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09 Nov 16:54

7 things you should never say to a veteran

by Áine Cain

veteran job fair

  • Business Insider interviewed a number of veterans from several branches of the military.
  • They told us about everything they wished civilians understood about the service.
  • Based on those conversations, here are some things you should refrain from saying to veterans.

Most of the time, people have the best intentions when they're talking to a military veteran.

"By and large, at this stage in history, the American people are very, very supportive of veterans," Brandon Trama, a former US Army Special Operations Detachment Commander, CivCom grad, and associate at Castleton Commodities International, told Business Insider.

Indeed, according to Gallup, the majority of civilians view each of the five branches either very or somewhat favorably.

"I've encountered numerous people when I transitioned who were willing to help me out, whether it was buy me a cup of coffee, give me thoughts on their career path, or put me in front of other people who may be able to point me in the direction of other opportunities," Trama said.

But, according to the Pew Research Center, fewer Americans now have family ties to those who served.

And despite the good intentions of many civilians, there's still a growing gap between the militiary and civilian worlds. So it's important for civilians to remember that there's a difference between reverence and understanding.

Business Insider spoke with veterans from several different branches of the military about transitioning back to civilian careers.

Here's what they said they wished civilians would understand — and, in some cases, refrain from saying:

This story was originally published in May of 2017.

SEE ALSO: 10 former Navy SEALs, Green Berets, and other veterans share their best advice for leaving the military and transitioning to civilian work

DON'T MISS: Inside the 11-week, intensive tech boot camp that helps vets get hired

'We all owe you'

The military is widely held in esteem in the US. A whopping 72% of Americans have confidence in the institution, according to Gallup — compare that with the 16% of folks who have confidence in Congress.

But quite a few of the veterans Business Insider spoke with asserted that well-intentioned adulation can go too far.

Some advised civilians against overdoing it when thanking veterans for their service. These veterans also warned fellow ex-service members from letting any praise go to their heads.

"Stop thinking people owe you something," Omari Broussard, who spent 20 years in the Navy, told Business Insider. "Nobody owes you anything."

The New York Times reported that some veterans view being thanked for their service as "shallow, disconnected, a reflexive offering from people who, while meaning well, have no clue what soldiers did over there or what motivated them to go."

According to Broussard, it's best for veterans — especially those who recently left the service — to not take the praise to heart, especially at work.

"When you get out, you've got to compete with the best," the founder of counter-ambush training class 10X Defense and author of "Immediate Action Marketing" said. "Go get it. That may require you doing a lot more work than you think you need to do."



'Do you have any friends that died?'

Probing and ill-advised questions from civilians can make many veterans feel dehumanized and othered.

"People will ask me plainly, 'Do you have any friends that died?'" Garrett Unclebach, who served as a Navy SEAL for six years, told Business Insider. "And then the second question they'll ask me is, 'You ever kill anybody?' Two super inappropriate questions to ask people."

Unclebach said people should remember they don't necessarily have a full grasp on the issues an individual veteran is facing.

"People talk about PTSD and they don't really understand it so I would tell you that some guys who have it are embarrassed by it," the VP of business development at construction firm Bellator Construction said. "Everyone needs an opportunity to be human and be vulnerable.



'I don't really understand how your ability to go fight is going to add value to my organization'

Edelman Intelligence's study of 1,000 employers found that 76% want to hire more veterans — but only 38% said veterans obtain skills in the military that "are easily transferable to the private or public sector."

Phil Gilreath, who served as a Marine officer for nearly 10 years, said this is a potential "stigma" veterans face in the business world.

"In reality over 95% of what we do is kind of planning and operations and logistics," he told Business Insider. "That absolutely translates to the corporate world, not to mention the things that aren't necessarily quantitative, such as your leadership experience, your ability to operate in a dynamic, stressful environment that's ever-changing."

Gilreath is now director of operations at storage space startup Clutter and was previously a fellow at the Honor Foundation, a group that specifically helps Navy SEALs transition to civilian life.

He said veterans must enter the civilian world prepared to explain and demonstrate how exactly their skills cross over.

Evan Roth, an HBX CORe alum and former US Air Force captain who now works for GE Aviation, agrees.

"Not only does this involve creating a résumé that has readable — no strange acronyms — skill sets and experience, but also learning how to talk to companies in a way that demonstrates value," Roth said. "Many members never practice how to give a 15-second 'elevator pitch' about how they can be valuable to a company, or in an interview they'll tell a three minute 'war story' without tying it back to how this could be useful in the civilian world."



See the rest of the story at Business Insider
09 Nov 16:52

Why Do Critics Hate Movies That Real People Love?

by Rohit

The Queen-inspired film Bohemian Rhapsody film was poorly rated by critics, yet became a big box office hit. Earlier this year, the same thing happened to Hugh Jackman’s The Greatest Show musical film about the life of PT Barnum. Why are critics so out of touch with what real people like? And why do we love the movies that “experts” (who presumably understand film) rate so badly?

As this article suggests, “one thing many critic-proof hits have in common is brand recognition. You know what you’re getting.” While this may be the case, it could also be the simple fact that we are primed to look for different things. While a critic may know more about the cinematography or be able to compare the film to others in its genre – most people are simply looking for great entertainment value.

This insight is useful to consider outside the world of film as well. Are you creating something that only a select few people who know what to look for will love – but the rest won’t understand? Too often it is easy to seek influencer approval instead of bypassing those critical voices and focusing instead on something that that the majority of your audience can love.

The post Why Do Critics Hate Movies That Real People Love? appeared first on Influential Marketing Blog.

09 Nov 16:51

A Beginner's Guide to Running a Comparative Market Analysis

by Nadia Balint

One of the first steps when working with home sellers is setting a home's listing price. When working with buyers, that first step is usually checking the value of a home before making an offer to purchase.

A home’s current worth can be difficult to pinpoint, and the best and most common way to find out how much a home is actually worth is by running a comparative market analysis. And in this post, we'll define a CMA, and walk you through how to conduct one of your own.

Download Now: 10 Competitive Analysis Templates [Free Templates]

what is a comparative market analysis

Why run a CMA report?

A CMA report is necessary to determine the accurate value of a property in the current market, so your client can get the most bang for their buck. In addition, It provides crucial information for both real estate agents and their clients to make informed decisions regarding pricing and negotiations.

A CMA report helps ensure a fair and competitive listing price by considering comparable properties, leading to a successful sale. So let's jump into how you can run your own.

How to Do a Comparative Market Analysis

1. Know the neighborhood.

A comparative analysis involves more than just doing the math on prices for houses in your area. In fact, an agent’s familiarity and experience with the local market can significantly affect a CMA’s accuracy.

To set the right price, you need to be familiar with the neighborhood and knowledgeable about the historical, current sale, and rental value of real estate in that area.

There’s been increasing popularity of single-family rentals in North America over the past decade — almost 50,000 of them built to rent in 2020, compared to about 14,000 built in 2010. If you’re not already acquainted with the neighborhood, check it out in person or via Google Street View.

Assess the overall quality of the neighborhood and identify the attractive and not-so-attractive blocks. Examine its proximity to parks, school districts, and other amenities.

Look at the curb appeal of homes in the area and identify any negative characteristics such as proximity to a noisy highway or dilapidated commercial buildings.

2. Pre-assess the listing property online.

If the property in question is already listed, browse the listing online before viewing it with your client. This will give you a preliminary idea of what to expect before visiting it in person.

Gather as much information as you can about the property, including the year it was built, home size, lot size, construction type, architecture, and condition. Being informed will give you an advantage for your first meeting with the seller.

3. Assess the property in person.

Visit the property in person to gather detailed information needed to prepare an accurate report.

Note its most important metrics, such as size, layout, age, condition, finishes, and landscaping, as well as any features that might add value, including a pool, finished basement, large garage, or oversized lot.

And, be on the lookout for issues that might affect the price negatively, like a roof in need of repair, poor overall condition, lack of central air conditioning, or other hidden issues.

4. Select comparable properties in the area.

Choosing the best three or four comparable properties in the area is crucial for the accuracy of a comparative market analysis.

To make a selection, scan MLS, Zillow, Property Shark, or Redfin for properties recently sold or closed on, active listings, pending sales, and expired listings.

Then, consider these three important factors:

  • When the comparable property sold: In a hot real estate market where prices rise fast, the price of a home sold a year prior may be irrelevant today. The CMA report should examine properties with a date of sale as current as possible — ideally within the previous few weeks. If it’s a slow market and you’re using comps sold several months prior, you might need to adjust the prices based on how the market has evolved.
  • Where it’s located: The location of the comps selected should be as close to the subject property as possible. It’s best if they’re in the same neighborhood, subdivision, and school district, or within one mile of the listed property. Residential areas can vary from one block to the next. Some properties are located next to a quiet park, while others in the same neighborhood might be next to a busy road. These subtle changes can lead to significant price differences.
  • What its main features are: You should compare your listing against homes with characteristics as similar as possible to the one you’re reviewing. This applies particularly to the number of bedrooms, baths, square footage, and lot size. Use properties with similar construction types and architectural styles if the selection size is generous. Homes with similar features are ideal, but this might not always be possible unless the home is located in a developed subdivision where all homes look the same.

5. Prepare the comparative market analysis report.

Using a template report form provided with your MLS or other software solutions, enter the information you gathered for the comparable properties selected and for your subject property.

Some price adjustments might be necessary to compensate for the structural differences and better match the subject property. For example, if the property you’re pricing has three bedrooms and the one you’re comparing it to only has two, you’ll need to adjust the price accordingly.

Now it’s time to do the math. After making the necessary adjustments, divide each property's sold (adjusted) price by its square footage to find the sold price per square foot.

Sold price of each property / square footage of each property = sold price per square foot

Then, multiply the calculated average price per square foot for your comparable properties by the square feet of your subject property to obtain its current market value.

Average price per square foot of comparable properties x square footage of subject property = current market value

To recap, your CMA report should contain:

  • The addresses of the subject and comparable properties
  • Information and characteristics of each property
  • Sold prices of the comparables
  • The total square footage of each home
  • The adjustment values for lot sizes, bedrooms, baths, and garages
  • The adjusted sold prices
  • The dollar-per-square-foot value
  • The subject property value

The final calculated listing price might need to be further modified, depending on how competitive the market is at the time. A high inventory of homes for sale could force prices down, while a low inventory might push your asking price upward.

Comparative Market Analysis Report Sample

When you have identified about three properties that have been sold in the same area with similar features, it’s time to put them into a spreadsheet for analysis. The following example is simplified and not based on true market data:

comparative-market-analysis_7

With each property itemized, an agent can provide a breakdown of the cost of each feature and how it affects each home’s overall value.

comparative market analysis: table variables

The sales price of each of the three properties is adjusted to be nearly identical to the value of your desired property value. The more desirable features are deducted from the sales price of each property, while the less desirable are added.

comparative-market-analysis_6-1

The adjusted sales prices show the range of an appropriate offer of $402,500-$432,000. This range will reflect the offer price of the desired property with the features they want.

During this part of the analysis, it’s important to weigh each property based on its similarity to the desired features. Property #2 had the most adjustments, so it is given the lowest weight. Property #3 had the least amount of adjustments and was given the highest weight. Once the weights are identified, the adjusted prices are multiplied by the weighted value and added together to determine the offer.

comparative market analysis solution

The more accurate estimation for an asking price in this situation is $409,000 based on similar homes in the area you found on the market.

Use a CMA to Your Advantage

Learning and understanding the purpose of comparative market analysis can save you money during your next house hunt — or earn you more when you decide to sell. Either way, doing your research and having the numbers to back it can help you negotiate a price more effectively.

Editor's Note: This post was originally posted in November 2018 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.

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09 Nov 16:51

The Top 5 Sales Skills of Modern Sellers, with Amy Franko – Episode #119

by Carey Green

Amy Franko is an author, speaker, and expert in modern selling and sales skills. She’s put her most recent observations and lessons-learned as a sales consultant and trainer into print in her new book, “The Modern Seller.” In this conversation, Amy and I discuss the top 5 skills every modern seller needs to have in their arsenal as well as why sales professionals need to think like an entrepreneur these days – and why it’s not always glamorous. In Amy’s words, modern sales skills must be applied holistically – a concept that surprised me in both its simplicity and its impact. This is a conversation you don’t want to miss – listen now!

Learn the top 5 #sales skills of modern #sellers from this conversation with @AmyFranko. Join @Iannarino #InTheArenaClick To Tweet

What has changed that requires that we make the delineation of “modern seller?”

It should be no secret to sales professionals that prospects and clients have changed the way they want to interact with your business. These days they come to you with all the information they need about your service or product. That means we are no longer educating clients on our products, we’re in a position to serve as a consultant to help them discover how our product can be applied best to their situation. In Amy’s new book she takes a look into what she calls the “skills behind the skills” – the things that enable us to effectively handle the needs of the modern buyer. It’s only with these kinds of modern sales skills that we will be able to meet and exceed the expectations of our customers. Listen to hear it explained as only Amy can explain it.

Modern sales skills must be applied in a values-based way

We all know what it feels like to be overwhelmed. The amount of correspondence and data I personally deal with on a daily basis is only one example of the type of things that contribute to those feelings. Amy points out that all of us have finite resources of time, energy, motivation, and discipline. As modern sellers, we must recognize that fact and identify where we want to spend those finite resources. It’s not your typical decision – it’s a values-based decision that we’ve got to learn how to make. If we can do it successfully, we’ve just learned the most important sales skill we could ever learn – and our effectiveness at serving customers and providing them with the value of an ongoing consultative relationship will only increase over time.

.@AmyFranko says that modern #sales skills must be applied in a values-based way. Learn what she means on this episode of #InTheArena with @IannarinoClick To Tweet

The quality of your relationships will dictate the quality of your sales results

There’s simply no way we can have even elementary level relationships with the 1500 people we are connected with on LinkedIn. We’ve got to be selective, choosing to invest our time in the relationships that will serve our goals and our customers best. It’s knowing how to best use our social capital, which Amy likes to think of this way: Social capital is the collective value people create when they are in a strategic relationship. People who get this understand that the quality of their relationships determines the quality of their sales results. For that reason, they make intentional decisions about the relationships they build and the goals they set for themselves. Amy explains it so much better than this short paragraph can do, so be sure you listen.

Sales ambassadors earn the right to be a trusted advisor to their customers

One of the concepts Amy introduces in her book – which is similar to my phrase “Combative Diplomat,” but much more elegant – is that modern sellers are ambassadors. The concept is simple and once you get it, it changes the way you view your role in your sales and prospecting process. An ambassador is a bridge – a person who brings things and people together. An ambassador is an owner – a person invested in their company and their results. An ambassador is a value creator – a person who works to serve others and enable their success. Listen to hear Amy’s insight into how the ambassador mindset can change the way you approach your next sales appointment for the better.

#Sales ambassadors earn the right to be a trusted advisor to their customers. Learn how you can become one from @AmyFranko on this episode of #InTheArena with @IannarinoClick To Tweet

Outline of this great episode

  • What it meant for Amy to become more entrepreneurial
  • Salespeople need to learn what it means to be holistic
  • Modern sales skills include managing relationships well
  • The number of people you need to be focusing on is really pretty small
  • What does an ambassador need to do as a modern seller

Resources & Links mentioned in this episode

The theme song “Into the Arena” is written and produced by Chris Sernel. You can find it on Soundcloud

Connect with Anthony

Website: www.TheSalesBlog.com

Youtube: www.Youtube.com/Iannarino

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/iannarino

Twitter: https://twitter.com/iannarino

Google Plus: https://plus.google.com/+SAnthonyIannarino

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Tweets you can use to share this episode

Learn how the #sales environment has changed and why modern #sellers are needed. @AmyFranko explains, on this episode of #InTheArena with @iannarinoClick To Tweet
The quality of your #relationships will dictate the quality of your #sales results. @AmyFranko says there’s no doubt about it. Hear her explanation on this episode of #InTheArena with @IannarinoClick To Tweet

The post The Top 5 Sales Skills of Modern Sellers, with Amy Franko – Episode #119 appeared first on The Sales Blog.

09 Nov 16:50

3 Reasons Technical Skills Matter Less Than You Think

by Michelle Delgado

Skitterphoto / Pixabay

If you read enough articles about the future of work, you might start to picture a cross between Office Space and Westworld. Headlines would have us believe that before too long, the average cube farm will be staffed by robots and artificial intelligence bots while the rest of us monitor algorithms on our laptops.

These sci-fi visions of the future of work would make a great TV series (The Office meets The Jetsons?), but the reality is actually much more nuanced.

