late July afternoon beside the River Thames in London as we exited ‘stage left’ to the haunting ‘Rhapsody in Blue’.