Tag Archives: Small business

Grace Under Pressure – Why No Hardship is No Good

The economy is struggling, and small businesses have been hit the hardest. However, amid all the downsizing and leveling of growth there are lessons to be learned, ones which are forgotten in better economic times.

Money Means Frills – As a business owner, its easy to be seduced by things you think you need, especially when those in the same industry think they need them as well. I’m talking about spending money on premium designs and logos, fat stacks of high-gloss business cards, cutting edge ad space, and automated phone systems. As good as these made me feel, I honestly don’t think any of them really helped me make money. Sure they may have moved some more product, but too often they were tacked on expenses that didn’t do that much good. These upgrades are nice, but in times like these such investments should do two things: get customers to choose you over others, and keep them once they’ve done that. If it doesn’t do that, its probably a waste.

Debt and Focus – Reduced cash streams gets you focused on what matters. Less money means your unique sales pitch has to be absolutely top notch, since you can’t hide behind gimmicky layouts and flashy websites (see above). You have to rely on value alone. Your customers need to remember and talk about your products. In the end, low-budget marketing campaigns based on serious commitment to an excellent service is fun, authentic, and memorable, not to mention affordable.

Character. Innovation. Success. “Wax on. Wax off.” Like the Karate Kid, getting back to the fundamentals of business discipline will only generate revenue, and perhaps uncover possibilities you hadn’t seen before. Remember the scene from Gone With the Wind where Scarlet O’Hara makes a dress out of curtains so she can get $300. Desperate times lead to desperate measures, but ‘desperate measures’ often means efficient, bottom-line success.

“Bootstrapping”

For many of us, the idea of roughing it means reducing cell phone minutes. Here are a few guidelines for what effective reduced-cost strategizing should mean.

  1. Know who your customer, their needs, and why they would choose you. Answers to these three questions will help streamline your marketing decisions. If they’re hard to answer, think about other companies you go to as a customer. If you like Starbucks, describe yourself, what you look for in coffee, and why you go to Starbucks. Do the same thing for your favorite PC, insurance company, department store. Think about how your needs are being met, and do the same with your own business. And never be afraid to ask your customers!
  2. Tracking Expenses – Everything. And written down. Enacting a strategy where every coffee and ink cartridge gets recorded reduces these nearly invisible bleeds, and may even expose places where a significant amount of money could be saved. A little self-accounting could go a long, long way.
  3. Referral System – Referrals happen. They’re also great for business. Why not structure a simple referral rewards program that incentivizes loyal customers to spread word about your business and gives them a selling sheet to work from. Not only will your customers hear exactly what sets your company apart, your ideal customer, your campaigns, and how you treat new customers (reinforcing their loyalty to the business) but also generate new income by effectively drawing in new customers. All this for typing up a simple sheet!
  4. Embrace the Internet – Social media tools like blogs, LinkedIn, and Twitter can be thought of as “digital billboards.” Gone are the days of these as gimmicky, new-fangled arenas. They’ve been proven to increase communication with your customer base. Not only that, but your company appears up to date on the latest technological trends, and all this for free. Nowadays when people ask if you have a website, you don’t want to be the person who says no.

Companies who economize know the importance of close relationships. They know that loyalty and honesty are what matter most, and that will thrive in any economy.

Does Influence Really Matter?

This article originally appeared on the AMEX Open Forum blog —  I wrote it to get people to seriously think about authority and influence.

Currently, Small Business Trends is running the SMBInfluencer’s Award; for which Survey Analytics has been nominated as an SMBInfluencer — you can see their nomination here and vote for them as well as any other gurus, companies and media organizations.

I’ve been thinking a lot about influence lately.  It seems that I’m not the only one.  Influence isn’t just for celebrities any more.  Small business has gotten into the game as well.  Mike Michalowicz wrote an article that talked about how you can grow your business by connecting with influencers.  And Guy Kawasaki gives us a real life example of  how you can create a path for influencing behavior by setting up an environment for easy compliance.

Why Influencers Matter to Small Business?

Influencers matter to your small business in the same way that segmentation matters to your marketing message – they simplify and cut the cost of communicating to large groups of people.

We’ve been conditioned to think of celebrities as influencers because a single mention from them can set product sales soaring.  During the times of network media domination, small businesses rarely got to participate in this kind of promotion.  But the advent of new media with its wide reaching social networks has suddenly made it possible (even easy) for small businesses to reach their target audience by investing their time rather than money.