If you’ve ever woken up in the middle of the night wondering if you need to enroll in a coding academy or risk never finding a job again, take a deep breath.

Although learning technical skills will be very important in most industries, there are 3 reasons that being a technical wizard matters less than you’d think.

  1. Companies Want to Hire Critical Thinkers

A spin through any given company’s job board will show that most companies are hungry for technically skilled workers, including frontend developers and sales reps who are adept at navigating specialized software.

However, a recent survey of over 500 workers revealed that both hiring managers and individual contributors value critical thinking skills even more.

If you think about it, this makes sense. Most people can pick up technical skills, but it’s much harder to train an employee to be a flexible problem solver or a flexible worker capable of adapting to frequent changes.

Both men and women avoid applying jobs if they don’t fully meet the qualifications to avoid wasting their time and energy.

But these new survey findings suggest that if a software proficiency or similar technical skill is the only thing holding you back, you should probably apply anyway. If you would otherwise love to do the job, you may be able to emphasize other aspects of your background to persuade an employer that you could dive in and get up to speed on the technical aspects quickly.

  1. Managers Appreciate Proactive Workers

If you’ve been noticing that your industry is gradually becoming more technical, your attitude can make a huge difference in how your boss views your potential.

Workers who rarely ask questions or volunteer to learn new things have less of a shot at getting promoted, observes LinkedIn Learning Editor Paul Petrone.

A good attitude goes a long way, especially if your colleagues are grumbling about having to change their workflow to master a new tool. Some key strategies to try include:

  • Volunteering to be on the search committee for digital tools
  • Vetting professional development material to help your team master new technology
  • Setting aside a few minutes each day to read an article or listen to a podcast about new technology in your industry
  • Express appreciation when others help you master technology
  • Become a master note taker who others can ask for help after tutorials

By maintaining a consistently proactive attitude, you can show that you’re eager to try new technology no matter how you actually feel about it.

Even if you’re not the best with technology, resist the urge to crack jokes about being clumsy or struggling to learn. Your boss will definitely notice.

  1. Online Resources Help to Quickly and Easily Fill Knowledge Gaps

I took a basic coding class in college, and I’ll never forget something my professor said. He told us we wouldn’t be coding experts by the end of the semester, but that he planned to teach us something even more powerful.

“You won’t emerge from this class as a coding expert,” he said. “But by the end of this class, you’ll know exactly where to look for information.”

As my career has progressed, I’ve learned the wisdom of his approach. No one is capable of knowing everything – but anyone can become a fast, accurate researcher capable of finding answers with lightning speed.

Next time you’re stumped by a technical question, know where to find answers on your own:

  • YouTube: There are a surprising number of kind souls out there who make tutorial videos for everything from Adobe Suite to Ikea furniture. Try searching for your question and you might find the answer you need, with a video showing you how it works.
  • Check Your Local Library: Here in DC, a library card is all you need to access Lynda’s full library of video classes on anything you can imagine. Sign up for a library card in your city and see what resources are available.
  • Help Forums: Try Googling your question in quotation marks + the name of the tool you’re working with and the word “forum.” Most technical tools have help forums with solutions to common sticking points, so you may find a solution there.

If you’re really organized, you might even be able to search your own notes. Organize your notes from any staff trainings in Evernote and tag it so you can find it later.

Technical Skills Alone Won’t Determine Future Success

As most industries adopt new technology to become faster and more profitable, it’s easy to fear that anyone who isn’t a Mr. Robot-style hacker will be left in the dust.

However, the future probably won’t be quite that extreme. Technical skills matter more than ever, but employers still value critical thinking, enthusiasm, and research skills when thinking about who to promote or who to hire.

As you think about your future career, definitely plan to keep pace with your industry’s changes. But before you freak out about robots taking your job, take a deep breath and remember that there are plenty of ways a machine will never be able to fully replace you.

09 Nov 16:37

Product Bundling Strategy: How to Get It Right

by Derek Gleason

It’s the early 1980s. You’re in charge of a fledgling ESPN, and you have two choices:

  • Add more college basketball—you’re highest-rated programming—to the schedule.
  • Stick with the skiing and billiards you’ve aired for years (because you couldn’t afford anything else).

Which creates the more profitable programming bundle?

ESPN stuck with the esoteric sports. And because of that choice, the ESPN family of channels now consumes a double-digit percentage of your cable bill.

Here’s what they knew: To boost subscriber fees, they needed to maximize the number of people who would pick up the phone and call the cable company if, during a tense negotiation, the provider threatened to drop ESPN. Hence, it benefited them to capture the widest possible market—even at the expense of ratings.

For ESPN and others, bundling strategy can be deceivingly complex. It’s easy to assume that you’ll succeed if you simply pick two or three items, sum their value, and offer them at a slight discount. But if you want bundling to work—and work consistently—you need a far more thoughtful approach.

What qualifies as a “product bundle”?

The definition of “product bundling” varies. According to some, newspapers are a bundle of articles sold as a single unit, just as albums are a bundle of songs. (So is a concert a bundle, too?)

This flexible definition can yield endless debate about what constitutes an individual unit for sale or whether an offer is a bundle versus a “cross-sell” or an “add-on.” We’ve tried before to differentiate the three, all of which we bundle(!) into the category of “upsells”:

  • Bundles. Two or more complementary products added to the cart from the product page or checkout, usually sold at a discount.
  • Cross-sells. A product that complements an existing purchase but is from a different category (or vendor).
  • Add-ons. The extras—protection plans, tech-support subscriptions, or product training—that offer peace of mind.

Regardless of where you draw the line, there are two key delineations within product bundles:

1. Product bundles versus bundle pricing.

  • While bundled products are often sold at a discount, a special price is only one of several potential motivators. (And, as it turns out, one of the hardest to make successful.)

2. Pure bundles versus mixed bundles.

  • Pure bundles are available only as a bundle. Think of Adobe Photoshop: You don’t get to include the magic wand tool but omit the Gaussian blur filter.
  • Mixed bundles are available for purchase separately and as a bundle. Think of fast-food meal deals: You can still purchase any of the items individually.

For sellers, the potential benefits of product bundling are clear—and, perhaps surprisingly, far-reaching.

How bundles benefit sellers

Most often, bundles are an opportunity to increase the average order value. One estimate from McKinsey suggests that 35% of all Amazon purchases come from recommendations (at least some of which qualify as “bundles”) and that recommendations have a success rate, according to Forrester, of around 60%.

While you can argue about which upsell bucket each recommendation falls into, the takeaway is the same: Adding related products to a pending purchase is a powerful way to grow revenue. (And, along with increasing the number of customers to your site and the number of repeat customers, it’s one of only three ways.)

There are six other, less-considered benefits, however:

1. Pricing opacity. Here’s the classic example: A $750-per-night hotel charges $10 for a bottle of water. Consumers feel ripped off. However, that same hotel room for $760 per night including water seems like a reasonable deal.

hotel with water bottleHigh-end hotels—and other big-ticket services and products—are better off bundling the cost of small items, like water, into the price of the high-value item.

If a minor product has a price point that—justified or not—causes major friction, bundling its cost into the price for the main item can reduce its negative impact.

2. Inventory reduction. Bundles can help move stagnant inventory. There are risks to “throwing in” products (detailed in a later section), especially if that product is cheap compared to other items in the bundle.

3. Product-line expansion. Typically, purchasing individual low-cost items online has two solutions, neither of which is satisfactory: The seller subsidizes shipping but loses money on the deal, or the buyer pays more for shipping than the product itself.

Bundling products at an order-value threshold (“Orders over $50 qualify for free shipping”) allows ecommerce companies to expand their product lines with a solution that works for buyers and sellers.

4. Marketing simplicity. If you sell 20 products, you have to market 20 products. If you bundle them as one, you market them as one.

5. Increased product usage. Spotify or Netflix could price plans based on genres. Don’t need the country music catalog? Save $1. Never watch horror movies? Take $2 off your bill.

For subscription services or SaaS companies, however, bundling expands the use cases for a product. And because platforms like Netflix rely on recommendation engines—some 75% of what users watch comes via recommendations—bundling expands the potential list of recommended titles.

At a minimum, bundles encourage product sampling and exploration, which could help an acid rock aficionado discover the joys of an aria (or motivate a new software user to learn advanced skills).

6. Subsidized feature development. Bundled content (for media companies) and features (for software services) use core features to subsidize development of “long-tail” capabilities.

Even if a fraction of customers use advanced features (e.g. Microsoft Office), the increase in consumers’ perceived value—what they could do—justifies a higher price point that, in turn, funds feature development for power users.

But what do buyers get out of all this?

How bundles benefit buyers

As Roger Dooley notes, bundling reduces the “pain of paying” for consumers. Because pricing is more opaque, they’re less able to identify the “right” price (even if you are charging them $10 for that bottle of water) and, therefore, less anxious about paying the “wrong” one.

In Dooley’s example, a consumer getting the “luxury” package for a new car has no idea how much he’s paying for leather seats versus the premium sound system. The inability to price each feature frees the consumer from the cognitive burden to pass a fair–unfair judgment on every item. (Yes, this can benefit the seller, too.)

bmw bundles

Automakers have long bundled disparate features into a handful of “packages” to reduce the “pain of paying” (and keep consumers from conducting a line-by-line accounting of every feature).

Reducing the pain of buying is increasingly important. A plethora of studies (here’s one and here’s another, but they’re everywhere) shows that most consumers research products online before buying—even on their smartphones while in a brick-and-mortar store. Omnipresent access to product comparisons and pricing knowledge balloons the pressure to find the “right” price.

When the price is known and a discount is offered, bundling helps price-sensitive consumers get what they want at a discount. As mixed and customizable bundles become more common (and better targeted), consumers enjoy more choice—they get the bundle benefits of convenience or price savings while retaining a say over what’s included.

As Anthony Tjan summarizes:

If you are the customer pushing to unbundle the package, asking for a price breakdown is almost always to your favor. Choice is a good thing for you.

Still, bundling is easy to get wrong.

When bundling products doesn’t work

While the potential business benefits of bundling are clear, the process to implement a successful bundling strategy is murky. The “presenter’s paradox” exemplifies the risks of getting it wrong.

The presenter’s paradox

In the original 2012 study, the “presenters” had two choices of what to offer hypothetical customers:

  1. An iPod Touch with a cover; or
  2. An iPod Touch with a cover and one free music download

Bundling the song download into the package should make it more valuable, right? Some 92% of presenters thought so—but they were wrong. Participants were willing to pay higher prices for the iPod Touch without the free song download.

Why? Because we subconsciously average the value of bundle components rather than taking their sum. Steve Martin of Influence At Work offers an analogy:

Much like adding warm water to hot leads to a more moderate temperature, attempts to clinch a deal by adding extra features to an already strong proposal, could mean a reduction in the overall attractiveness of that proposal. In effect each additional feature or piece of information provided serves to cheapen the overall package.

The iPod Touch wasn’t the only scenario to show the effect: Consumers were more likely to purchase a pricey home gym when a companion fitness DVD wasn’t included. Additionally, and most surprisingly, people were willing to pay $225 for one piece of luggage and $54 for another when purchased separately—but only $165 for the items as a bundle.

suitcases bundle pricing

Why are we willing to pay more for less? Categorical reasoning.

Categorical reasoning

As Alexander Chernev explains:

People naturally tend to classify products as either expensive or inexpensive, and this categorization influences how they judge products. When an expensive item is bundled with an inexpensive one, people categorize the bundle as less expensive, and this lowers their willingness to pay for it.

Chernev’s research on categorical reasoning reveals further insights:

  • “Simply putting the products side by side doesn’t produce a subtraction effect. That effect occurs only when the two items are considered part of the same offering.”
  • “This effect is not caused by differences in the perceived quality of the bundled products and can occur when both items are of similar quality, as in a combination of a Porsche with a Montblanc pen.”

Ultimately, if a bundle inspires categorical thinking along “inexpensive” and “expensive” dimensions, your offering will suffer.

But categorical thinking applies to more than just price. As Chernev discovered, adding a salad to a cheeseburger reduces estimates of total caloric value, even though adding food could only increase calories. Categorical thinking averages the non-numeric perception of nutrition between the two items.

Our research on the presenter’s paradox and the categorical thinking that fuels it confirms its effects, albeit in a diminished form. Our findings reinforce the idea that the effect “is contextual, and likely is influenced by the value gap between the items presented and the presentation of them.”

When it comes to the risk of bundling products, there’s another factor to consider: cognitive load.

Beware of cognitive load

Cognitive load is the amount of mental energy it takes to complete a task. As we’ve written before, a high cognitive load can lead to “analysis paralysis” and make consumer decisions more difficult. Complex bundles may increase the cognitive load—even if the intention is to benefit the consumer.

For a buyer, choosing a single streaming service that bundles all content is easier than selecting the 56 subgenres you want to pay for (or, at maximum granularity, the exact songs or shows among tens of thousands).

netflix bundles choiceNetflix could allow consumers to customize their access based on genre—but the cognitive load would be overwhelming.

The key to making bundles work is symbiosis—developing a product bundling strategy that benefits buyers and sellers.

How to make product bundles work

While price-based categorization can undermine a product bundling strategy, there are two workarounds: price anchoring and, if that fails, a reframing of categorical dimensions.

Price anchoring

Roger Dooley has a theory, one that helps explain why infomercials are so successful with the extras and add-ons that the presenter’s paradox warns against:

the infomercials work to establish a high anchor point (“Thousands sold at $199!”), and then give the consumer a lower price (“Just four payments of $29.99!”). By the time they start throwing in the deal-sweeteners, the price has been set in the consumer’s mind and the extra items are indeed seen as adding value. The consumer doesn’t need to take a mental shortcut to estimate value, and the categorical thinking effect doesn’t occur.

Dooley’s theory is useful for SaaS companies that choose to present annual versus monthly payment plans: A monthly payment plan may create, in the consumer’s mind, a lower price anchor that makes a lower-value freebie or bundled add-on seem more enticing.

The ideal solution, however, may be to stray from any focus on price.

Categorical thinking: Focus on benefits, not monetary value

Categorical thinking has a negative effect on product bundling when the two categories are “expensive” and “inexpensive”—the cognitive average will not help you. However, Chernev argues, there’s a way to side-step the challenge of price-based bundling:

People categorize along just one dimension at a time. So if you get people to focus on non-price attributes, the price effect will go away. For example, a shoe retailer could get customers to think of shoes in terms of comfort, durability, or versatility.

Refocusing the presentation of bundled products on non-price benefits avoids the price-based comparison. For accessory sales, Verizon could focus on price savings but instead highlights convenience and improved device performance as the primary benefits of bundling:

verizon accessory bundles

A focus on monetary value may work only for price-sensitive consumers who need a reason to make a purchase sooner rather than later.

Bundle pricing to accelerate the purchase

original nes bundle

An extensive study of Nintendo sales of hardware (consoles) and software (games) showed the potential impact—and limitations—of bundling, especially bundle pricing, which may motivate consumers to enter a market more quickly or for the first time.

Timothy Derdenger and Vineet Kumar, who conducted the research, explain that bundling can be

especially effective in markets with intertemporal tradeoffs and significant consumer heterogeneity, e.g. durable goods like automobiles, consumer electronics and in technology markets where tradeoffs on when to purchase are especially important.

As Kumar continues in an interview with Forbes:

If consumers don’t like the offering you put out, they can postpone their purchases. In a sense, you’re competing with yourself over time, especially if you’re a monopolist.

Bundle pricing introduces urgency even if waiting might benefit the consumer (game console prices come down, technology advances).

Consumer choice, Kumar notes, remains critical. Even as mixed bundling increased sales for Nintendo, pure bundling reduced them by 20%. Preserving consumer choice—bundle or console, now or later—allows different market segments to choose different solutions.

For Nintendo, Kumar recommended taking the bundle a step further by allowing consumers to choose the game to bundle with their console and maximize the “positive synergy” between items. Nintendo appears to have listened:

new nintendo bundles

For sellers, custom bundling is easier in the ecommerce era: Companies don’t need to pre-bundle, ship, or stock inventory at brick-and-mortar stores. Customization lets consumer preferences drive decisions on which products to bundle and, in turn, makes those bundles more relevant.

Using consumer expectations to your advantage

Bundles succeed more often when included items are usually purchased together. Similar items enjoy an inherent synergy: a hamburger, fries, and a Coke are components of a meal. Likewise, a bundled price for a loveseat and sofa makes sense—most living rooms have one of each, and consumers want them to match.

