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Sunday, September 27, 2009

The Evolution of Marketing and Communication: How we've arrived at social media...

Social media didn't just happen. We've evolved into a culture that demands immediate, transparent, and authentic communication. We desire this not only with each other, but with the companies and brands with which we affiliate. Understanding how we arrived at this place, and how marketing and communication has evolved helps us understand the context as we move forward.

Read our brief white paper here.




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Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Art imitating life imitating art, or Internet imitating TV, as TV?

For the past couple of weeks I've been on vacation and pulled myself away from Internet and Video business. Well last week I found myself doing something I hadn't had time for most of this summer...flipping through the TV channels. Now call it Law of Attraction, or serendipity, or coincidence, but whatever it was I'm still smiling. Flipping through the channels I stumbled into a new series, i-CAUGHT on ABC.

I was surprised and captivated by the premise...but then again maybe not really surprised because I knew this was coming (is coming). I'd say the feeling was more like "impressed" the by speed and agility of those who brought the show to fruition. It is exactly the evolution I've been telling so many of you about; warning that times are changing, and if you don't recognize this progression of Video-Internet-Television, it may cost your business.

In it's own description of the program ABC claims "...we all know there's a video revolution swirling around us all - 24/7". Interesting. Powerful. Did you know about this revolution? Check out the link above, there is a video introduction of the program that is very compelling.

Its a great time to get involved, and to rethink the ways we do, what it is we do. This is just the beginning, but hold on tight, it could be a very fast ride.

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Wednesday, July 25, 2007

“…B2B communications are NOT in video…”

In a conversation that came about after my last post regarding video as a “relevant “ communication medium in a software development businesses, I found myself facing nearly the same argument from a B2B perspective. My protagonist in this case accepted video and other forms of online media as valuable B2C vehicles but dismissed its presence in Business to Business relationships, management, and information exchanges (hence the quote). So the conversation was interesting and we debated a bit, but I knew I would have to show this individual the face of what he believed non-existent in order to help him reach the first step: Acceptance.

This morning I’m digging around my usual online news centers and thinking about trying to find some recent articles that addressed this evolution in Business communication. As I’m reading a WSJ.com article with some level of consciousness and thinking about my recent conversation, something to the right of my screen caught my eye. There was a movie box playing what “looks like video" of a glass with coins filling it. There were also words posing the questions “Do you invest in IT?”, then “Do you spend IT?”. A few seconds later, I’m recognizing this is exactly what I was talking about. The ad completes and I see Accenture, so I click the box and allow my attention to be directed at their landing page. I smiled widely. This is another place that gets it, and for all those that don’t yet, be concerned.

The landing page presents me a visually pleasing presentation of information on the value prop and solutions. Mid screen is a movie box above which has a blurb describing who the individual in the box is and why I might want to hear from her. This is known as a talking head piece (meaning a head and shoulder shot), and this piece is a video testimonial. Now I’m standing up at my desk I’m so impressed. You have no idea how many times I have advised a client to use video testimonials, they can brilliant! So of course I press play and learn from a very nice, enthusiastic woman, who happens to be a CEO at a major electric organization how Accenture products and service helped her transition her organization to a platform for growth which has lead to a 125% increase in stock. SHWING!

This is not only B2B communication (and marketing)but it is on IT, I mean this is about as dry a well of content as you can drill and they have made it engaging, informative, compelling and the most important quality, relatable. If I am a CEO with enterprise IT needs, I would listen and learn. I would pick up the phone after hearing a piece like that a gazillion times faster than after reading a white paper from …no names…let just say the other guys who don’t yet get it.

Here’s the landing page for Accenture that I saw.

BTW – the article I was reading on WSJ.com was about Dell, HP and others full court press into online video. If you haven’t seen it yet, check out it out. Dell now has a place referred to as Studio Dell that is a library of video content on everything. This is B2C communication evolution.

The WSJ article

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Thursday, July 19, 2007

"How is this relevant to me?"...

Shortly after my last post I received some feedback from a software business owner. He still didn't get how the video "thing" was relevant to his business, outside of say executive presentations. We'd talked previously about screencasts but it had always appeared to this person that they were things to be used after a release as a marketing tool. I guess I never really explained it, it just makes so much sense to me that I figured it was obvious. My bad. Let's start from the top.

When I was actively leading a development team, we worked in a modified agile, product centric way. That means we worked with QA, Doc, ET AL, early; even in design. We delivered work product in quick measurable iterations. The "keeping everyone in the loop thing" works so much better when the loop is manageable. So we bit off bite pieces and cycled through, gaining education and information across each domain every time. This not only decreases time to market, but it takes the "crunch" at the end of a project and dismisses it completely, because by the end, everyone knows what they need to know to execute their part successfully and efficiently. Big point coming up...This included Sales. Video is more than just the sexy, it communicates so much information, so quickly, that it just makes sense to use it.

We used screencasts to get project stakeholders and the sales organization up to speed on the new features as well as the look and feel, before we even hit beta. Letting the sales team get excited about the impending release is a good thing! Furthermore putting a similar screencast of "what's new" out to your beta users is smart. It can get them engaged and ready to use the new release instead of just letting it sit in their "when I've got time for it" pile.

Once you've brought your sales team and maintenance users up to speed; it's time market and demo the bits. Again with the video. If your not using it, you're missing it. Screencasts can be created to highlight the "wow" points of the new release. Putting a 30 sec./1 min. video teaser on the product page and/or landing page has a much higher rate of conversion to contact than a picture or big words with "New!", "Just Released!", or "Version XX!".

Giving the sales team a demo product is common, but unless the prospect is hot, and not busy doing their own job, it can be really difficult to get them through a product demo successfully and with any sense of urgency. But you give your sales team a screencast, or a webcast, or both, and now they have the tools to get the prospects hooked and evaluating the purchase options. These tools reduce the sales cycle significantly. Double check me with stats from all the big guns, it's true.

So with video you can shorten the time to market by making the information flow richer and faster, you can shortened the sales cycle with webcasts and screencasts, and you can increased the rate of conversion for sales by using these tools...I'd say that's pretty relevant.

Here are some businesses that get it (these are not clients, nor am I endorsing their products or services...they are just folks that get it):

www.ecopy.com watch a video that showcases their software

www.ektron.com watch a value prop video

www.fitnh.org watch a non-profit connect donors to the cause

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