blog

Archive for August, 2010

Tim Freestone How Can You Use a Longer Sales Cycle?

August 30th, 2010 - Posted in Solution Provider Services by Tim Freestone

Long sales cycles are frustrating not only because it delays revenue but because they also introduce the risk that you won’t. The longer it takes to bring a prospect from the mouth of the funnel to a closed deal, the greater the likelihood is that you either won’t finalize the relationship or that it will come in at a much lower amount than you expected.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tim Freestone Get Ready to Change Your Twitter Strategy … Again

August 25th, 2010 - Posted in Social Media Marketing by Tim Freestone

Back when Twitter had only 3 million users or so, you could market by developing a rich, high-value following, engaging in conversations with your target market and … well … not really marketing. Now that Twitter has topped 125 million users, using the microblogging service as a newsfeed has become far more effective, even though it ostensibly shuns much of what makes social media “social.” Yet, marketers have adapted to this evolution in Twitter, continuing to find ways to use the service to drive traffic to blogs and websites in the hope of luring prospects into their sales cycle.

And just when you were getting comfortable, it’s all about to change again.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tim Freestone Turn Your Clients’ TCO into ROI

August 23rd, 2010 - Posted in Solution Provider Services by Tim Freestone

For so many IT solutions, TCO is the easiest selling point: it isn’t hard to show a company how it can save some money. When you focus on the cost argument too much, though, you miss a golden opportunity to sell based on ROI, too. Every TCO play has an ROI component, and getting there requires no mental gymnastics.

It’s all about moving resources around … prudently.

Let’s assume your solution can cut TCO for a particular platform by 50 percent in dollars and two full-time employee equivalents. That’s a savings — great! Now, your client needs to know what to do with the “leftover” resources. Raise the issue of redeploying both the cash and the bodies to initiatives that will advance the company in the marketplace. The cost savings becomes fuel for a growth engine.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tim Freestone Four Objectives for Your Corporate Blog

August 18th, 2010 - Posted in Social Media Marketing by Tim Freestone

As you get ready to jump into the social media marketing fray, the draw of just getting started can be powerful. The potential associated with this form of marketing is high, and the pressure to claim your space on the most visible social networks is intense. It’s also fraught with risk, especially if you leap before you look.

Want to make your corporate blog – and Facebook page and Twitter presence – a success? Here are four crucial objectives to focus on:

1. Publishing regularly: this may seem counter-intuitive, as it deals with your company, not your market. Dig a little deeper, though, and you’ll find that both sides of the equation are affected. Without regular content, your market has no reason to engage. Further, it’s challenging to create interesting and useful content regularly, so you need to make that a clear goal.

Objective to set: frequency of publication

Read the rest of this entry »

Tim Freestone Ready Your Clients for “Next”

August 16th, 2010 - Posted in Solution Provider Services by Tim Freestone

Do you spend sales appointments talking about yesterday’s news? That’s what everyone else is doing! Make your company stand out: help your clients understand what’s on the horizon. Get them set for the future, and you’ll deliver a far better ROI case — for them and for you.

The cost and return benefits associated with conventional IT solutions are inherently constrained. They are known quantities, innovation that has become standard. To provide outsized value, you need to introduce your client’s to what hasn’t become widely adopted yet, and implement technology that will keep them ahead of the game.

How does this work?

Read the rest of this entry »

Corporate Blogging Starts at Home

August 13th, 2010 - Posted in Social Media Marketing by Tom Johansmeyer

Either you’ve been tasked with starting your company’s blog, or you just think it’s a good idea. Now what?

Unless you’ve already dipped a toe in the blogging pond, the entire experience can seem overwhelming. Since any corporate marketing initiative comes with a lead time – consisting of everything from design and development to legal approvals – the best first step is to start a blog of your own. As your company is going through the necessary machinations, you can take the time to get a feel for what blogging is.

This may seem like a big step, but it’s actually rather tame. Don’t spend too much time planning (or worrying about what you’ll write). Just head over to WordPress, register and look around.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tim Freestone Are You Studying Your Market?

August 11th, 2010 - Posted in Solution Provider Services by Tim Freestone

It’s tough to stay current. After all, you already have a full-time job (you know, servicing clients), and making time to keep up with technology sector developments isn’t easy — it has to come at the expense of something else. Skip this effort at your own risk, though. Our market moves quickly, and something as simple as keeping an eye on new products and solutions from your IT manufacturing partners can be a powerful differentiator.

Here are three ways you can keep up with the market:

Read the rest of this entry »

Tim Freestone Four Ways to Get Ready for a Sales Call

August 11th, 2010 - Posted in Social Media Marketing by Tim Freestone

A successful sales call requires preparation. You can’t just glance at your notes in the parking lot and assume the rest will take care of itself. Fortunately, you have plenty of information at your disposal, maybe even more than you realize. For your next appointment, keep the following in mind:

1. Study what you have: we give our clients detailed sales intelligence for every appointment. Read it carefully, and collaborate with colleagues for additional insights.

2. Read between the lines: is there something the prospect isn’t saying? Sometimes, a handful of pain points can suggest a greater underlying problem.

3. Hit the web: learn more about both the person and the company … Google exists for a reason! Check LinkedIn for the prospect’s background; you may learn something useful.

4. Gather materials: pull white papers, brochures and other tools that align closely with the prospect’s pain points. It’s great to have something to leave behind.

How Mature Is Your Social Media Marketing Program?

August 9th, 2010 - Posted in Social Media Marketing, Strategy by Tom Johansmeyer

B2B social media marketers are in the early and middle stages of their efforts, according to a study by MarketingSherpa. The survey finds that, almost independent of social media marketing category, trial programs and transitions (to strategic roles) are most common, with relatively few companies using these tools strategically.

Overall, 33 percent of companies are in the Trial Phase, with 40 percent in the Transition Phase. While this constitutes an overwhelming majority, the fact that 23 percent of social media marketers have moved into the Strategic Phase is actually promising. Businesses are moving into this advanced state – and they are using social media to drive returns.

[Source: MarketingSherpa]

Tim Freestone Be Aggressive: Don’t Wait for Your Corporate Blog to Work

August 9th, 2010 - Posted in Social Media Marketing by Tim Freestone

Organic growth translates to missed opportunities. When you launch your corporate blog, don’t sit back and wait for readers to come to you … and then wait some more for them to step into your sales cycle. Instead, seek them out, and use your blog as a first step in lead qualification.

Combine direct and social media marketing, and you’ll gain a powerful demand generation tool.

Blogs do have a tendency to be discovered (i.e., to gain readers). Whether it’s through searches, a link on your website, a PR effort or tweets and status updates, traffic happens … it just happens slowly. And since high-value readers are likely to be only a small portion of your organic traffic, you could be waiting quite a bit before your social media marketing effort generates any leads. Take a proactive approach, and this changes drastically and quickly.

Read the rest of this entry »