Sumit Bansal, who sells training courses on Microsoft Excel, experienced—for better and worse—the subtleties of those differences:

A bundle where I sell a basic and advanced Excel course is more appealing as the bundle promises to take care of everything on that specific topic. On the other hand, a bundle of two advanced courses on different courses didn’t work at all.

excel course bundlesFor Bansal, successfully bundling products hinged on understanding the business task that consumers needed to complete, not the user’s skill level.

It’s the same concept behind bundles like our Digital Analytics minidegree—a package centered on start-to-finish mastery of a skill rather than a package of diverse skills targeting a certain level of practitioner.

Increasingly, recommendation engines enable companies to identify and promote products that consumers view as “similar.”

Recommendation engines: The new frontier in product bundling

It’s one thing for a salesperson to tell me that I should buy Monster cables (one of the great all-time rip-offs) with my new TV. It’s another for an algorithm to let me know what others purchased with their TVs.

frequently bought amazonA subtle but potentially critical tweak of copy by Amazon: Recommendations are what others “frequently bought,” not salesy prodding.

Purchase data fuels the predictive algorithms that recommend product bundles. Those recommendations have two distinct benefits:

  1. They seem like insider knowledge from other buyers, making them welcome opportunities to reduce cognitive load. As McKinsey has found, peer recommendations have up to 10 times the influence of those from sales staff.
  2. They’re fully customizable mixed bundles that maximize consumer choice.

Conclusion

“There’s more potential to get it right than to get it wrong,” Kumar says of bundling. And yet, potential guarantees nothing.

A price-based focus on value is the greatest challenge for bundling strategies—the presenter’s paradox is in play, and categorical reasoning deflates the total value. Discounts may work well for a market segment (price-sensitive customers), but avoiding price comparisons entirely may succeed most often.

The diverse benefits of bundling to sellers—which extend well beyond near-term revenue—are a strong incentive to invest the time in strategy and testing to get it right. Even a simple price threshold for free shipping encourages consumers to build custom bundles and spend more, while also allowing ecommerce companies to carry low-cost items profitably.

For its part, technology is helping: Recommendation engines offer custom bundles at the point of sale that meet customer needs—and help companies hit revenue targets.

09 Nov 16:37

How Do I Prospect at a Trade Show?

by Mark Hunter

How effective are trade shows as a selling opportunity?  They’re not if all you do is show up and think business is going to fall into your lap. You have to look at trade shows as merely a platform from which to prospect and sell.

Let’s break this down and look at what we can do purely from a prospecting standpoint.

Remember that having a booth or being a sponsor is certainly a positive, but it’s not essential.  There are numerous ways you can get business by just attending, and it starts with being visible and engaging.  What does that mean?

If you’re attending from your company with another person, don’t hang out together.  It blows my mind how multiple people from the same company will attend a trade show and then spend the entire time hanging out with each other.  If this is your strategy, skip the trade show and just head to the beach.

Your results from a trade show begin long before it starts.  Let prospects and customers know that you will be there.  Set up times to meet with others, and when you do, make sure it is in a very public place.  I like public places because I want to be seen by other people. I hope that as I’m meeting with someone, I will see somebody else to whom I can introduce to them. In so doing, I hope others do the same for me.

Be deliberate with the breakout sessions. Attend the ones your prospects are most likely to attend. I also prefer sitting in the back to be able to see who else is in the room — people I may want to make sure I say hello to at the end.  Attending sessions means sticking around after the session ends, as that’s the time the truly great discussions with other people will take place.

When you’re not busy with people, spend your time at the entrance and exit areas of the trade show.  If you’re going to see people, they’ll have to pass by you.  Same goes for a hotel lobby.  I can’t begin to tell you the number of new clients I’ve picked up simply by being in visible location.

The objective of meeting people at a trade show or conference is not to sell to them, unless you have a pre-arranged meeting. A trade show is a time to create a relationship and a follow-up conversation.  I would much rather leave a trade show with three business cards of people with whom I’ve developed a good relationship than with 30 business cards of people I know zero about.

After the show is over, it is is imperative you follow up within 48 hours.  If you wait days to connect with them, they won’t remember you at all.  Your first connection is simply to deepen the relationship and to share a key insight you picked up at the event they will remember.

After you’ve had an exchange of comments, then you can begin to probe deeper about their issues.  Don’t blow it by suddenly sending them your beautiful capabilities presentation about how wonderful you are.  When you make the focus about them, it’s amazing how the opportunity for which you’re waiting will materialize.

And don’t forget that a coach can help you excel in your sales career! Invest in yourself by checking out my coaching program today!

Copyright 2018, Mark Hunter “The Sales Hunter.” Sales Motivation Blog. Mark Hunter is the author of High-Profit Prospecting: Powerful Strategies to Find the Best Leads and Drive Breakthrough Sales Results

09 Nov 16:37

Bottom of the Funnel Content You’re Probably Missing

by Kaleigh Moore

When it comes to the customer journey, it’s critical to pay attention to every stage.

It’s tempting to focus mainly on awareness and attracting potential customers, but what’s the point of all that effort if they don’t ever reach the final conversion step?

Potential customers at the top of the funnel have different needs than those at the bottom of the funnel. Your top-of-the-funnel prospects are likely most interested in your About and Product pages as well as content that explains why your product or service can solve their business problem. At this stage, they’re trying to figure out what product is right for their unique situations, which gives you the opportunity to shine.

However, bottom-of-the-funnel prospects already have this information and are close to making a decision. Because of this, your content not only needs to clearly show what sets it apart from the rest, but you need to get it in front of them—STAT.

As you know, content marketing, as a whole, is used to help move customers along the funnel and help dispel any hesitations they may have about your product or service. When used correctly and at the appropriate time, it can remedy many problems that companies focusing on lead gen experience on a regular basis. These problems may include things like unnecessarily long sales cycles and the ever-present struggle of getting freemium users to upgrade to a paid membership.

According to Bizible, bottom of the funnel marketing is dependent on identifying where a potential customer is in their sales journey and then meeting that with the correct content.

So what does this mean?

Paying adequate attention to your bottom of the funnel leads is just as important as attracting them in the first place. With that being said, let’s take a look at a few content opportunities that can help you convert those bottom of the funnel leads.

What exactly is bottom of the funnel content?

Bottom of the funnel content, no matter what form, must be created with potential buyers top of mind. This content is hyper-focused and not made for the masses, unlike other campaigns you develop throughout the year.

This strategic type of content is for potential customers who have moved past the awareness stage of the funnel and are gravitating toward the conversion stage. Your message should be clear and catered to their unique business problem.

You may be thinking, “Sure, that sounds great. But what does this content look like?”

Whether you create value-packed blog posts, educational videos or audio recordings, infographics, or a captivating email sequence, make sure the content is engaging. Creating memorable experiences with content, especially at this stage of the funnel, could make or break a potential customer’s decision.

It’s also worth noting that this content should be measured differently than your other content. Because this content is typically comprised of both product marketing and sales information, it’s best to check directly with both teams to gauge how it’s performing.

Then you can ask: Has your content had a positive impact on lead engagement, conversion rates, etc.? Once you get a pulse on how the content is performing, you can see what’s working and what needs some TLC. For example, if your bottom of the funnel content is preventing customer dropoff, you know it’s useful.

BOFU content in action

There are several types of bottom of the funnel content that can help move potential customers toward conversion.

First: A look at the numbers. A study from McKinsey found that about three in five bottom of the funnel leads don’t make any decision at all because it’s easier than making one.

So what does this mean for your team? Engaging with your bottom of the funnel prospects and providing them with the content they need to convert is essential. Otherwise, you could lose out on many new customers who were close to making a choice.

Let’s explore a few of the most popular types of bottom of the funnel content and how you can integrate them into your content marketing strategy.

Webinars

Webinars are great for many reasons, but a primary one is that they’re demonstrative and high-touch. Webinars help demonstrate a company’s expertise on a particular topic in real time, whether it’s general or super niche. Plus: The Q&A session format at the end that most webinars typically follow is an excellent opportunity for generating engagement and sparking other conversations among viewers.

For example, Social Media Examiner, a widely recognized resource for all things social media marketing, frequently hosts useful and educational webinars on a variety of topics featuring industry leaders.

They’ve even created a webinar on how to successfully leverage webinars in sales strategies. This particular webinar aims to teach viewers how to effectively use this type of content to sell their product or service.

Product Update Walkthroughs

Even after a potential customer has gotten to the bottom of the funnel, they may still have reservations about going all in on your product.

What better way to dissolve those final doubts than with an engaging product tour? Better yet, give them an engaging experience with your latest and greatest updates. This way, potential customers can get a sense of what’s new with your product as well as see firsthand what it’s like to use your product.

This is also a great opportunity to further educate potential customers on how your product can solve their specific business issue.

Getting potential customers to see your product in action can go a long way and can mean the difference between them backing out and them reaching for their credit card.

Fitbit does an excellent job of providing potential customers with the ability to get a feel for their diverse line of products via their website.

It’s easy for potential customers to see how each feature looks on the selected device. Because of Fitbit’s various smart watch offerings, this can help potential customers easily narrow down which model is right for them.

Branded search queries

Branded search queries play an essential role in any marketing strategy for several reasons. For one, they are an excellent way to drive awareness and establish a coveted spot on the first page of the SERP. But they can also help your bottom of the funnel content strategy.

But first, what is a branded search query anyway?

A branded search query is a search term with — you guessed it — a company’s name included.

For example, a SnapApp branded search query might look like this:

  • SnapApp products
  • SnapApp pricing
  • SnapApp examples
  • What is SnapApp?

So how do these queries relate to converting bottom of the funnel customers?

It’s simple. The people who are searching for your company’s name specifically are likely leads who are close to converting, or at the very least, are interested in your company.

According to data from PM Digital, branded keywords convert 2x more than non-branded keywords, and often by 10-20x more. By optimizing your branded search queries, you are helping give potential customers the final push they need to convert.

Interactive content

Similar to product walkthroughs, interactive content is an excellent way to connect and engage with potential customers who are far along in the funnel.

Did you know that according to DemandMetric, interactive content converts 2x better than static content? It’s true.

Interactive content could be the deciding factor for many potential customers. After all, what customer wouldn’t appreciate a unique, engaging experience from a product or service they are thinking about investing in? This could be one of the last interactions potential clients have with your product before they make a decision.

Whether your team has created a quiz to help potential customers find the product that’s right for them, or if you’ve built a calculator that can help them better understand their investment, deploying interactive content is a great way to send these prospects to the conversion stage.

For example, this interactive calculator from data and records storage management company and SnapApp customer, Iron Mountain, lets potential customers see how much they are currently spending on data storage.

This calculator not only shows potential customers how much they are likely spending on data storage, but it provides them with the information they need to present their case to management. Iron Mountain is providing their potential customers data-backed information about their current situation as well as the tools to make positive changes all in one interactive tool.

Having a tool like this instantly proves Iron Mountain’s credibility and willingness to go the extra mile for their customers.

Wrap up

When it comes to converting your leads, it’s crucial to focus on your bottom of the funnel content strategy as you would other stages of the funnel.

Many times, marketers and sales teams tend to spend a lot of time and effort on their top of funnel strategy to attract leads, but those bottom of the funnel prospects are just as important–if not more. You can lead them to the finish line, but you also have to get them to break through the tape.

When creating content for this stage of the customer journey, timeliness and personalization are essential to its success. Because of this, bottom of the funnel content needs to be engaging and relevant in addition to highlighting why customers should invest in you.

When leveraged correctly and in a timely fashion, bottom of the funnel content can majorly influence a potential customer’s decision.

Looking for ways to refresh your bottom of the funnel content strategy? We can help.

09 Nov 16:37

Jaw-Dropping Stats to Convince Your Boss to Invest in an Inbound Marketing Strategy— Right Now!

by Jenn Villa

Outbound marketing practices, like newspaper advertising, billboards and direct mailers are dead. That’s right, we said it. DEAD! But so are intrusive pop-ups and unsolicited IMs. And for good reason.

These interruptive advertising approaches are annoying and, oftentimes, untargeted— blasted to whatever phone numbers, emails or eyeballs old-school marketers can reach.

If you’re still relying on trade shows and cold-calling to reel in leads, it’s no wonder your sales team is struggling.

Inbound marketing, by contrast, is outbound marketing’s polar opposite. It’s about creating content that helps your customers. Instead of pestering prospects, people naturally find you while problem-solving online. When done right, you become their source for all their answers over time.

But don’t just take our word for it. Let these inbound marketing strategy statistics do the talking. Then, bring these stats to your boss for some convincin’!

“ Thirty-three percent of inbound marketers and 31% of outbound marketers rank outbound marketing practices, such as paid advertising, as the top waste of time and resources ”

If you’re currently running paid ads, how are they performing? Well, according to a pretty decent chunk of marketers— and HubSpot— the return ain’t so hot.

Even if you are getting some leads from your ads, they’re quick wins, without any long-term sustainability. That’s because, if you aren’t getting traffic to your website naturally— AKA through organic search results— then the benefits stop when your daily investment in pay-per-click (PPC) advertising stops.

Inbound marketing involves creating content that’s optimized for search engines and solves the problems of consumers. They find you, without you having to dip into your wallet.

Let’s pair that with this stat from MarTech—“70-80% of search engine users are only focusing on the organic results”— and putting an emphasis on your SEO and inbound marketing strategies seems like a no-brainer.

“ Eighty-one percent of consumers have closed a browser or exited a webpage because of a pop-up ad. ”

pop-up-ads-rude

We all know how annoying pop-up ads are, yet they’re still a popular outbound marketing tactic used today. Why? Just why?

If these ads are causing 81% of consumers to leave your webpage, or have a lower opinion of your brand, what motivates marketers to use them? An outdated mindset, that’s what. An inbound marketing strategy doesn’t involve disruptive ads or intrusive, unsolicited tactics— and that’s why it’s more successful.

People don’t like to be forced to look at anything, especially if they’re on the hunt for information and you interrupt them! There are, however, other visual elements that work quite well. For example, video marketing, when used effectively and voluntarily, can be super effective for driving conversions.

“ Companies that published 16+ blog posts per month got almost 3.5 times more traffic than companies that published zero to four monthly posts ”

Now, 16 blogs might seem like a lot, but let’s be real: in a large organization with two writers easily pounding out two blogs a week, that’s totally doable.

Even B2B companies that blogged 11+ times a month got three times as many leads, while B2C companies got four times the conversions!

So why is it that blog writing takes a backburner so frequently in your organization? Because blogging— like many wonderful things in life— takes work. We don’t always have the time to pump out quality content, so we convince ourselves to wait to do it right, and then it never happens.

Is the allure of quadrupling your website traffic convincing enough for ya? It’s time you think twice about developing a powerful blogging strategy— better yet, think about developing both content and inbound marketing strategies. Let this next stat explain why.

“ Forty-seven percent of buyers view 3-5 pieces of content before engaging with a sales rep. ”

Almost half of people interested in a product or service view multiple pieces of content before making any purchases, according to Demand Gen Report. A website without the right content to consume could mean bad news for searchers, who could move onto the site of a competitor who does, before your sales team even gets a chance to talk to them.

Do you have at least three to five pieces of content supporting each of your services or products? Then, are you consistently pushing new content? Google and other search engines value freshness, and so do people

Plus, “content marketing gets three times more leads than paid search advertising,” according to a study by the Content Marketing Institute.

Give your sales team the chance to get conversations started by earning your prospect’s trust with content first. If a potential buyer is getting hounded before they’ve had time to consider their options, your sales people won’t get too far.

“ Only 18% of marketers say outbound practices provide the highest quality leads for sales ”

It’s not all just about getting leads— it’s about getting quality leads. According to HubSpot’s State of Inbound 2018 report, traditional outbound marketing practices aren’t serving up worthwhile prospects, nearly three quarters of the time.

When you broadcast yourself to everyone, you’re bound to get a wide bunch who aren’t interested. Inbound marketing doesn’t work that way. It centers around developing buyer personas and targeting their unique pain points. When you’re there to solve their problems, they naturally begin to trust and prefer your brand.

With 69% of marketers saying converting leads is their top priority (according to HubSpot, yet again), it’s becoming less about quantity and more about the quality of leads.

“ 79% of marketing leads never convert into sales, the common cause being lack of lead nurturing. ”

lead-nuturing-inbound-stat

After someone downloads a content offer or subscribes to your blog, they become a lead. This means you can immediately start trying to sell to them right? WRONG!

Just because they gave you a little bit of information, it doesn’t mean they’re ready to buy anything. In fact, they’re probably only in the first stage of the buyer’s journey: the awareness stage. Here, they’re just starting to discover some solutions to their problem, and likely haven’t even started to consider who can help them.

