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5 Best Practices for a Great B2B Website


ClickZ

Recently I’ve been helping one of my clients redesign its online presence. As we all know, our website is our brand’s front door – just as important, if not more so, than our company’s physical presence. It’s how potential clients learn more about our brand, and where existing clients will go to stay connected with us. When executed well, a great B2B website can do the job of 100 salespeople, scaling your message to the masses and helping drive loads of revenue. They can help with retention, upselling, and help facilitate customer service. So, why are so many of them so terrible?

In general, a great B2B website does five things:

1. Gets users the information they came for quickly. Ad specs, contact info, you name it. Run a survey with your visitors – or look at your Google Analytics to see which pages generate the most engagement – to determine the reason they’re coming to your site; put those items in a location that’s easily accessible, like the footer.

Continue reading… 

 

Lack of Trading Transparency Heightens Agency-Advertiser Tensions

MediaPost

A new study from the World Federation of Advertisers and Europe’s Festival of Media, the trade show organizer, illustrates continuing tensions within marketer-agency relationships. The study, which quizzed both advertisers and agencies, concludes that most marketers believe that agency trading desks — used to buy various forms of digital media — are a “threat to transparency.” They make it harder for clients to understand the true cost of the media they are purchasing.

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ANA: Clients Challenge Agencies To Cut Ad, Marketing Budgets

MediaPost

The recession may be officially over, but marketers are under increasing pressure to find cost savings and reductions in their marketing and advertising budgets. Those efforts will impact ad shops, as many clients are asking their agencies to identify potential cost cuts that go beyond merely trimming ad-spending budgets.

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OMD’s Next Big Thing Is Just A Bunch Of Hacks (And Why That’s A Good Thing)

MediaPost 

In what likely is the first initiative of its kind by a major ad agency and its clients, Omnicom’s OMD unit brought some of its biggest brands together with some of the app communities’ most innovative developers to create new digital media experiences that could change the way consumers interact with brands. The initiative, which culminated in a 48-hour “hackathon” at an empty ping pong hall in downtown Manhattan, generated nearly 50 new applications for experiencing music on ad-supported online music service Spotify, some of which are already being optioned by the OMD client brands that participated.

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Email Newsletters Convert Best For B2B; Sales Emails For B2C

MediaPost

Results from an Econsultancy survey released in February, conducted in partnership with the Email Experience Council of the DMA, and reported by Marketing Charts, show that 55% of client side marketers are using lead source to personalize/segment their mailings, while 53% are using demographic data. And, although only 49% currently personalize emails based on behavior, including recent purchase, time on site, and pages viewed, almost one-quarter plan to do so in the near future. By contrast, the proportion who already factor in business information is roughly equal to those who have no plans to do so (46% vs. 45%).

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Essential social media advice for B2B companies

ragan.com

Sometimes it seems business-to-consumer companies get all the attention. Not this time. Here’s one for the business-to-business communicators. In my column last week, I addressed some of the characteristics that make those brands with several million Facebook fans so successful. Though my piece focused on business-to-consumer interaction, several commenters astutely pointed out a dearth of business-to-business best practices in social media. My work now deals mainly with B2C clients, but I’ve had plenty of experience working with B2B companies, and I’ve seen their challenges in trying to be consistent and relevant in the social space.

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What It Takes to Cultivate and Keep High-End Business Clients

Personal Branding Magazine, Feb. 2012

By Howard Sholkin

What It Takes to Cultivate and Keep High-End Business Clients

The business-to-business (btob) segment of our economy is sometimes overlooked but it is fundamental to how businesses and organizations buy goods and services to operate each day.  Some of the country’s largest corporations are primarily btob such as GE, IBM, Boeing, Raytheon, and Oracle.

I interviewed two executives focused on btob markets:  Michael Friedenberg, president & CEO, IDG Enterprise with media and event brands including CIO, Computerworld, InfoWorld, and Network World; and David Bernstein, associate publisher, BtoB for marketers and Media Business for the media industry.

Relationships, communications, and commitment

While Friedenberg and Bernstein serve different markets, they share some similar views.  They both emphasize the importance of relationships, communications, and commitment by high-end clients to repeat business.  “A high-end customer uses at least two media platforms including digital, events, custom solutions, and/or print,” explained Friedenberg whose clients include the largest technology vendors and agencies who serve them.  He said these clients have an in-depth plan to reach their prospects in IT, security, and finance professions, the same people who are IDG Enterprise readers, site visitors, and event attendees.

Bernstein, a media sales executive for 17 years, looks for a customer who wants to reach marketers across industries and who “regularly uses BtoB to meet marketing objectives and to do their jobs better.”  Bernstein adds that a high-end customer is not necessarily a high spender.  At IDG Enterprise, “The high-end customer spends 13 times more per year than the average customer,” noted Friedenberg. While high-end clients make up 30% of IDG Enterprise’s business, at BtoB the high-end represents more than 50%.

Not Just Order Taking

Both executives underscore the need for expectation setting and consultative selling.  “Continual conversation on goals and objectives and how we can work together to drive results for our customers forms the basis for a high-end relationship,” according to Friedenberg, a 20 year sales and management executive in technology media.  For Bernstein “communication is not just asking for the order but also working with clients as an extension of their marketing team.”  Friedenberg echoed those comments when he said; “With trust and an open dialogue our customers let us ‘inside’ to understand their challenges and allow our team to propose new programs to meet the marketers’ goals.”

Both recognize the strategic partnership that goes with high-end clients where services and advice play key roles.  For example, at IDG Enterprise, Avaya grew into a high-end account starting with online advertising and in-person events.  “With Avaya’s willingness to try different tactics to tell its story,” Friedenberg explained, “Avaya and IDG developed a custom program, the CIO Debate Series, which includes buyer research, multimedia content, IT executive participation, and the social web.”  He mentioned the adage that it is five times more expensive to find a new customer than to keep an existing one.

Finding High-End Clients

IDG Enterprise and BtoB mix direct selling with a variety of marketing programs.  BtoB leans on newsletters, print and online ads, the social web, and in-person events to find the next high-end client.  IDG Enterprise prospects with a blend of corporate, product, and field marketing programs via newsletters, social media, email, and events.

Neither Friedenberg nor Bernstein mentioned a marketer’s title as a high-end indicator.  As Bernstein pointed out, “in this economy all prospects need to be considered high-end potential because a small opportunity can ultimately grow into something big.”

 

Mediabrands Adopts Pay-For-Performance, Seiler Calls Other Models ‘Horrible Disservice’

MediaPost

IPG Mediabrands will move to a pay-for-performance model that links the agency’s performance and compensation to the clients’ business outcome, according to global CEO Matt Seiler. Other ways create a “horrible disservice” to clients, he said. “It’s simple, if our clients don’t achieve their business plan, we don’t get paid.”

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Goin’ To Meetin’

MediaPost

According to the American Express Meetings & Events “2012 Meetings Forecast,” 60% of meeting suppliers around the world expect the number of meetings planned to increase next year. Among those surveyed, 42% of North American, 50% of Latin American, 51% of European and 57% of Asian respondents see signs of increased activity from their clients.

Issa Jouaneh, vice president and general manager, American Express Meetings & Events, says “… even in the face of economic uncertainty, meeting industry stakeholders appear to be cautiously optimistic as they report an increase in services and property demand from clients… “
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