Just on a hunch I googled the term "industry leading." In the past week, the technology world has 11,640 leaders. According to Dow Jones there are only 5,000 startup in the US at any given time.
That takes some effort to listen and be aware of what the opportunities actually are but if you ignore them you do so at at your own peril. Throughout my career as a professional communicator I come across clients who are absolutely sure they know who their audience is. Invariably they are wrong.Let me give you an example. Many years ago I counseled a semiconductor company that had a great business selling components to Apple for the iPod. They sold almost 30 percent of all their product to Apple. They knew that Apple was never going away. In our research into the effectiveness of their content we found what seemed to be a discrepancy. We knew that there were multiple product groups that the client’s technology would fit, but they were focused only on the iPod team. We told them they needed to start a focus on development teams. They responded, “We know who to talk to, you just concentrate on putting out press releases.” Six months later, at a trade show, two Apple team managers came ...
When you boil down attitudes toward and execution of social media practices, it's all about leadership. Real leadership, not the popular definition that rises from the horrific misinterpretation of Geoffrey Moore's book, Crossing the Chasm . Let me explain that reference a bit more in depth first. Moore stated fairly simply that for a technology company to be successful, it must attain the perception of leadership in a market niche. The misinterpretation of that concept is what screws up the marketing for so many companies. Moore's statement was an indicator of success and a strategy, not a tactic. If you are the perceived market niche leader, Moore explains, THEN you know you successfully crossed the chasm. Therefore your marketing strategy must revolve around developing the perception of leadership. However, most companies believe that saying you are a leader in your marketing documents, even when you are clearl...
I received a few emails from a content services vendor this week (Here’s a suggestion…did you get my email… have you read my email…) and after getting over the initial annoyance of a rookie PR gaffe I decided to look into the suggestion while I made coffee. My response is this blog post. The vendor was Venngage which has a nifty online tool for creating infographics for distribution on digital media, and competes with dozens of similar online tools. The offer was a very long white paper on engagement that, to their credit, had no blatant push to buy their service, but it wasn’t completely subtle. The premise of the white paper is “content that people share is a good thing.” In fact, if anyone from Venngage sends you the link to the paper, I just saved you a who lot of time because you don’t have to read it now. That is all it says, but with lots of statistics before they get to the point. It’s true that a metric of content engagement is, in fact, how many people in your audience share...
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