The time to reach out to a lead is not right after they convert into a lead, but rather, after they’ve been nurtured.

A lack of nurturing is why over three quarters of leads don’t convert to sales, according to Marketing Sherpa. How do you nurture a lead? Well, you can start off by scoring them, or assigning a point value based on actions they take. Once they trip certain triggers, like viewing a new blog post for example, then you can start guiding them towards a purchase decision. Developing lead scoring metrics is an integral part of any inbound marketing strategy, that outbound marketing certainly lacks, and is a great place to get started.

The Time to Develop your Inbound Marketing Strategy is Now

If these stats peaked your curiosity, keep exploring. Read up on the four key differences between inbound versus outbound sales.

Looking for help developing an inbound marketing strategy? Our Beginner’s Guide to Inbound Marketing will help you get started. We’ll walk you through implementing a success marketing campaign as well as address best practices for creating powerful landing pages and other lead generation methods.

If you’re not up for doing it all yourself, that’s what an inbound marketing agency is for! Learn more about how we could transform your entire marketing model, today.

09 Nov 16:36

20 Ways World Class B2B SaaS Companies Grow

by Guido Bartolacci

Editor’s Note: This article first appeared on the New Breed blog here

Every SaaS business experiences some challenges as they try to grow. The landscape is constantly evolving, making it difficult to predict the best ways to move the company forward. To help you navigate through this complexity, we identified the top 20 activities best-in-class SaaS companies are doing today to grow their businesses.

1. Cultivate Positive Company Culture

This has less to do with hosting a dynamite office party and everything to do with the perspective and values you cultivate within your workforce. Mutual respect goes a long way toward forging strong and productive alliances. In Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, the need for esteem and belonging are key motivational determinants of our behavior. Lack of recognition is cited as the number-one reason most Americans leave their jobs (ranking above money, conflicting opportunities or a need for increased flexibility). Furthermore, when we feel supported and appreciated, we’re more productive and likely to stick out difficult challenges rather than jump ship.

2. Encourage Innovation

These days, everyone’s talking about the power of grit. According to a plethora of recent studies, grit, more than natural intelligence, is an accurate indicator of an individual’s likelihood of achieving success. Similarly, perspective plays a key role in how we approach new challenges. If you encourage employees to approach obstacles as opportunities for innovation and a chance to collaborate with peers, you’ll actually foster grit and promote teamwork at the same time.

3. Hire the Right People

It’s always good to have smart, qualified people at your company — but it takes more than just technical acumen to be an asset to a team. The “right” person means someone with good qualifications and the kind of personality that will enable them to succeed and adapt in a highly collaborative, tech-driven and client-facing industry.

4. Have Amazing Backend Tech

Having a solid yet malleable technical architecture can do wonders for your business in the long run. No matter how innovative your ideas are, you’ll be crippled if you don’t have the technological capability to realize them. So what makes for amazing backend tech? Make sure your system is scalable, secure, easily integrated with other platforms, has a highly customizable user interface and is capable of conducting automated tests and other touch-free functions.

5. Fast Product Iteration

Growth driven design, or GDD, is founded on the idea that rolling out small changes in real time (rather than a multitude of changes, say, biannually) will help you grow by informing your marketing and sales approach moving forward. This trial-and-error model requires that you pay attention to how customers engage with your product — and quickly respond to any user frustrations. The payoff? You’ll have happier customers and minimize the risk to your business by pinpointing the exact variable that led to a given outcome.

6. Think Strategically

In the same vein, the best B2B SaaS marketers have a comprehensive short-term and long-term strategy to meet their goals. In the example of GDD, a short-term strategy would involve quickly executing a small change, whereas a long-term strategy would entail using data feedback from a multitude of small changes to inform how you grow, how you invest and how you engage with customers in the future.

7. Focus on the Customer Experience

It’s truly a buyer’s market — today’s consumers have more choices and more access to information to inform those choices. The result is that most people already have an idea of what they want before they’re ready to make a buying decision. That leaves you with one area to really shine and demonstrate your integrity as a business — the customer experience. A customer-centric approach to marketing is a win for businesses and consumers alike.

8. Balance Form and Function

Good web design has a whole lot of intention behind it. Think about how you’d like visitors to interact with your site and what kind of experience you’d like them to have. The best design is not only simple and beautiful, it’s also driven by functionality. There’s no point in having a stunning web design if it inhibits engagement with your site or doesn’t help convert visitors into leads.

9. Understand the Market

It’s hard to sell a product if you don’t know who you’re selling to or how big of a market they represent. Different potential buyers will have different pain points — and will be searching for slightly different solutions. If you know who you’re selling to, you’ll be able to speak more directly to their needs and convert more leads into customers. If you know the size of your market, you can also create more accurate business forecasts and predict your ROI for various marketing campaigns.

10. Price it Right

The “freemium” model is a little tricky to master, but works well for SaaS when executed correctly. The freemium idea is that you target the individual first, then they find value in the product and then share it with their peers. It’s important that you’re seeing some kind of value from your free user base (to justify the investment), even if that value isn’t dollar signs. Value can mean referrals and exposure for your brand in the short-term. A successful freemium model will also work toward a long-term goal: forging a link from the individual to a team account, where your sales opportunities live.

11. Reduce Churn

It’s important to adapt to your customers’ schedule and desired level of communication and not expect them to adapt to yours. Customer satisfaction surveys are a great way to get feedback on how you’re doing and make changes accordingly. Be available to prospects and customers on multiple web platforms, so that when they do want to communicate or ask a question, you’re there to help. Email campaigns that offer value in the form of e-books, webinars and infographics are a great way to keep communication open without adding empty clutter to someone’s inbox.

12. Build a Value-Added App

At the heart of value-added services and capabilities is the notion that you can use your industry know-how and connections to provide additional value to your customers — or enable them to do something they would unable to do on their own. The “value-added” refers to any services that you provide in addition to the actual product you are selling. A prime example of this would be a free one-year support warranty attached to the purchase of an electronic or appliance. Most SaaS companies are web-based, so developing a mobile app would be a logical way to add value to your company and convince customers to “stick.”

13. Sync Revenue and Costs

When it comes to finances, the more you know, the better off you’ll be. Raw data and metric-tracking software is your friend in this regard. Know your monthly recurring revenue, customer acquisition cost, cost of sales, average revenue per customer and average customer lifetime value. Once you know these things, you’ll be able to determine if a new lead is worth pursuing or if you’ll see more ROI by nurturing existing customers.

14. Outline a Lifecycle Funnel

To ensure you’re landing the most leads and snagging the most sale opportunities, it’s important to have a system in place for moving visitors through the various stages of the buying process. If you identify separate stages of the buyer’s journey, you’ll be able to determine where a potential customer sits in that process and what kind of interaction they’d be most receptive to. You can also customize Calls-To-Action (or CTAs) to engage, convert and offer reciprocal value to visitors for proceeding down the funnel in a prescribed way.

15. Know the Forecast

Generating business performance forecasts will give you an idea of future numbers, characteristics and trends in your target market — and allow you to estimate what the demand will be for your product (and where to focus your energy). A comprehensive analysis of the market should help you develop a strategy in line with that market and determine how to position yourself therein. In addition, forecasts can help you generate more accurate timelines for projects, so you can deliver on previous promises and know how to structure your sales strategy.

16. Give Gifts

Who doesn’t like getting a gift? Giving prospects a free gift is a great way to generate good will and move them down the funnel. Furthermore, gifts can be given at any stage of the lifecycle as a way to evangelize current customers.

17. Create Quality Content

This is the Inception moment of this list. At this very moment, I’m striving to practice what I’m preaching — essentially, I’m providing you with valuable information on how to provide valuable content to your customer. If that’s too meta to follow, just know this: quality content will not only increase organic traffic to your website, it will also help establish you as an industry thought leader (and source of authority).

18. Offer Product Trials

Product trials are a great way to generate leads in the SaaS industry — especially if you’re selling a tech or data tool. There’s no better way to show prospects what you have to offer than letting them try it for themselves. Just be sure to set them up for success so they walk away with a positive feeling. This might mean scheduling a call before the trial to show them the ropes or providing a video guide for using the product.

19. Search Engine Optimization

Search Engine Optimization (or SEO) is at content marketing’s core. As you create great content, it’s important to ensure people can access it — and that they want it.You should incorporate SEO both from the beginning of your content strategy development and during the production process itself. Make sure you’re using specific keywords, creating inbound links, writing clear and accurate titles/captions and ensuring speedy page-loading times. All of these things will help your content rank higher on search engines like Google, thus increasing organic traffic to your site.

20. Referral Marketing

Referrals are low cost and are usually primed for a quick sale. Think about a time when you learned about a product from a friend. That friend likely shared their positive experience with the product and maybe even suggested ways in which the product could serve as a solution for you. Because that initial “pitch” is coming from someone you trust, you’re more likely to act on it, propelled down the funnel by their assurance. In SaaS, referral marketing takes the form of incentivized referral programs or a landing page with a built-in referral/share option.

The post 20 Ways World Class B2B SaaS Companies Grow appeared first on OpenView Labs.

08 Nov 16:22

Using Analytics to Align Sales and Marketing Teams

by Andris A. Zoltners
gremlin/Getty Images

Many companies struggle to deliver a consistent and easy buying experience for their customers.

Consider the following scenario: A manager wants to purchase some computer software for her business. She asks an analyst on her team to do an online search for information. The analyst recommends a particular software company’s solution. The manager peruses that company’s website and requests more information by entering data about her needs through a webform. The software company emails relevant materials which the manager reviews before reaching out to an inside salesperson with questions.

But then things begin to break down. The inside salesperson hasn’t seen the webform data, so the manager must repeat much of the information she had already entered. Furthermore, some of the advice the inside salesperson shares contradicts what the manager recalls reading on the website. The manager decides to meet with a field salesperson to get clarity and to work out some details for a quote. Then, just days after receiving the quote, the manager gets an unsolicited email from the software company’s marketing team offering a better deal. The mounting number of inconsistencies and redundancies confuse and frustrate the manager. At the same time, the software company has wasted time and resources on duplicate, uncoordinated, and ineffective marketing and sales outreach.

As customers have begun interacting with sellers through websites, emails, texts, social media posts, print and TV ads, and salespeople, it’s become difficult for companies to synchronize these communications. (The profusion of independent information sources, such as customer reviews and price comparison sites, adds to the confusion.) When it’s time to actually buy, customers may do so via purchasing portals, internet chat reps, call centers, field salespeople, or other sources.

Customers move frequently and unpredictably between these various channels when buying. For simple purchases, they might buy online exclusively. For complex purchases, they might start with online information, then talk with salespeople, and then return to online sources to validate what the salespeople said. The buying process is no longer linear or consistent.

For companies that sell to businesses, meeting the buying needs of today’s customers requires a mindset shift.  Companies need an orchestrator to ensure marketing and sales outreach is well-coordinated and aligned with customer buying needs. In some cases, the orchestrator is a computer system. In other cases, the orchestrator is a person enabled by data and analytics.

Amazon is a prime example of a company using a computer system to effectively orchestrate customer buying. Amazon’s analytics use data to make inferences about what products each customer might buy. The analytics also suggest an automated–yet coordinate–way to reach each customer with the right offer at the right time. For example, Amazon makes customized purchase suggestions on its website. If a customer clicks on a suggestion but doesn’t purchase, Amazon can follow up with a reinforcing email or post on the social media platform the customer uses. Companies are using computer-based orchestration frequently with business customers, especially for smaller accounts and simpler purchases.

For larger accounts and more complex purchases, companies are giving account managers responsibility for orchestrating marketing and sales outreach to customers. In their expanded role, account managers decide what the company should offer each customer, along with the best message timing and delivery channel (e.g. digital message, phone call, personal visit). Account managers are more effective when they are armed with insights from data and analytics.

For example, a telecom company used predictive analytics to help account managers orchestrate outreach to under-performing, high-potential customers. The analytics found “data doubles” for these customers – i.e. similar customers who were buying much more. The company shared insights with account managers about which customers had significant unrealized opportunity and what sales strategies had worked previously for their data doubles. The insights helped account managers offer the right products with the right sales messages, thus increasing sales at under-performing accounts.

In another example, a pharmaceutical company used a computerized suggestion engine to help account managers orchestrate the sharing of prescription drug information with physicians. The company provided physicians with information through various sales team members (e.g. account manager, reimbursement specialist, medical science liaison) and marketing channels (e.g. emails, podcasts, mobile apps, invites to conferences, company website). By examining data about each physician’s situation and preferences, the suggestion engine told account managers which actions, and the timing of those actions, were likely to produce the best results. This allowed account managers to tailor communication to each physician’s needs. For example, an account manager might get a message on his tablet: “Dr. Jones just logged on to the company’s website to investigate drug side effects. Suggest visiting Dr. Jones to discuss her concerns.” During the visit, Dr. Jones asks about drug effectiveness and mentions she hates receiving unsolicited email. The account manager updates Dr. Jones’ profile to stop marketing emails and asks a company medical science liaison to call Dr. Jones to answer her questions. By tracking physician preferences, behaviors and results, and sharing insights with account managers, the company continually improved its relationships with physicians.

More companies and industries are taking on the challenge of orchestrating marketing and sales outreach to align with modern customer buying needs. As the volume, variety, and velocity of business data escalate, analytics (including artificial intelligence) will play an even bigger role in the effort to improve the customer buying experience.

08 Nov 16:08

You'll soon be able to delete a Facebook message up to 10 minutes after it's already been sent (FB)

by Paige Leskin

Facebook Messenger

  • Facebook Messenger will soon introduce a feature that lets you delete a message up to 10 minutes after it's already been sent.
  • The new feature was spotted in the release notes for the newest Messenger update, but for now it's still listed as "coming soon." 
  • Facebook said in April it planned to add such a feature after the platform was caught quietly deleting messages that CEO Mark Zuckerberg had sent via Messenger.

Facebook will soon allow you to delete messages that you've already sent via its Messenger app.

Plans for the "unsend" feature were found in the release notes for the newest Messenger app update made available to iOS users Tuesday. The note states that users will be able to remove a message within 10 minutes of sending it "if you accidentally send the wrong photo, incorrect information or message the wrong thread."

The release notes say that the feature is "coming soon," but didn't give an exact date for when it would arrive on users' phones. 

Facebook first floated plans for rolling out the "unsend" feature back in April. The announcement was in response to TechCrunch's report that the social network had been quietly deleting old messages from its CEO Mark Zuckerberg over fears of future hacks and data breaches. The revelations were met with heavy backlash.

Months passed by without any additional updates from Facebook on the feature, but TechCrunch reported last month that the feature was being tested internally, as evidenced by screenshots posted on Twitter.

Read more: Facebook was caught secretly deleting Mark Zuckerberg's sent messages — here's what it's doing about it

Experts have previously expressed concerns that allowing users to "unsend" messages could have severe implications, since such a feature could allow evidence of harassment and abuse via Messenger to be erased.

But similar features already exist on other apps that Facebook owns: WhatsApp users were given the ability last year to delete messages for up to an hour after they're initially sent, and Instagram has let you "unsend" messages ever since direct messaging was first added to the platform in 2013.

The addition of the "unsend" feature on Facebook Messenger is in addition to the app's "secret conversations" feature, where users can have their messages expire after a set amount of time.

SEE ALSO: DELETE YOUR ACCOUNT: How to wipe your personal information from Facebook, Amazon, Google, and other major websites and apps

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Review: Google Pixel 3 and 3 XL are the best smartphones you can buy right now

08 Nov 16:06

Marketing Team Hires: 8 Skills New Recruits Need to Have

by Young Entrepreneur Council

Having the right job skills is absolutely essential for success in the modern marketing landscape. Members of the Young Entrepreneur Council suggested the following:

As marketing tools develop, so must the skills of the people you hire. What is a newer skill or skill set that has become critical for marketing, and why does it matter so much?

