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My buddy Gary Slack is about to launch Bizy, a new Website offering small businesses the same bargains on business products and services you'd find on consumer goods and services on Groupon.
Businesses can procure things like payroll services, janitorial services, trucks and vans, meeting rooms and retreat facilities, smartphones and more.
The projected average savings will be 50 percent.
Gary heads the Chicago-based B2B marketing firm Slack & Company, which helped launch eBay Business.
So he knows what he's doing.
When launched, the site will serve Chicagoans, although most of the deals offered will come from national companies. It will roll out beyond Chicago afterwards.
Bizy will be a great way for B2B sellers to introduce themselves to large numbers of buyers.
Good luck, Gary!
BNET columnist Steve Tobak provides a peek inside Apple in his article "10 Ways to Think Different."
"Apple’s culture is like a genetic mutation of the corporate America genome," Tobak writes. "A mutation that should be studied and replicated wherever possible."
One way Apple thinks different?
It "gets" marketing.
"Marketing is the one great weakness of the technology industry. For some reason, high-tech CEOs don’t get it, understand it, or value it as they should."
By that, Tobak means the company devotes real resources to dreaming up better mousetraps. "Apple spends a great deal of effort divining the next big thing—figuring out what people want—even when they don’t know it themselves."
Apple also "gets" highly orchestrated marcom.
"Few companies truly get communications and PR the way Apple does," Tobak writes.
"A big part of its formula for creating a buzz like no other company is its famous secretiveness. Considering the sheer number of people, companies, and news outlets that would give anything for a tip, virtually nothing leaks until Apple’s ready to spill it."
Got marketing?
In her blog, Ardath Albee (my favorite B2B marketing guru), laments marketers' obsession with lead generation.
Leads are like kids. Generating a bunch means little, if you don't nurture them as well.
"Lead generation is a hello and a handshake," she writes. "Lead nurturing is the art of building a relationship with purpose. Big difference."
Albee cites new research from Marketing Profs that shows marketers consider their primary goals to be (in order) branding, customer retention and lead generation. Lead nurturing is the last goal on the list.
Marketers are missing the boat.
As Albee notes, someone who "opts in" isn't really a "lead." She's just a gal who's interested in information you're offering. She'll never become your customer unless she's cultivated.
That's because, at this early stage, she isn't "sales-ready." She's just educating herself.
"The evidence exists that buyers spend more time self-educating via the Internet than they do in conversations with salespeople. There's also proof that, due to this change, sales is only invited into the last one-third of the buying process."
If you're not providing the continuing education she needs, you're not cultivating that gal.
Worse, if you're tossing her name to sales, mixed in with a bunch of other so-called "leads," what do you think happens to her when sales discovers she's not ready to buy?
The short answer: like a lot of children, she's neglected. That's sad.
"What's the benefit of spending all that budget to let non sales-ready prospects languish unattended?" Albee asks.
None.
Times are tough. Nothing's certain. Fear is rampant.
On the blog for Harvard Business Review, movie magnate Peter Guber warns that "if leaders don't tell and sell a purposeful story that incites their employees, partners, investors, boards of directors, and other stakeholders to manage fear, confront uncertainty, and collaborate with change, someone else will write their future."
So what is a purposeful story? Guber defines it as a "a vehicle that puts facts into an emotional context."
A purposeful story is "built to create suspense and engage your listener in its call to action."
But a purposeful story also lays to rest your audience's fears, Guber says. "Leaders must tell a story that makes fear an ally, not an adversary, ultimately conveying the message that fear—F.E.A.R—is 'false evidence appearing real.'"
By way of illustration, Guber recounts how he convinced Loews to build super-mulitplex theaters in Manhattan in the early 1990s.
Loews resisted his idea for the mammoth movie theaters, afraid the city was already overbuilt. So Guber turned to storytelling.
"I first engaged them with a question. I asked: What if a group of hungry people went into a large food emporium? If one particular food was missing or sold out, there was so much else there they could choose from.
"We should make movies that people consume emotionally with the same availability as a food court. If the movie that brought you to the theater is sold out, there were 15 or 16 other movies to consume and enjoy."
Loews bought Guber's tale and built the theaters, which became "an enormous success."
Guber believes purposeful storytelling provides people a form of "emotional transportation" that can move them from Point A to B.
"Your story and its supporting facts transport the people who hear them to carry your story forward," he writes. "Good stories, well told, turn people into apostles and advocates of your brand, service, mission or cause."
Do you have a story to tell?
In his blog this week, social media maven Chris Brogan crystal-balls the future of online communities.
Brogan believes tomorrow's communities will be:
Wide-ranging. "People refuse to talk about you all in one place," Brogan says. As a result, marketers will have to invest a lot more time monitoring multiple communities. Keeping up with all of them will be "the hardest thing to manage in the future."
Mobile. They have far to go, but location-based apps will eventually be all the rage, especially for "tribes" of like-minded nomads.
Loyalty-based. Today's loyalty programs are annoyances. "Sign up and we’ll bother you until you buy." But tomorrow's will feel like genuine relationships and provide a "feeling like you’re on the inside."
Cause-oriented. Marketers will build cause into communities in the future. "Putting a bunch of people together who love Snickers bars isn’t all that interesting," Brogan says. "Putting people who love Snickers together to work at a soup kitchen to feed the homeless would be a lot more interesting."
Single-identity. People will stop supplying each and every platform a separate biography. Instead, they'll use identity-sharing tools that allow them to port one profile across all the platforms.
Two-way. In the future, marketers will have to become measurably more engaged in the virtual conversations taking place everywhere. If they don't, "things will go poorly for other efforts to build relationships and sell," Brogan warns. But the added investment won't come easily, because "there’s a lot of time and effort involved, and it’s not directly tied back to obvious or instant revenue."