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Marketing + Technology: Ad Age and BtoB Conference

05/20/2013 New York NY

Digiday Conference & Expo

05/27/2013 - 05/28/2013 New York NY

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06/02/2013 - 06/04/2013 San Francisco CA

tech-business-marketing

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New trends challenge telecoms brands

Warc 

NEW YORK: Brand owners in the telecoms category are facing numerous sources of pressure, with customer loyalty levels and revenues per user in decline as the expense of subsidising devices rises.

PricewaterhouseCoopers, the consultancy, conducted in-depth interviews with 12 major telcos in North America, including Bell Mobility, Sprint Nextel, T-Mobile and Verizon Wireless.

Read more… 

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.”

 

Blogging Declines Across the Inc. 500

ReadWriteWeb 

A new longitudinal study at the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth focusing on the online activities of the Inc. 500 has found a huge drop in the number of companies maintaining corporate blogs over the past year. The UMass researchers, under the direction of Nora Barnes, has been following this group for several years. Only 37% of those interviewed had a corporate blog last year, down from half of those interviewed in 2010.

Read more… 

Magazine Rebound Falls Flat Ad Spending Drops 6.8%, Muting Early Gains, as Marketers Get Economic Jitters

Wall Street Journal

What was expected to be a rebound year for many magazine publishers is ending with a whimper. Worried about the economy, marketers have cut their ad spending in the past couple of months, according to new data and interviews with advertising executives.

To continue reading… 

Social Media Club: Interview Adam Kaufman & Tom Langford

Hyper-Local, Hyper-Social, Hyper-Competitive: The New Journalism”

Are bloggers journalists? Adam Kaufman, new media sports contributor, NESN.com and Tom Langford, a reporter at New England Cable News, answered that question in an interview with Colin Browning, IDG Strategic Marketing Services. Langford answered Browning’s question first…

The entire discussion can now be viewed at
http://itsfreshground.com/2011/06/hyper-everything-video/

Social Media Club: Interview Chuck Tanowitz

“Hyper-Local, Hyper-Social, Hyper-Competitive: The New Journalism”

Are hits, clicks, and other online metrics much different than ratings that influence TV news reporting? Chuck Tanowitz, principal at Fresh Group, a Boston area PR agency, spoke with Colin Browning, IDG Strategic Marketing Services…

The entire discussion can now be viewed at http://itsfreshground.com/2011/06/hyper-everything-video/

Selling to the C-Suite

2/8/10, BtoB

Over the last decade, I was involved with a research project involving CXO-level executives who were interviewed to learn about their relationships with professional salespeople. The research was conducted in North America, Asia and Europe and involved more than 500 interviews with CXO-level executives. The data gave birth to our new book, “Selling to the C-Suite” (McGraw-Hill, 2010).

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