Here’s what they said:

1. Writing

Content marketing is a crucial element in our marketing strategy so we have a large team of writers that are responsible for writing great content. We take our readers’ time seriously, so I care most about the quality of the writing and their ability to provide value to our customers. If they know how to research keywords that’s a plus, but if not, we’ll teach them. – Syed Balkhi, WPBeginner


2. A/B Testing

We A/B test so many things that it has become an important skill to have. Whether it’s A/B testing different Facebook ads or experimenting with the placement of a button on our site, we’re always looking for ways to increase conversions. Take a look at some of the latest tools and start running experiments on your own site to gain the experience. – Jared Atchison, WPForms


3. Paid Digital Marketing

Paid digital marketing is very important these days for any type of company or business. We spend a lot of money on digital marketing, especially pay per click. It is very important for any marketing person these days to know how to run paid campaigns, analyze the data, optimize and target the campaigns. This is also being taught in all marketing courses as well. – Piyush Jain, SIMpalm


4. Google Analytics

Every marketing staff person should be at least fairly well versed in the use of Google Analytics to help the company analyze and track how traffic is coming to the site via organic search, paid search, directly, via referrals, emails or social media. Learn how to compare progress year-over-year and month-over-month, and how to follow the popular customer’s paths from discovery through purchase. – Diego Orjuela, Cables & Sensors


5. An Awareness of the Cultural Zeitgeist

While it’s tempting to get bogged down in the specific details of a certain skill set, I have found that it is crucial to hire someone who possesses the visual acumen to see the bigger picture. This means that an employer should look for an employee who has a finger on the pulse of pop culture and is aware of how all the moving parts of a company address the cultural zeitgeist. – Shu Saito, Fact Retriever


6. Live Video

Video skills are critical. Better yet, live video skills. We depend on live video for two reasons: 1. Organic reach on social media is garbage right now. Posting live content immediately alerts all of our followers and garners significantly higher viewership (especially on Stories and SnapChat). 2. Live video is spontaneous and authentic. Creating authentic content is the goal, after all. – Eng Tan, Simplr


7. Audience Targeting and Research

Knowledge about digital marketing, data analysis and automation tools is important in this day and age, no doubt, but all your marketing efforts might come to a naught if you cannot put a finger on the pulse of your target audience. With marketing becoming increasingly personal, it is important to appreciate customers, get insight into their likes and dislikes, and appeal to them accordingly. – Derek Robinson, Top Notch Dezigns


8. The Ability to Learn New Skills

These days, new marketing channels rise and fall rapidly. Rather than hire someone with a skill in a particular platform or channel, it’s best to hire someone who has the ability to learn new skills as they’re needed, fast. Today’s best marketers can juggle multiple channels and skills to come up with new data-driven ideas to become the chosen marketing method of tomorrow. – Arry Yu, Stealth Mode, WTIA

08 Nov 16:06

To Protect and Server: The tale of the tape on two top VPNs

by Boing Boing's Shop

Thanks to savvy hackers, desperate ad companies, and increasingly lax government oversight of the internet it's a good bet that even your nana knows what a VPN is by now. In the best case, Virtual Private Networks are essentially an underground railroad, whizzing you from destination to destination through a secure server that hides your ISP from advertisers and malcontents. Users in China and other areas that restrict internet content are using it to bypass those restrictions, and there's nothing to stop international travelers from using VPNs to access (for example) cheaper local rates on things like hotels and attraction tickets.

Of course, your mileage may vary. Setting up the infrastructure necessary for that kind of security is no mean feat, and user experiences are going to differ based on where you are, which VPN you choose and what you choose to do with it. Based on user chatter and reviews, two services have arisen as popular favorites: NordVPN and Private Internet Access. Let's break down the highlights:

NordVPN

Since its release in 2012, NordVPN has steadily grown a fan base of satisfied users that include reviewers at trusted tech sites like CNET, TrustPilot and PC Mag, the last of whom gave them a rare 5-stars, or "outstanding" rating. With a somewhat higher price point, it's the Cadillac option of VPN - but with features that make the extra scratch well worth it.

Compatibility

NordVPN wants to be your across-the-board security guard. It's compatible with Windows, Mac, Linux, Chrome OS or iOS and Android smartphones, and you can connect to six devices simultaneously.

Privacy

Like all VPNs, NordVPN runs your data through its own dedicated servers, making your location appear to originate from wherever the server is located. In Nord's case, you can take your pick of any one of 3,521 servers in 61 different countries. And yes, we did say dedicated servers, meaning they are physically located where they claim to be, not configured to appear that way. Depending which server location you choose, you'll be able to bypass international content regulations and firewalls - an added perk that comes with the anonymity. And perhaps most vitally, NordVPN stands by its no-logging policy. That means it keeps no record of your log-ins or where you surf, making you effectively anonymous even to the VPN itself.

Security

The fact that ISPs won't be able to track your location acts as its own rudimentary ad-blocker, but NordVPN piles on some extra features here. Data sent through their service is double-encrypted, and they'll automatically shut down your site as soon as the VPN connection is dropped, ensuring no data leaks out.

Price

With all these bells and whistles, NordVPN holds up as the option for those that really want to hedge their bets - especially with anonymity. As we said, the price points tend to be higher, but there are discounts available. A two-year subscription to NordVPN is currently $95.75 and a one-year sub is $60 - more than 65% off MSRP in either case. Use the code VPNSAVE20 for an additional 20% off.

Private Internet Access

Compared to NordVPN, Private Internet Access' shorthand description would be the "value" option - but writing it off that way would really short-change the features. Compared to the many, many VPNs in its price range, PIA offers some unparalleled security features, as well as that crucial (and all too rare) no-logging policy to protect your anonymity. Introduced in 2010, it's the more experienced dog in the fight and has garnered its own accolades from Tom's Guide and PC Mag, both of whom named PIA their Editor's Choice. (Check out PC Mag's breakdown here.) Both they and BestVPN gave PIA high marks for their speed, too - always a concern when running through a VPN.

Compatibility

With Private Internet Access, you can access up to five devices simultaneously on Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS, Android, or Chrome. There's unlimited bandwidth on any of the above.

Privacy

With Private Internet Access, you've got your pick of more than 3100 servers in 33 countries - more than enough options to bypass geological restrictions and still keep your speed up to par. Like NordVPN, PIA also holds to a no-logging policy that means it will not keep track of your whereabouts, virtual or otherwise - and neither will advertisers or hackers.

Security

Here's where PIA really shines, with a host of extra protections that augment the ISP invisibility you'll already get. Like NordVPN, it's got a kill switch that will shut down your session if the VPN connection drops. But even through the tunnels of its secure servers, PIA runs your data past Blowfish CBC encryption. Users have the option of additional security with their MACE ad blocker, which keeps a running list of sites associated with malware or ad tracking and stops them at the DNS level. There's also the option to run using SOCKS5 proxy service, which adds an extra layer of anonymity for using torrent services or other specialized software. Lastly, MIA runs on an open-source system, which can be combed for any flaws and constantly improved.

Price

For security, Private Internet Access is an unbeatable option at any of its regular price points. There's no free option for the service, but deals abound: A one-year subscription to PIA is currently 59% off at $33.77, with deeper discounts available for the two-year subscription ($55.55) and three-year subscription ($77.33).

08 Nov 16:01

Connected Homes are Driving Business Opportunities

by Samella Garcia

Alexa - Kitchen Helper

Connected devices are rapidly becomingly more present as a part of our everyday lives. No place is this more apparent than in the home. These devices leverage the power of the Internet of Things (IoT) to create powerful new features and applications within the types of devices we already have in our home. From refrigerators to doorbells to thermostats and beyond, you can now control many of the devices in your home using your mobile phone.

Connected homes have created an opportunity for savvy entrepreneurs and business people as the demand for smart devices in the home grows rapidly. There are nearly endless possibilities right now within the smart home market. Best of all, with the growth that has already occurred, businesses can carefully examine what has happened so far and learn what has worked and what has not within the industry and build upon that information.

While the Internet of Things has already evolved a great deal, it will continue to grow and develop further, changing the way we live and work. Its impact is continuing to affect a number of industries as we are seeing innovations across a broad spectrum of applications. Many of them are within industrial sectors that the average person does not see.

When it comes to our homes, we are seeing IoT turning day to day household devices into smart devices that are helping make our lives more convenient and simpler while keeping us better informed. Connected devices such as Ring smart doorbells have existed for a few years and they give us a good look at what is possible by leveraging IoT.

No longer does a doorbell just let us know that someone is at the door with an audible chime in the home, with the Ring smart doorbell, you can now see, hear and speak to people who are at your front door with your smartphone. And you can do this even when you aren’t at home. Ring has, over the years, enhanced their product offering to the point where it now allows users to send and receive real-time crime alerts to and from their neighbors, allowing them all to work together to make their neighborhood safer.

Momentum is increasing

Within the industry, we see the market continuing to grow rapidly; in fact, on Statista, it is predicted that the connected home market will grow 16.1% per year to arrive at a $37 Billion market in 2022. It is also predict that household penetration will grow from 32.0% in 2018 to 53.1% by 2022.

While smart home devices are grabbing the attention of consumers, this isn’t the only area where IoT is making a splash. IoT enabled devices are becoming common in industrial settings and even offices all around the globe.

IoT has created an exceptional opportunity that more and more device manufacturers are trying to capitalize on. Do you have a little imagination? Can you or your business leverage the power of IoT and the nearly limitless possibilities it offers to grab a share of this massive market? With all the success stories that already exist, there is a great deal to learn from others that have achieved success within the connected home market.

Connected devices in the workplace

As the Internet of Things has continued to penetrate mainstream consciousness, many businesses have followed the connected home model and have developed connected devices for the workplace environment.

It is no surprise this is occurring, as IoT can be utilized to increase productivity, enhance decision-making, reduce costs and help businesses develop a better understanding of their customer’s needs. There are countless examples of IoT bringing value to businesses around the world that extend beyond the few listed here.

A great example of a connected business device is a smart sensor that evaluates inventory levels improving the supply chain. Connected sensors and equipment in warehouses and other outlets can help monitor movement within the facility and connected products can update inventories in real-time.

By optimizing supply chains and utilizing data and modeling to guarantee that the right products are in the right place at the right time, businesses are not only able to save money on inventory costs but they can also change their in-store experience, allowing them to connect with shoppers in a more personal way.

Or another example would be smart sensors helping businesses manage fleets of vehicles, allowing them to collect data in an efficient and more cost-effective way. These are some pretty exciting examples for business uses, but they are just the tip of the iceberg. With the Internet of Things, it seems like nearly anything is possible. Right now we are limited more by our imagination than by the opportunities that exist.

Leverage data

One of the greatest opportunities that come from IoT devices is the large volume of data generated by the connected devices. By utilizing analytics and data modeling, businesses can gain great insight into their customers’ needs and make improvements to their products and/or services.

For example, by tracking various aspects of product usage, businesses can learn patterns and other insights and then adjust their products to better meet consumer needs. Smart homes enable businesses the opportunity to serve their customers better.

To leverage the data they are receiving, IoT businesses need to plan ahead and create an effective data management strategy and prepare for the massive amount of data they will receive. If they are fully prepared, it will go a long way towards helping them make the most of all that the connected device they have installed. To accomplish this, they will need to have a clear view of exactly what data is being tracked and presenting it in usable ways to internal decision makers.

While entrepreneurs and businesses new to IoT will face many challenges along the way, by taking advantage of the advancements in consumer technology they can have an impact on consumers’ daily lives and make huge profits at the same time. By taking their smart home devices a step further and utilizing data management systems and analytics, they will be able to fully take advantage of the amazing potential of the Internet of Things.

Image: Methodshop (Flikr) http://bit.ly/2PbZWzE

08 Nov 15:57

The Top Factors That Slow B2B Purchases

B2B buyers say not having enough information was the top factor that slowed their last purchase, according to recent research from Showpad. Read the full article at MarketingProfs
08 Nov 15:54

Intent Data Turns a Buyer-Centric World From a Curse into a Blessing

by Nicolas de Kouchkovsky
intent data b2b sales marketing image

Intent data has become one of the hottest topics in the B2B sales and marketing space. However, it remains under-utilized by many sales practitioners. A 2018 ABM Benchmark Report found only 25% of companies were using it. Let’s explore what it is, why it matters, and how to make the most of it.

What the heck is intent data?

Intent data is a relatively new term our industry has adopted to encompass signals and data about prospective buyers or businesses actively researching products or services. Several people spending time on Product Hunt web pages tagged with the sales topic show a company interest for solutions and innovation in that realm. Likewise, the ability to detect that an unusual number of visitors that can be traced to the same company are educating themselves about network anomaly detection will give you a likely security pain point to start engaging.

Intent data works by being able to track the content they are reading online and their digital activity to uncover interests suggesting a purchase intent. Intent data has become strategically important for sales and marketing organizations to prioritize their effort and find when and how to engage prospective buyers in a relevant way.

Why should you care?

Buyers have become overwhelmed with offers. In a market close to us, Martech, Scott Brinker is now listing almost 7,000 solutions. Even someone in the target market for your product is unlikely to take the call of a potential marketing vendor unless it relates to an issue top of mind. The content consumption habits of a prospect can provide a precious clue into this prospect’s interests.

Sellers are also challenged by prospective buyers exploring their options by themselves rather than reaching out to them. The latest statistics from Forrester indicate that 63% of B2B buyers prefer to research on their own, up from 53% three years ago. Intent data turns this curse into a blessing.

What if you knew about what people were researching? Even if the information doesn’t relate directly to your offer, it’s great insights to engage a prospect on relevant topics. Furthermore, it can be used to determine if the timing is right to pursue a company or to prioritize opportunities.

RELATED: 4 Unconventional Ways To Close More Deals With Data

Many usages

There are many usages for intent data. Intent data can help prioritize sales efforts or uncover the most pertinent way to engage with prospective buyers. Picture yourself coming back from an event with tons of leads and business cards collected. Now you can use intent data to prioritize your follow-up with the companies that are reading about issues you can help resolve.

A sales rep assigned a large territory can use intent data to spot the businesses actively educating themselves on specific solutions to select the ones to go after. Marketing can leverage intent data to personalize the website experience or to direct ads to low-funnel companies.

One unique aspect of intent data is its ability to pinpoint potential buyers even at a very early stage. Brad Rosen, Vice President of Revenue Operations at G2Crowd cites the example of a customer exploring the category of your product or the reviews of your competitors. This is a high-funnel signal that is still very indicative of future purchase intent. Reading reviews probably suggests some dissatisfaction with the current product and thus, an opportunity to swoop in and make a sale.

Panning for gold

Intent data hinges on getting access to content consumed on relevant properties. It is important when considering a solution to understand where data is coming from.

The methodology varies. Some vendors begin by adding a web cookie to the prospect’s browser. In exchange for cookie placement, the technology returns an aggregated view of the content consumed, as long as the site is within the vendor’s ecosystem. Other intent data providers focus on social media-driven buying signals. As mentioned earlier, review sites are another potential treasure trove of targeting insight. The result is a ripple effect of relevance. Advertisers gain context to improve their targeting and make ads more relevant. Brands can combine these insights with their first-party data to tailor the experience based on interests. This give-to-get model is a win/win in that it provides users with a more targeted experience and helps sellers understand how to make that all-important connection.

Making sense of data

Most intent data providers have developed through topic taxonomies. Publishers and review sites leverage their proprietary content classification. Articles and pages can be further mapped to the consideration stage providing a readership pattern across a company.

The IP address of visitors is used to consolidate reading activities by company and location. The combination of signals is critical to infer an intent. Another option is to use device ID instead of cookies. Indeed, cookies have a limited lifespan, in particular on mobile devices.

Putting intent data to work

Many vendors have developed integrations to CRM, marketing automation, and sales engagement applications. It allows intent data to be leveraged in specific workflows. The handling of intent data remains a challenging task, in particular for companies that don’t have analysts on staff, so outsourcing analysis can be a good option.

I expect more technology and delivery options to surface in the near future. In my latest version of the SalesTech landscape, I lumped intent data providers into the Account Intelligence category.

With sellers overwhelmed with data about people who could be interested in their products and buyers over-solicited for attention, intent data is poised to become a key element of your data arsenal.

The post Intent Data Turns a Buyer-Centric World From a Curse into a Blessing appeared first on Sales Hacker.

08 Nov 15:54

Increase Your Focus on Targets

by Anthony Iannarino

There is a man on his hands and knees underneath a street light. He is searching for something he’s lost. A police officer walks by and asks the man what it is he is searching for, and the man answers, “My keys. I’ve lost my keys.” The police officer joins the man in looking for the keys, and asks, “Do you remember where you dropped them?” The man, still on his hands and knees searching, says, “Yes. I dropped them in the alley over there.” The police officer asks, “Why, then, are you looking for them here,” to which the man who has lost his keys replies, “Because the light is better over here.”

On Visibility

There is a difference between targets and leads, targets being far more valuable. Much like the man who has lost his keys, some salespeople (and whole sales organizations, as it turns out) believe that, because they can see the lead, because they have contact information, and because the lead has taken some small, mostly meaningless action that can be measured (read, download), it is better than a cold target. Because a lead is visible, it appears easier than cold targets.

