Monthly Archives: December 2014

Announcing THE 2015 B2B Marketing prediction!

DEACM

I love this time of year, along with the parties, presents, general cheer and happiness there is also the liberal giving of opinions, thoughts, guesstimations and general predictions for the forthcoming year, and marketing, like many other disciplines, participates in this with gusto.

So without wanting to feel left-out or robbing the general public of my own crystal ball like vision, I’ve decided to post a short article on what I sincerely believe is the future of B2B marketing certainly for 2015 and probably into 2016.

We’ve had over the last few years social media, mobile and content marketing, outbound to inbound, SEO and SEM to name but a few, as a focus for marketing departments, and with this have seen a general maturing of both companies and customers in the use and expectations of the various digital marketing platforms.

What I now see as departments and people ripen in their grasp of digital marketing, is an inevitable and logical move to Digital Engagement And Collaboration Marketing (DEACM) in 2015. As companies come to terms with content marketing and understand that long-winded highly technical documents tend to only be appreciated by the author, or that ‘matey’ banter only works at your local watering hole and very rarely on-line in a B2B, there will be a general acceptance that the purpose of good content is to engage your target audience, and that your target audience is expecting good content. Once engaged though, what happens next?

The B2C generalised expectation is that you will by the item you came to the site for, However in a B2B, that is often not the case. With longer cycle purchase journeys and products that can be too costly to purchase online, there is a need to build on the engaged content, to maintain the relationship with the customer. This is the key value of DEACM…Collaboration! I believe we will see probably toward the end of 2015 a drive to encourage customers to collaborate around the content, discuss it’s merits, share examples, challenge and even disagree. I believe the openness of companies to encourage candid discussions and feedback, suggestions and comments will significantly and positively impact growth as customers move from sceptics to loyal brand ambassadors. A transition built on the development of trust between vendor and customer, and built from great content that encourages engagement and collaboration.

I suspect this doesn’t sound like rocket science to anyone, and it isn’t. However, in the B2B space, a segment that significantly lags behind its B2C sibling, it is. It has been a forced march for digital marketing in B2B’s over the last 18 months, with very steep learning curves. This has had pro’s and con’s, the cons – B2B’s are not delivering digital engagements their customers expect, the pros – they can take advantage of all the good work other digital marketing teams have done and learn how to adapt them for what is a very different and sceptical user community, that of the business buyer.

This is something I strongly believe in and will provide an update to this article in April as I deliver on this exact topic.

That’s enough from my crystal ball gazing, I want to take this opportunity to wish you all a wonderful Christmas /Holiday break and a Happy New Year.

Crystal-Ball

DEACM, you heard it here first!

 

 

 

Carve your own path – Fashion v Function

Selecting the right tools

Selecting the right tools

As Christmas / the Holidays rolls rapidly along, and people’s minds start musing on just how much money is deemed an acceptable amount of money with which one can buy oneself a present, without it appearing self-indulgent/greedy/selfish, I’ve started wondering what makes people choose, what is often the wrong tech?!

I’m thinking specifically about work and the professional environment here, that started this train of thought! I recently acquired a Blackberry Passport for work. I could have chosen any device, but find that the BB does exactly what I need from a work device…email, opening and editing Office docs without the need for reformatting, my full work calendar and a battery that lasts me a full day (over 2 days to be precise) etc. So if it can do all this, why are iPhones or Android devices so coveted by professionals and in the work place? Apps I hear – and often read – are the big difference. But what apps do I actually need that I can’t get on a BB? Maps, got them. Browser, got it. Whatsapp, yup. LinkedIn, yes. So I can only surmise then that its more fashionable and perhaps a status symbol, as I struggle to see that there is truly any additional value an iPhone for example brings, compared to a less expensive BB.

This thought carries across to tablets too. So many companies are iPad crazy. Again, why? The Windows tablets are perfect for the workplace. You can get all you mail accounts, open and edit Office docs again with ease etc. So whats the fuss with the iPad? Retina display, do you really care when using a device at work? I’m not sure it makes any discernible difference! Fashion over function!

Marketing Trends

So then I started thinking about digital marketing activity. At the moment content marketing is all the rage. Why? is it because some agency stated that it should be? Is there some digital marketing path that we should all be following? Who says we should be focused on this, especially when there’s no conclusive data that says it works. It feels to me like someone makes a suggestion and everyone, again to be seen to be doing the right thing (on trend), jumps on the train. Is it about content, or value? Inbound or outbound?

My suggestion and advice is, do what you/your business needs to do. All these trends and fashions might work for one, but certainly not all. It should be about fit for purpose not a fashionable fit!