No Interest. High Value.

A strategic, cold target isn’t easily obtained, just like the keys. The circumstances appear more difficult. Your cold target already has a partner that provides what you propose to provide. The contacts are tougher to reach and are reluctant to schedule a meeting with a salesperson. Creating and winning an opportunity requires that one nurture relationships over time and create value compelling enough for the contacts within the account to consider doing something different. More still, a lot of people within the company have no real interest in changing at all.

But for many in sales, the cold strategic targets are necessary to reaching their goals. Even if you have to look in the dark alley instead of under the street light.

Your dream clients, the ones for whom you can create massive value, and in doing so, transform your results and your company, are known to you. You know where they are, and you know they will be more difficult to win. As difficult as it might be, it’s still easier than believing that leads are a better strategy—even if they are easier to see under the street light.

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The post Increase Your Focus on Targets appeared first on The Sales Blog.

08 Nov 15:54

Webinar vs Seminar: Picking the Right One

by Veronica Green-Gott

More and more, companies are focused on creating events to engage with potential customers. As companies have realized the benefits to brand and value, event marketing has become all the rage. But should you do a webinar or seminar? The answer is not always that clear.

Why Event Marketing Works

If I had a dollar for every sales team that said to me, “If I can only get in front of a prospect, I can make a deal,” I’d be a rich man. My response? Riiight.

Well, for those of us that are not faultless sales machines, we desire to find ways to deliver value to potential customers in a context that adds more than expertise by also showing a personal dimension. Getting personal and setting up a relationship with a potential lead is a great place to develop those leads into opportunities.

There are two popular formats for these events: seminars, which are essentially gatherings around a specific topic, and webinars, the online version of the same concept. Each has its own pluses and minuses, and both provide value. So, let’s find out which one works best for you.

The Pluses and Minuses of Seminars

We go to seminars to learn. That is the basic premise. Yet, the aggressive digital marketing world that we live in has changed some of the expectations with this type of event. Now there is more skepticism, more guardedness around what is going to happen in the event. This makes clarity critical.

If you want people to be intrigued, you need clarity – clarity on what a participant will do, what they will learn, and what the value will be to them. So, no matter the format, exploring and sharing value becomes the overall driver of this type of event.

Let’s break down when and why to use a seminar in your marketing and product offering. This will be broad, as we are trying to understand how to best use this in our marketing for many different types of tech marketing companies.

Pluses

Seminars can be great if you deliver software because training around software is always needed. Training seminars can be great because you can meet the customer, connect with users, and create a loyal community.

Seminars can also be great if you want to bring a solution set to a particular group of individuals, or, conversely, if you want to target customers around a specific set of solutions. A seminar around technology in manufacturing might include discussion of your product or service, as well as discussion of a few others that could offer value to the prospect.

Seminars create value because you get to meet the person face to face. There is nothing that replaces that.

Seminars also allow you to be more dynamic and have more conversational-type interactions

Minuses

Seminars involve more commitment from the attendees. This makes the planning and execution more of a consideration.

They tend to be higher cost, especially if you need to do them at a location that is not your office. Food and drink are required.

There are always more administrative considerations for an in-person seminar due to the human factor. You need to consider the flow of the event, where attendees will want to go, and how they’ll know where to be at the right time.

Pluses and Minuses of Webinars

Webinars are the online version of the classic seminar. We go to seminars to connect with potential clients or business partners, as well as to learn new information. Most often, we go to webinars to learn– lecture-style. Webinars tend to be less interactive, and while there are polling and Q&A options, they tend to be more of the sit and listen variety when compared to in-person seminars, where there may be discussions. There isn’t as much exploration or sharing in these types of events because the learning tends to be more one-way. The voice on the computer screen will expound new information to the waiting ears on the other side of the internet connection.

While webinars tend to be less interactive, there’s no doubt that they are valuable in a lot of different ways. Just like anything else, there are both drawbacks and benefits to this style of event.

Pluses

Webinars are extremely flexible. Listeners can tune in from anywhere with an internet connection and listen for as long as they have time.

They tend to be very low-cost, as the host doesn’t have to provide food and drink or support any in-person attendees.

Webinars save time and allow your staff members to set aside an hour or two for the event without any of the time constraints of event prep or clean up.

Webinars can be very effective at imparting information to audience members who do well with audio and visual learning styles.

Minuses

With a webinar, you receive none of the face-to-face interaction that you get with seminars.

It can be much harder to accommodate more hands-on learning styles. Additionally, group exercises don’t really work.

Feedback is limited to post-event emails and surveys. It’s much harder to change your speech based on an audience you can’t see. Oftentimes you have no idea if you are your audience’s sole focus, or if you’re just on in the background as they go about their day.

Deciding between a seminar and a webinar is often a personal decision based on how your schedule works, what you value in connecting with your audience, and your audience demographics. There’s no wrong choice. Both webinars and seminars have their benefits and drawbacks that will influence the type of engagement you receive with your event. But whatever you choose, you still need great event marketing to make it a success.

Press releases, podcast interviews, and social media promotion – the general steps to promote a webinar and a seminar are the same. But your event marketing still needs to be customized to meet your goals and tailored to whichever platform you choose.

08 Nov 15:54

Introducing "The Elevator Pitch: Sales Navigator Edition"

by Sean Callahan
Sales Navigator Elevator Pitch

Sometimes, you need to go deep on a product. That’s why there are product pages and ebooks.

Other times, you just need the elevator pitch. And then there are those times — such as right now — when you need an elevator pitch that has, well, perfect pitch.

Introducing “The Elevator Pitch: Sales Navigator Edition.” This elevator pitch video has the advantage of taking place in an actual elevator — with a barbershop quartet thrown in for good measure. 

In this short video, you get the elevator pitch for LinkedIn’s Sales Navigator. Here's the pitch:

Sales Navigator helps sales managers and sales representatives by tapping into over a half billion LinkedIn members. Sales Navigator is purpose built to help sales teams expand existing customer relationships, acquire new business, and maximize productivity — with all the goodness of LinkedIn like connections and InMail. You also get Advanced Search, which enables you to save leads and accounts. It will even suggest Lead Recommendations, customized for you. Additionally, Sales Navigator’s TeamLink enables you to find the mutual connections that turn a cold call into a hot lead. You can also use PointDrive to share relevant content with your buyers throughout the customer lifecycle. And our new Deals feature enables sales managers and reps to get better visibility into pipeline and more productive deal review sessions.

Check out the video It will take you less two minutes — and you won't even have to wait for the elevator. 

The Sales Navigator Elevator Pitch Video

And that's how you do an elevator pitch in harmony.

To keep pace with the latest in sales technology, subscribe today to the LinkedIn Sales Blog.

      
08 Nov 15:54

Here’s a Radical Idea: Raise Your Prices

by Scott Maxwell

From the early days of computing, there has been a subset of users who think that software should be free. “Most of you steal your software,” Bill Gates charged in his famous 1976 Letter to Hobbyists. “Who cares if the people who work on it get paid?”

Gates’ point was that someone needs to foot the bill for the costs of software creation or there will be no software. He won that debate, but more recently the divide has been over business strategy rather than ethics. The prevailing view is that prices should be kept as low as possible to spur growth. The counter – that raising prices will result in a higher-quality product and take some of the financial pressure off – doesn’t get as much play.

The reality is that most companies are setting their prices too low. There isn’t much danger in at least experimenting with raising prices.

The benefits of raising prices

A price hike is the most efficient way to boost profits. A study by Andreas Hinterhuber found that a 5 percent boost in prices leads to a 22 percent improvement in operating profits. But cutting SG&A expenses by 5 percent only increases profits by 5 percent.

A McKinsey & Co. study also found that if the Global 1200 raised prices by 1 percent that it would boost profits by 11 percent.

The benefits of raising prices go beyond merely financial. By setting prices higher you are alerting the market that you are not taking part in a race to the bottom to sell your services at the lowest possible price. This communicates to your customers that quality and service will be secondary and that you are selling a commodity.

By contrast, raising prices telegraphs the idea that you are focusing on quality. You are willing to lose some customers to focus on the ones who are willing to pay more for a better experience. This can occur on a micro level too. I know a consultant who was in such high demand that he was constantly traveling and wearing himself out. He was surprised when I suggested he raise his prices. But doing so meant that he was able to do less work for the same or even more money. This creates a virtuous cycle in which consumers believe they are getting quality and your company (or in his case, a sole proprietor) works hard to meet their expectations. It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

The fear of raising prices

My friend’s objection was a common one. We all fear that if we raise prices, our customers will revolt and leave en masse. But that almost never happens. Most customers are sanguine about absorbing a small price increase if they’re happy with the service.

For instance, Netflix has raised its prices in the past and though some users complained and growth did slow a bit, the company didn’t lose customers. One reason is that the price hike – from $9.99 a month to $10.99 a month for the standard tier – wasn’t very big. Consumers could rationalize that that extra dollar was a small price to pay for 24/7 on-demand high-quality content.

If your customer feedback and data show that your customers believe they are getting value, then you can probably get away with a price increase. Other “green flags” are if your customers tell you how cheap you are, if your sales team doesn’t have to discount often or if you know that your customers are getting a high ROI off your product/service.

Another way to rationalize a price increase is to note that inflation has been rising lately. In 2017, inflation rose 2.1 percent year over year and the rate is projected to be 2 percent for 2019 and 2020. If you’re not increasing prices then you are experiencing a de facto price decrease by leaving them as they are.

When in doubt, test

The best way to figure out if you can get away with a price increase is just to do it. Sure, you will lose some customers, but if 100 percent of your customers are satisfied with your current prices, that means that you are charging too little. It’s like the person who hosts parties and remarks that they always made just the perfect amount because there was nothing left – what that really means is that if the host made a bit more, people would probably eat it.

If you’re scared to implement price increases across the board though, test them with some new customers. Or you could test two different price increases (or three or whatever) and find the optimum amount that maximizes both retention and profits.

One caveat: You can take the idea of raising prices too far. Not everyone is cut out to be the Rolls-Royce of their category. Pricing isn’t binary though; you can straddle the line between premium and mainstream. A great example of a sophisticated pricing strategy is Apple. With a $999 price tag, the iPhone XS is one of the most expensive smartphones on the market. But you can also buy an entry-level MacBook Air for $999, which is a reasonable price for a model with that capability and form factor. Apple draws a lot of criticism for its high-end pricing, but it’s also a trillion-dollar company.

Consider adding some complexity to your pricing too. If you’ve already created some demand, then resist the culture of underpricing. When in doubt, assume that your prices are too low.

The post Here’s a Radical Idea: Raise Your Prices appeared first on OpenView Labs.

07 Nov 16:49

This robot is training to become a construction worker — Genius Moments

by (Deleted account)
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The National Institute of Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) of Japan is developing a humanoid robot that is capable of performing simple construction tasksHRP-5P can comfortably — albeit slowly — install drywall all by itself. In the past, we have seen robots laying bricks and robots assembling Ikea furniture. It seems like construction workers of the future will be robotic, and these examples are just a glimpse of that future.  Read more...

More about Robots, Mashable Video, Construction, Automation, and Construction Industry
07 Nov 16:38

The Rise of the Micro-Influencer

by Ivie Ndep

Influencer marketing has grown rapidly, and marketers are leveraging this trend to get the buzz about their brands out. Gone are the days where celebrity influencers like Kim Kardashian were the game changers in promoting a product or brand. Big name influencers were once cool, but we now live in an age where micro-influencers reign supreme.

Micro-influencers are “regular Joes” who have grown their social media following by posting about a niche topic (for example sports, fashion or travel etc.) and they usually have a social media following starting anywhere from 1,000 up to 50,000.

Micro-influencers develop a relationship with their fan base by posting frequently and giving them a behind-the-scenes look at the happenings of their daily life. They tend to have higher engagement rates when compared to macro-influencers and there’s a higher chance of consumers listening to their recommendations because they are relatable, unlike celebrities. Consumers tend to trust their recommendations because it’s just like getting advice from family or a friend.

 How Can Brands Benefit from Micro-Influencers?

Budget friendly

Micro-influencers are cost effective as they don’t charge as much as macro influencers and can potentially create more value for a brand. They can charge as little as $100 for a post depending on their follower count. A lot less expenditure can be made on a campaign while still driving the conversations to a targeted audience.

Create engaging content and drive social buzz

They create posts daily with their own personal opinions evoking credibility. They can tell a story that is very engaging and realistic and have the content resonate with the target audience. Micro-influencers are very effective for creating social media buzz about a new or existing product and also targeting a specific demographic for a brand.

High engagement with their fan base.

Micro-influencers can be very knowledgeable about a brand or product and potentially better at explaining its “ins and outs” to their fan base. They are personally invested in their craft and continue to develop a relationship with their fan base by responding to their questions and comments about their posts. This results in higher engagement and eventually conversations that lead to sales.

How Daniel Wellington is “Winning” With Micro-Influencers

Daniel Wellington (DW) is an example of a brand that has succeeded in growing itself from scratch using micro-influencers. DW is one of the watch brands with the biggest digital presence and it owes its success, in large part, to micro-influencers.

Filip Tysander, the owner of DW, built the company with a business model based on a strong social media presence and using social media platforms to display his DW watches. The Instagram account @danielwellington has roughly 4.3 million followers and over 1.9 million posts on Instagram have the DW hashtag (#danielwellington) with most of them being user generated content!

The main marketing strategy of the brand is to use the power of many micro-influencers rather than rely on celebrities. The brand gives free watches to these influencers and asks them to post the pictures with a discount code offered to their followers. This has saved DW lots of money in advertising costs while increasing product visibility and has made it a very highly profitable watch company.

To Wrap It Up

The micro-influencer of today has subtly become a powerful tool in the bid to increase brand awareness and a create a huge social media following. When launching campaigns for either new or existing products, micro-influencers could just be that added edge to provide one of the best returns on investment. With their budget friendly nature, ability to drive social media buzz and high levels of fanbase engagement, this type of influencer could just be the key to your next successful marketing campaign.

07 Nov 16:36

Alex Boston: Despite new mayors' promises, transit extensions require population density, sound business models, to work

by Gordon Clark

It has taken a decade to get all three levels of government on board for a new rapid transit deal for Metro Vancouver. Just as we are about to leave the station, two incoming mayors — Surrey’s Doug McCallum and Vancouver’s Kennedy Stewart — have threatened to take us off the rails. The first advocates higher-cost SkyTrain over light rail. The second aims to extend the Millennium Line to the University of B.C.

Regionally, we have to understand these business cases before we can get back on track with a shared plan.

While Premier John Horgan has indicated that the region needs to figure this out, successive provincial governments have helped create this situation.

In the U.S., an analysis of more than 50 rapid transit systems found a litany of poor investments. In numerous situations, the high capital costs did not deliver the desired ridership, revenues or congestion reductions. The primary explanation: insufficient resident and job density.

Forward-thinking states and provinces have established resident and job density targets for different types of transit infrastructure. In California, municipalities are required to develop regional integrated transportation and land-use plans that meet shared greenhouse-gas reduction targets. Once plans show reduced commuting distances and increased transportation choices, federal and state transportation funding is unlocked. This requirement has led to California’s best regional planning ever, with additional benefits to public health, farmland protection and affordability.

To guarantee taxpayer value, B.C. should follow suit and establish performance requirements for transit investments. This would help the public separate bona fide rapid transit schemes from boondoggles. At some $150 million per km, there is no legitimate business case for SkyTrain to far-flung, seaside communities such as White Rock and Dundarave, despite calls from politicians.

Similarly, the province, feds, TransLink and every Metro Vancouver municipality share ambitious GhG reduction targets, which are also off track. The mayors’ transit vision has been justified in part as a climate action investment. However, TransLink’s analysis shows congestion and GhG will continue to rise. Could the $8.5-billion investment reduce gridlock and GhGs? Certainly! It would require deeper integration of land-use plans with transportation infrastructure investments.

Could McCallum’s SkyTrain expansion across Surrey serve the best interests of regional taxpayers? Sure, if jobs and residential growth are focussed around mass transit stations instead of new neighbourhoods far from good transit. Encouragingly, McCallum has previously emphasized the need for concentrating growth around transit stations.

Langley City, with one of the region’s slowest growth rates, likely won’t have a solid business case for SkyTrain for two decades. LRT is more economically viable, but still requires more complete, compact design than planned.

The business case for Stewart’s SkyTrain extension to UBC is complex. UBC’s population is greater than most B.C. municipalities — all concentrated within a couple square kilometres. While UBC’s density justifies SkyTrain, low populations between UBC and Arbutus weaken the business case for extension. Focussing growth around nodes along 10th, Broadway and Jericho lands could change this math.

Metro Vancouver’s best bet to cut congestion and GhGs would be intensification around under-utilized SkyTrain stations in Burnaby, the Tri-Cities, New Westminster and Vancouver.

Behind their bold promises, the three leaders driving our mass transit agenda have tools to avoid a train wreck. Stewart was an SFU public policy professor interested in effective decision-making. McCallum’s defining trait is respect for taxpayers. Horgan has vowed to meet GhG reduction targets and deliver a comprehensive climate plan. This plan should commit to phasing in transit investments across the region as business cases emerge. To reach our destination cost effectively, all mayors can help better integrate land use into local and regional plans.

Alex Boston is executive director of Renewable Cities at the SFU Morris J. Wosk Centre for Dialogue.


Letters to the editor should be sent to sunletters@vancouversun.com. The editorial pages editor is Gordon Clark, who can be reached at gclark@postmedia.com.

CLICK HERE to report a typo.

Is there more to this story? We’d like to hear from you about this or any other stories you think we should know about. Email vantips@postmedia.com.

07 Nov 16:34

What Do You Think About Your Ability to Think?

by JoAnn Corley

DanaTentis / Pixabay

Are you are power thinker?

I was thinking about thinking the other day. I’d just completed an executive leadership learning roundtable with a client based in Kuwait. (All of their executive team was present from Dubai, Bahrain, Jordan & the US. — isn’t technology just amazing!) They are serious about cultivating a culture of innovation and know that it needs to start with the leadership, so they are taking advantage of our virtual leadership development offering.

The roundtable theme was Power Up Your Thinking, the focus of which breaks down very practically the fundamentals of what it means to be a better thinker…which also means better problem solver, better collaborator among other benefits professionally and to an organization. Side note: I know “design thinking” is becoming very popular, yet at its more basic level, teaching folks how to think is an important prelude to it.

We started off with this powerful quote from Dr. Martin Luther, King Jr.:

I don’t know about you, but I am finding this to be truer than ever!…and this was written back in the 1960s!!!

As I’ve worked with human potential in organizations over the years, I have come to the conclusion that nothing could be a more useful, worthwhile and profitable investment than teaching employees, key leaders, and managers how to think.

Why? Because thinking is at the heart of running and growing a business, it’s a leader’s #1 business asset, and learning how to think involves a variety of activities with incredible, profitable benefits.

Unfortunately most leaders don’t know and understand what robust thinking looks like nor how to practically do it.

We in our business culture frequently use different types of “thinking” terms in conversation without, for many, really knowing what they mean or how to demonstrate them. Here are a few: strategic thinking, creative thinking, innovative thinking, design thinking and their corresponding partners: problem solving, process improvement, decision-making, and judgment.

I call these pieces of the thinking puzzle or key elements of a thinking toolkit. To become a “power thinker”, you not only need each of these capabilities in your thinking toolkit, but need to be able to do each reasonably well…and in order to achieve that, you have to know what they are.

To gain a basic understanding, we worked through definitions and from the roundtable there were some wonderful “ah has”. For example, some of the definitions included terms like methods, process, disciplined, all which inspired a conclusion that leaders need to give their team members time to think!…or, as King said, the solutions may well be half-baked.

Think about this for a moment. Often, leaders want answers quickly, and even accuse people of not being “smart thinkers” if they don’t come up with potential options or solutions in a short time frame.

Good thinking, power thinking requires time.

Leaders need to give team members, permission, space to think!

And, leaders need to not so much tell people what to think, but teach them how to think! Consider the benefits…here’s a few: ownership, buy-in, mapping a practical path forward, constructing progress, learning to value differing views, a resource for working through conflict (that’s a big one!), reduce employee problems, developing and or discovering talent, mining ideas for greater business success, nurturing openness and humility, bolstering engagement …you could probably add more.

I often say leaders need to host a creative thinking workshop at least once a year (another very misunderstood form of thinking by the way and the foundation of power thinking), because at the center of the power thinking puzzle is creative thinking — all other thinking types hinge on it! In fact, it is the essential element of each.

Everyone needs a power thinking tune-up from time to time!

So, how is the thinking in your organization? …among your leaders and managers? Are your leaders teaching, training their folks how to to think? Do they work with practical methods to get the best results? Is process improvement a practiced part of your company culture?

A final note: Many companies want to have an innovative, learning culture, yet don’t know how to make that a reality. If this is true of you, let us help. We’ve been working with companies to jumpstart this for a number of years throughout North America. And now, with our virtual offerings – we are starting to do so globally.

07 Nov 16:27

The Beauty Contest: How Cities are Shaped by What We Think Others Think (Part Two)

by Erica Barnett & Ben Klemens

We’re bringing you something a little outside our usual box this week.

Erica Barnett, a Seattle-based journalist, and Ben Klemens, a Washington, D.C.-based economist and author, are working on a book about how economic and game-theory principles can help explain sociocultural phenomena. In this, the second of two guest posts, they use a computer-generated model to examine how a much-discussed urban phenomenon—gentrification—is best understood neither as top-down conspiracy nor as the inexorable consequence of supply-and-demand math, but rather as a social phenomenon profoundly affected by the question of what people think other people think about a neighborhood: a phenomenon called the “Beauty Contest.”

Click here to read part one.


In Part 1 of this two-part series, we talked about how gentrification can spread via signals, using an intersection in Seattle’s rapidly changing Central District neighborhood as an example. In Part 2, we broaden our approach, using computer simulations to demonstrate how a signal—a store that draws customers from around the city, or a third-wave coffee shop—can lead to gentrification even in the absence of overt preferences or bias, or conscious beliefs about property values in an area—and how changes in house prices can actually be more dramatic in the absence of these kinds of overt beliefs.

To demonstrate how this can happen, we’ll use two computer simulations that show house sales over time, one with conscious preferences, and one without.

In the first simulation, some people have a strong preference for living near a useful amenity. They may also have an aversion away from other locations, whether they’re liquor stores with bulletproof glass or people of a different nationality. In the second, the people bidding on houses have no serious desire to live next to the amenity and no concern about race at all, but everybody knows that there are other people, somewhere, who do. It is the second simulation—the one where overt preferences don’t exist—where we really see home values shift in both directions. 

These simulations take place in a town we'll call Squareville, where houses are neatly laid out on a grid. When Squareville was built, all the houses were identical, so each buyer bought a house from the builders for $100. Every year, ten houses go up for sale, and there are always three bidders on every house. Bidders' bids are a bell curve centered on the average of the last sale price of the surrounding houses.

In Vladimir Nabokov's Pale Fire, a poet suffers great angst when the house next door is rented to a migrant from the fictitious country of Zembla. So in our first simulation, let’s move some Zemblans into a block of Northeast Squareville, a town where half of the residents, like Nabokov, are zemblophobes. If a zemblophobe is bidding on a house adjacent to a Zemblan, they will bid 20 percent less.

There is also an excellent bakery in the southwest, which is a delight to walk to. Here, half of bidders on houses adjacent to the bakery will bid 20 percent more.

How Does Overt Prejudice Affect Home Prices?

 Figure 1: Some zemblophobes and a bakery (the green circle), where the bakery is popular, so the zemblopobes are outbid and have little effect on house prices.

Figure 1: Some zemblophobes and a bakery (the green circle), where the bakery is popular, so the zemblopobes are outbid and have little effect on house prices.

Using these parameters, we simulated 250 periods of selling, buying, and bidding, and the plot in Figure 1 shows the result. Darker colors indicate higher house prices, and they are clearly higher around the bakery in the southwest (represented by the green circle)—and not just immediately adjacent, but for a few blocks in all directions, as higher sale prices near the bakery cascade to higher-priced sales down the street.

Around the Zemblan block to the northeast (represented by the green triangle), prices do not get much out of line with other neighborhoods in Squareville outside the trendy southwest, and any occasional dips do not spread out. After all, the high bidder wins every auction, so if a zemblophobe is bidding lower than typical, the odds are good that a non-zemblophobe with a not-depressed bid will win the house.

What If No One Is Actually Prejudiced?

In the second simulation, there are no actual zemblophobes, but no individual Squarevillian can know for sure that this is the case. In this simulation, every bidder is concerned about what their fellow Squarevillians are thinking. When bidding on a house by the Zemblan block (the green triangle), they consider the possibility that some of the bidders may be zemblophobes. To keep things simple, bidders will assume one of the competitors is a zemblophobe who won't place a competitive bid, meaning only two serious bidders instead of three. Applying some game theory, bidders on a house adjacent to a Zemblan block lower their bids by 15 percent.

 Figure 2: Everybody thinks somebody somewhere out there is a zemblophobe, and house prices move accordingly.

Figure 2: Everybody thinks somebody somewhere out there is a zemblophobe, and house prices move accordingly.

 Across town, a trendy pot shop (the green circle) opens up. Everyone in Squareville knows hipsters think it's cool to live next to a pot shop, so bidders on nearby houses expect that there is some chance that competing bidders are hipsters who will bid higher for the choice location. Expecting competition from enthusiastic hipsters, bidders on a property by the pot shop raise their bid by 15 percent. As outsiders, we know there are no hipsters in Squareville. But that doesn’t matter—in our simulation, everyone thinks that there may be high-bidding hipsters competing for houses near the pot shop, so the price around the pot shop goes up anyway.

The plot in Figure 2 shows the result of a simulation over 250 periods using these rules. The effect of perceived zemblophobia is greater than the effect of actual zemblophobia in our first simulation. In other words: the fact that people believe others think Zemblans are bad for property values causes that assertion to be factually true. Meanwhile, the effect on prices around the pot shop is similar to the effect of the bakery—even in the absence of any high-bidding hipsters. The beauty contest makes the problems of perceived markers of lower and higher neighborhood value especially ingrained. We can't just flip a switch and say, “Okay, redlining is over; no more discrimination”—or “hipsters are over; no more gentrification.” Even if nobody actually believes that Zemblans are bad for property values, or that hipsters are good for housing prices, as long as there are people who erroneously think people with those beliefs exist, we're off to the races and the beauty contest argument applies.

A Problem of Self-Fulfilling Expectations

Let's step away from housing for a second, and consider a hiring manager making an offer to a job candidate. Comparable to bidding on a house, the hiring manager’s bid for the candidate's salary depends on what she imagines other bidders are thinking.  Taking the color of the candidate's skin as a signal, she may expect that other bidders will bid lower for this candidate.  Then she can adjust her bid down a little, under the assumption that there is less competitive pressure to bid top dollar. She has a correct assessment of what the candidate is worth and does not devalue him because of his physical features, she bears no animosity and expects none from coworkers, and yet she makes a lower bid anyway. And if everybody else makes the same assumptions, then her odds of winning the candidate are not dashed by her underbid.

The inverse of this process—gentrification—is also about expectations: one pot shop does not make a wave of anything, but if that shop creates the perception among a large population that further change is coming, that perception can be self-fulfilling.

But isn't the market self-correcting? If a supermarket charges too much or too little for apples, the manager can check the supply in the bin at the end of the day and adjust prices tomorrow accordingly. There is a functional value to an apple, which can be compared to the functional value of other fruits.

The problem is that the value of property is only partly for the functional use of shelter, and partly as a store of value and a bet: If I am confident that I can sell a house for $1.5 million in a few years, then it's a profitable bet for me to pay $1 million now, regardless of the market price of the components that make up a house. It's a beauty contest game again: if I expect the neighborhood will be "hot" in ten years, then paying more than what it would cost to build a house in a cheaper area is a rational bet that the market will reward me for. If I expect institutional racism to persist ten years into the future, then the "correct” bid in a Zemblan neighborhood will be lower than the bid on an identical house in the "hot" neighborhood. A buyer buying a property in the Zemblan neighborhood today has to consider what the market will look like when she sells. If she expects that it will be selling to zemblophobes in the future, she has to lower her bid now accordingly. As long as perceptions remain constant, taking those perceptions into account when bidding is the market-correct thing to do. And It certainly doesn’t help that the grocer can check the apple bin every few hours, while buyers won't get feedback in the form of a future sale for maybe a decade down the road.

In the first example with actual zemblophobes, some people bid lower on houses in one neighborhood, but others placed an "objective" bid based on market conditions—and it's the high bidder who wins, so a real change in prices was difficult to observe. This is the story of the free market smoothing over imperfections: if people bid below the accepted norms because of personal biases, they lose. But even in the absence of overt racism, a population of indifferent people who modify their bids according to the belief that others expect a norm of racism, could be sufficient to explain some of the patterns we observe.

Neighborhoods Change If They Reach a Tipping Point

 Figure 3: The pot shop (the green circle) and the zemblan home (the green triangle) are now in the same neighborhood. In this case, gentrification wins, and relatively lower-priced housing is pushed to the east.

Figure 3: The pot shop (the green circle) and the zemblan home (the green triangle) are now in the same neighborhood. In this case, gentrification wins, and relatively lower-priced housing is pushed to the east.

After a major trauma, the free market continues to show scars for decades. Redlining has been gone for about half a century, Realtors are now monitored to limit their ability to steer people based on race, and the banking system continues to make progress toward fair lending, but all of those issues we want to think of as done with and healed continue to set our expectations for how the market will behave in the present day. And those expectations are self-perpetuating. Similarly, the positive signal that radiates out from a fancy pot shop (or bakery, or cocktail lounge) reverberates to tell future homebuyers what a neighborhood will look like in two or five years—and this understanding, once it is recorded in property sale deeds, can also become self-perpetuating.

In the real world, of course, gentrifying neighborhoods are considered “gentrifying” precisely because they were once populated primarily by low-income people and people of color. So there must, in theory, be some point at which the two competing impulses described above—beliefs, or beliefs in the existence of beliefs, that stigmatize certain neighborhoods, and beliefs that lead gentrifiers to think, “This neighborhood has become a place for people like me”—tip toward or away from gentrification. In other words, there has to be a reason some neighborhoods with similar qualities gentrify and others don’t. There are no easy answers to this question. However, we can demonstrate both of these possible scenarios (the pot shop/bakery/cat cafe that tips a neighborhood into gentrification and the one that doesn't) using two more simulations.

In the first (Figure 3), we move the spot that is perceived to raise values and the spot that's perceived to lower values into the same neighborhood in the center of town, with the pot shop just to the west and the zemblans just to the east.

 Figure 4: Bidders bump up bids by only 5% to be near the pot shop instead of 15%. With that change, gentrification fails to set in.

Figure 4: Bidders bump up bids by only 5% to be near the pot shop instead of 15%. With that change, gentrification fails to set in.

It's rarely just one building that people perceive (read: perceive that others perceive) as desirable. If a neighborhood looks like it doesn't have a lot of money, then bidders may not want to live there as much, causing a feedback loop where lower-income neighborhoods stay that way. One could imagine a similar feedback loop in ritzier areas, where money attracts amenities which make home values worth even more. In this simulation, bidders take these things into account and bid higher or lower if a neighborhood is already especially high- or low-value. This leads to an unstable situation: a perfect balance is almost impossible, and a minor change in conditions can lead to a major change in outcomes. As time goes by, the higher home values represented by darker colors take over, and the lower-priced squares drift to the east.

The second simulation in this set (Figure 4) shows that this doesn't always happen.  In this simulation, bidders don't expect as much from a pot shop. In the first set of simulations, bidders increased their bid by 15 percent for squares adjacent to the shop. In this set, we’ll lower that to an increase of just 5 percent. When we make this change, the entire story is different. The center of town remains a low-priced area, and the boom in prices we saw in the previous simulation doesn't materialize at all.


Revisiting Our Real-World Case Study

As of this writing, here's what's happening at 23rd and Union in Seattle: Businesses are starting to move in to the ground floor of another new apartment building across called The Stencil, where one-bedrooms start at $2,400 a month. The strip mall across from Uncle Ike’s, Midtown Center, will soon be the site of a new 429-unit apartment complex.

And, just east of the Neighbor Lady, another six-story apartment box—located at the historic site of the first bank west of the Mississippi to serve the African American community, Liberty Bank—is about to open. This one, however, is a little different. It’s being developed by a partnership of community groups, including Africatown, and its 115 apartments will be affordable, with rents starting at just $526 a month. A special phone line, set up for prospective tenants, went live at 9 a.m. on November 1st.



About the Authors

Ben Klemens (Twitter: @b__k) is a Washington, D.C.-based economist and author (Modeling With Data: Tools and Techniques for Scientific Computing; Math You Can't Use: Patents, Copyright, and Software) who has written about policy issues in publications such as The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post. Erica C. Barnett (Twitter: @ericacbarnett) is an independent journalist in Seattle with 20 years of experience as an editor and news reporter for publications including Seattle magazine, Sightline, The Stranger, Next City, and PubliCola, a local news site that she co-founded in 2009. Barnett and Klemens are currently working on a book that uses the principles of economic theory to argue that many common sociocultural phenomena, from gentrification to stock market trends to how political parties evolve, can be understood through game-theory concepts like the beauty contest.

07 Nov 16:26

Step 1 for Managing, Training & Selling with Emotional Intelligence

by deb.calvert@peoplefirstps.com (Deb Calvert)

It's human nature to focus on self. On top of that, the perception (fair or not) is that sellers are even more self-oriented than people in most other professions. To overcome this perception and temper that human nature, sales managers and sales trainers who want to enable sales may find real value in developing a stronger orientation to others. This is part of what I call selling with emotional intelligence. This shift to become more "other-oriented" works for sellers, too, when they dedicate more focus on their buyers.

07 Nov 16:24

The Incumbents Digital Dilemma: Why Digital Disruption Demands New Skills in the Boardroom

by Anita Sands

Editor’s Note: This article first appeared on LinkedIn here

Competing in a digital world requires companies to recognize a simple fact: we are rapidly moving from an era where systems support humans to one where humans will support systems. No company is immune from the inevitable disruption that digital technology is bringing.

Forget about software “eating the enterprise.” Software is fast becoming the enterprise. The pace and scale at which this change is happening is mind-boggling and unprecedented. Whether we like it or not, the foregone conclusion for directors is that we are now all in the technology business.

Not only have the ways in which customers purchase products, consume services, and interact with organizations shifted (although they have, radically), but human expectations have also altered irrevocably. Consumers now expect their experiences be seamless and their products intuitive and customized. The demand for everything to be mobile, transparent, and instant isn’t ending with consumers; enterprises are grappling equally with the changing expectations of employees.

Anyone who harbors doubt that we are in a new era need only look at how Digital Disruption has upended telecom, media, and retail in the past decade to realize that the challenge for directors is inevitable.

How do we provide the foresight, insight, and oversight required in this digital era? What are the right questions to ask? And what kind of skill sets will boardrooms require in the future?

Foresight

Digital disruption demands that companies thoughtfully and boldly reexamine their strategies and business assumptions. Reliance on customer loyalty, traditional business or operating models, or heretofore barriers-to-entry represents fallacies in thinking.

We need to challenge our organizations to re-evaluate the competitive landscape:

    • Who are the emerging players?
    • What is it about what they do, or how they do it, that customers seem to like?
    • Is there a risk of a new competitor attacking in a way that would cannibalize current revenue streams if you were to respond? (The famous example being Netflix’s original strategy of “no late fees,” which marked the beginning of the end for Blockbuster.)

In other words, where are you vulnerable?

We must also understand the potential drivers of disruption within a particular industry. Is data produced by billions of IoT devices going to become a real strategic asset, as we’ve seen in the energy and healthcare industries? Or is it more likely that the rise of automation and artificial intelligence will eliminate certain costs? Perhaps you’re contending with emerging technologies that threaten to render vast numbers of employees redundant. Or maybe it’s an entirely different operating model and customer experience that simply could put you out of business.

Insight

These questions should be at the heart of boardroom discussions and will spark organizations to look increasingly to their directors to provide insight and guidance as they pursue their digital endeavors. Yet many boards aren’t equipped to frame and address these questions with the “digital fluency” they require.

Recognizing potential disruption ahead of time is even more important for successful and established companies and is particularly challenging for publicly listed companies, contending with the pressures of quarterly results, analysts and investor expectations. Boards must play an active role in navigating the choppy waters of transformation and embarking on the necessary journey long before the threat of disruption manifests.

Alas, very few organizations, or indeed boards, relish this kind of change.

Driving successful transformation often involves the difficult task of addressing the “incumbent’s dilemma.” The very elements that made you successful might now be impediments in the digital world. For example, companies that are asset-heavy now exist in a digital world that demands everything virtually. Others, reliant on business models structured and priced for ownership, are competing in an era where value is increasingly created by ‘sharing’.

Incumbents are also often plagued by “legacy debt,” everything from outdated technology to silos of information, inefficient and cumbersome processes, multi-year initiatives, annual budgets, and industrial era regulations. This debt is a major part of the dilemma incumbents face when they try to nimbly respond to changes or threats in a timely fashion.

And, while experience is undoubtedly valuable, the skills needed in this cloud-enabled, design-driven, data led, socially savvy, “light-speed, lights-out” world can make tenured talent, including in the boardroom, a liability, when the imperative for new skills and thinking has never been greater.

Oversight

Nowhere is the board’s role more important than in the hiring and firing of the CEO, who by definition is now also the organization’s Chief Digital Officer. Yet how often do we think of searches that way? Core criteria for all CEO appointments must include how a candidate leads in the digital world and, in the incumbent’s case, how he or she manages to pursue two separate strategic courses: repositioning the core business and investing and growing new areas of digital revenue.

The onset of digital businesses has also brought new requirements for how directors assess and oversee risk. Along with traditional responsibilities, boards must contend with a plethora of new risks and challenges. Is your organization dealing with its data appropriately? How are you managing any potential over-reliance on external cloud-technology providers? Do you know whether your cybersecurity defenses are sufficient to handle 24/7 exposure to attacks that all businesses now face? And how are you positioned to respond if breached?

Conclusion

Change starts at the top, which is why it’s important to turn a critical eye to both our leadership teams and to us as directors.

Digital knowledge is important, but so is diversity of thought. We tend to focus on diversifying through gender, age, and ethnicity, which is much needed, but the digital era requires true cognitive diversity. We need people who think differently, come from varying backgrounds, and who can constructively and collaboratively challenge the current thinking.

Only when we, as Directors, bring an array of ideas and perspectives to the table can we become a more visionary and effective board—one that thinks big, thinks different, and, best of all, thinks digital.

Dr. Anita Sands is an independent board director, investor, advisor, speaker, step-mom to 5 young adults & mom to baby Rosie. She, and her husband John, split their time between San Francisco and NYC. All comments personal.

The post The Incumbents Digital Dilemma: Why Digital Disruption Demands New Skills in the Boardroom appeared first on OpenView Labs.

07 Nov 16:24

Connect the Dots: Lead Qualification and Customer Experience

by David Cunningham

In the B2B space, customer experience is primarily thought of as a post-sale concern. Once a potential customer has converted, then it’s time to pull out all the stops and show that customer that they made the right choice. However, this traditional outlook on customer experience means marketers are missing out on a serious opportunity…. better lead qualification.

While prospects aren’t customers yet, the overarching goal is to convert as many of them into paying customers as possible. However, marketers first need to separate the good leads who show genuine interest in conversion from the leads that are either simply browsing, or have no intention of actually converting into a customer.

To do this, marketers need to understand their prospects. Specifically, marketers need to understand their unique questions, pain points, and interests in order to align marketing efforts toward accurate lead qualification and disqualification to help bring the right leads to sales.

With this in mind, focusing on providing better customer experience across every touchpoint can help deliver value while providing an opportunity to understand potential customers on a granular level. Ultimately, these insights allow marketers to qualify leads quickly and effectively.

There’s just one problem… many B2B organizations are falling short on delivering the customer experience prospects expect. A staggering 73 percent of B2B buyers indicate their standards for customer experience are higher than ever, yet 45 percent report that organizations are falling short of these expectations.

(Source.)

To illustrate the importance of CX in B2B marketing — and the impact it can have on business results — another study found 84 percent of organizations that focus on quality customer experience across the sales cycle report an increase in revenue .

In this post, we’re diving into a few concrete ideas to get you started on this customer-centric journey and help connect the dots between lead qualification and customer experience. Take a look:

1. Answer Questions

From the top of the funnel to the bottom, all B2B prospects have questions. Whether they’re specific questions about a product or service, or high-level questions about business enablement and overall benefits, one thing is certain: the organizations that can quickly answer prospect questions stand out.

There’s plenty of opportunity for B2B marketers to help their organization stand out, too. Given the fact that it now takes between six to eight touchpoints before a lead is ready to become sales qualified, marketers have a number of chances to answer questions that lead to better customer service.

Knowing this, marketers need to pay attention to the questions their prospective customers are asking across the sales cycle. Leveraging tools like interactive assessments or PDFs, marketers can quickly provide the relevant content and engagements that answer key questions. In doing so, potential customers will have an easier time navigating the buyer’s journey, and will be less likely to turn to a competitor for the answers they need.

2. Solve a Problem

If all prospects have questions, you can bet they also have problems. In fact, “solving a pain point” was the most important criteria for 81 percent of B2B buyers making purchase decisions last year.

While traditional customer experience aims to solve problems that are based on helping customers utilize the product or service they’ve purchased, potential customers have problems of their own.

This provides marketers with an opportunity to establish their business as a resource for its target audience by developing content that’s helpful and relevant to the needs of B2B buyers.

via GIPHY

Across the sales cycle, potential customers are looking for services that can solve the problems unique to their organization. While a current customer is concerned with getting the most from a purchase, prospective customers have different problems – namely:

  • Choosing the right product or service that matches their business need
  • Getting enough information to take to key decision-makers
  • Finding the right resources and content to help reach a buying decision
  • Understanding the key differences between competing organizations

Simply put, marketers that can identify and solve these kinds of problems will provide a higher calibre customer experience than the marketers that can’t. Moreover, identifying and addressing these problems head-on help marketers understand which consumers are actively researching, and need more nurturing, from the leads that are ready to pick up the phone for a conversation with the sales team.

To help solve the unique problems that B2B buyers have before they convert, marketers need the ability to provide fluid, relevant engagements that connect prospects with answers.

In this effort, tools like interactive whitepapers and infographics help turn static resources into question-answering machines by providing unique engagements based on the particular needs of those engaging with them.

By instantly connecting possible customers with the answers they want, the moment they want them, marketers get a better understanding of their location within the sales funnel as well as their buying intentions.

3. Ask for Your Prospects’ Input

Across the B2B space, potential customers are spoiled for choice. There are scores of competing businesses offering similar products and services from which they can choose based on the unique needs their organization has. Yet, regardless of the organization a B2B buyer engages with, there is a common expectation: that the prospect is valued.

With this in mind, the input gathered from leads across the sales funnel helps provide two distinct customer experience benefits. One, it indicates that their experience, and moreover they themselves, are valued. Two, it helps identify the strengths and weaknesses of marketing efforts across the sales cycle.

By bringing prospective customers into the fold and asking them for their unique point of view, marketers are providing a tailored customer experience that lets them know they’re valued for more than the potential purchase they’re looking to make.

Additionally, prospect input is a great way to quickly and accurately gather insights that help qualify leads, which allow marketers and salespeople alike to better direct their efforts toward the right leads.

For example, if marketers notice a lead rapidly engaging with top-funnel content, then suddenly stopping, they can use interactive polls and surveys to understand what is working and where the organization can improve.

4. Make the Customer Experience Entertaining

Unlike its B2C counterpart, B2B marketing has a reputation for relatively dry and corporate marketing. For those engaging with B2B content, this translates to an all-too-similar customer experiences across the organizations. In other words, the engagements marketers provide customers can lack the human touch that can make someone choose a particular brand.

Considering the fact that 88 percent of B2B organizations leverage some form of content marketing, it can be easy to fall into the trap of consistent, flat content that leaves audiences less than wowed.

(Source.)

We know what you’re thinking: focusing on entertainment value doesn’t communicate the things B2B buyers need to know, or even care about. While this may be true for organizations focusing on entertaining prospects first and foremost, it certainly doesn’t have to be the case! B2B engagements can provide the relevant and useful information that moves leads down the sales funnel while still being fun and entertaining.

Take this informative version of “Candy Land,” aptly named “Content Land,” for example. Fun, simple, and completely different than traditional content, it provides audiences with a fresh way to learn about content marketing best practices that keeps the viewer engaging with branded content without getting bored.

With a creative lens, marketers can both inform and entertain, which is likely to increase engagement. More engagement = more opportunity to understand that potential customer and better nurture him or her toward conversion.

Final Thoughts

Customer experience in the B2B space continues to be a post-sale afterthought. However, across the sales cycle, marketers that provide quality customer experience stand to build better relationships with potential customers, and in doing so, unlock opportunities to for better lead qualification and ultimately,revenue growth.

07 Nov 16:21

How to Position High Level Employees as Trusted Thought Leaders

by Bernie Borges

The concept of people serving their industry as “thought leaders” is fairly new, but in the digital world, it’s a vital one for B2B leaders to understand and leverage. On this episode of Social Business Engine, Bernie’s guest is Xenia Muntean, CEO of Planable. Xenia is an entrepreneur and an emerging thought leader on the topic of digital marketing. She’s been featured in Forbes as one of the Top 100 Forbes Women Entrepreneurs, and has spoken at Cannes Lions.

On this episode, Xenia shares her journey from digital marketing agency owner to technology platform entrepreneur. You’ll also hear Xenia explain the business challenge that she’s passionate about solving and how her team is enabling companies to empower their top employees to be effective representatives of the brand – and most importantly, be seen as trusted thought leaders who amplify the message and mission of their companies.

The Development Of Thought Leaders Is Vital For B2B Brands

B2C brands have long used influencers to promote and communicate their messages. Celebrity endorsements and spokespeople are great examples we all understand. But B2B brands have had a much harder time using personalities to influence others regarding their brand.

Xenia points out that the advent of digital media makes that a problem of the past, brands just need to figure out how to use the available tools to do what their B2C counterparts have long done effectively. Her conviction is that brands can leverage their top employees as thought leaders in their industry by effectively equipping them to speak for the brand in a way that is consistent with the brand message and voice.

She recommends brands look for senior employees who already have significant experience in the industry and who already share things about what the company is doing. Couple those employees with social media experts and you have a winning combination. Listen to hear how Xenia recommends brands start their own form of influencer marketing – including practical ways to create relevant, powerful content for them to share, on this episode.

How To Encourage Busy Team Members To Become Brand Thought Leaders

High-level employees became high-level because they are serious about the work they do and they get results. That means their schedules are appropriately filled with high-level activities. Given that fact, asking them to become an integral part of a thought leadership initiative could feel like “just another thing” for them to cram into their hectic schedules. What’s the solution?

Xenia says that the first step to creating an all-star team of influencers for your brand is to notice who is already showing a proclivity toward this kind of social sharing. Those are the employees who already see the value, so enlist them as part of your pioneering thought leadership team. As you get started with those people and see success from what they are doing, use their stories to encourage others to get on board.

Bernie says it’s like bowling pins – when you hit the pin that is front and center, it starts the chain-reaction that takes the rest of the pins down. In this situation, as you enlist the natural influencers within your team who are already doing great work, you’ll soon see others who respect them eager to join the cause.

Xenia explains how to gather your team, how to assess the digital tools you’ll need to effectively work as a team, and much more, so be sure you listen.

Every Brand Needs Guardrails For Its Social Media Voice And Image

For many brands, the idea of employees communicating via social media on behalf of the company is a scary proposition. What if they say something off-message? What if their style or personality reflects poorly on the company? Aren’t you putting the company’s image and reputation at risk with this kind of strategy?

Xenia Mutean insists that the pros outweigh the cons by a large margin. One of the main reasons is that studies have shown that employees are by far the greatest source of influence a brand has. Wisely guiding employees to take advantage of that fact on behalf of the brand only makes sense provided they have the right tools to make it easy.

In this episode, Xenia explains how brands can enlist and empower employees to be trusted thought leaders who represent the brand accurately on social media channels. An important aspect of how that is accomplished is through the guardrails the company’s leadership establishes around the sharing of content. Be sure to listen, Xenia walks a wise line between being too restrictive and not restrictive enough, so don’t miss out on the insights that she shares.

Featured on This Episode

Outline of This Episode

  • [2:05] The interesting background and motivation Xenia has around this topic
  • [3:42] Why thought leadership is vital for brands in the B2B space
  • [6:20] Influencers and thought leaders in your company need appropriate content to share
  • [10:00] What’s the best way to enlist employees to become brand thought leaders?
  • [11:42] What tools and technology makes sense for this kind of collaboration?
  • [14:21] The training involved in building out this influencer content team
  • [15:48] Are there guardrails brand leaders should establish for employees?
  • [20:32] How should the results of these influencer programs be measured?
  • [26:39] Why this approach is a win-win-win for the business, their team, and their customers

Resources & People Mentioned