Move Over Oprah!

Social networks have made it possible for experts in any area of industry to have their voices heard and to gain a loyal and responsive audience.  I’m specifically talking about people like John Jantsch, the author of Duct Tape Marketing, Robert Scoble, a technology evangelist from Microsoft and publisher of the Scobleizer blog and Anita Campbell, who reaches over 2,000,000 small business owners with her award winning publication Small Business Trends and is launching the first Small Business Influencer event for 2011 this summer!

The rise of the “Internet Influencer” has been both a blessing and a curse for those of us looking for good advice.  On the one hand, there is no shortage of expert small business advice.  And on the other hand, there are so many people in so many areas, that it’s hard to find the people who can help you the most.  So where is a small business owner supposed to go to figure out who the real movers and shakers of business are?

How to Find Your Best Influencers

In a previous post here on Open Forum, I discussed how influence measuring apps are helping small business owners filter through the plethora of experts on any given topic.  You can use apps like Mixtent or Klout to get you started in finding those people who are most active in their industries.  But that’s just the start.

Finding and building real relationships with influencers requires time, patience and effort.

  • Read and comment on their content.
  • Find out what their marketing and promotional goals are and look for ways to help them out.
  • Contribute relevant, high quality guest post articles.
  • Promote their content to your network.
  • Partner with them on a mutually beneficial project that will build THEIR audience as well as yours.
  • If they are an author; read and review their books on blogs and on Amazon.

This is just a short list that’s only limited by your imagination and creativity.

How to Identify Your Target Market

In our last post, Michael DiFrsco, “The Affordable Branding Guy” from How-to-Branding told us WHY targeting an audience was so important.  In today’s post, he’s going to show us HOW to find them and target them.  Whether you’re selling products, services or surveys — finding the right audience is always the first and most important step.

I once heard of bit of advice from a direct marketing guru that sticks with me to this day: Before deciding WHAT to sell, determine WHOM you’re going to sell it to. What he was suggesting was to first find an audience—the people who can and will buy your products or services—and then decide how to create or modify your offerings to fit that marketplace.

Having a target market is one of the best ways to focus your business. Ivana Taylor, of DIY Marketers, has targeted small businesses without marketing departments. Her offerings are not for every businessperson who can fog a mirror. That focus allows Ivana to craft her messages to a specific target, making her more relevant and making her own marketing efforts more efficient.

When United Air Lines was looking for growth in a hypercompetitive markeplace, they decided to focus on business travelers. People who travel for business are more willing to pay full fare. They’re easier to target than casual, pleasure travelers, who often have more options when selecting an airline. So United shifted a good chunk of marketing dollars to business travelers, and the result was that more pleasure flyers looked at United in a new way: If business travelers know which airline is best for their needs, surely United is good enough for me.

How about the super-crowded non-cola and energy drink space? There are drinks for gamers, athletes, college students, you name it. Now there’s a new wellness beverage called ZAZY; an upstart drink aimed at the aging female demographic, supplies calcium and vitamin D supplements to a female’s healthy diet. While available only in New England for now, what better way to cut through the clutter than to BE only for a specific target market?

How to Target YOUR Market

Here are four easy steps to targeting the ideal core market for your small business.

  1. Does your target market have a need that only you can fulfill? Are they willing and able to spend money for your product or service to solve their specific need? Does your background and experience point to this specific audience as being ideal for your offerings? A Conservative Café is a coffee shop for, wait for it, conservatives. The Indiana-based café claims that it’s “coffee served right.” Do conservatives NEED their own coffee shop? Who knows? But Conservative Café thinks so.
  1. Consider the size. Is your target market large enough to sustain your business? Don’t worry about precise numbers, because as in the United example above, your brand will also attract an aspirational audience; those who want to participate even if they’re not considered your target. Take Seventeen magazine. While the publication’s strategic target is young girls around 17 years of age, their actual market is young girls aged 13-15 who want to act like they’re 17.
  1. Is your target market, well, target-able? If you can’t find them, you can’t sell to them. What does your desired target audience read? Where do they hang out? Who else competes for their loyalty and devotion? Even an iconic brand like Harley-Davidson can reinvent itself by remaining true to its roots, but appealing to niche audiences through creative marketing and social media approaches. Once the domain of inner-rebel and CEOs, Harley is reaching out to younger demographics, women, and Hispanics—each on their own turf and in their own “language.” And these vertical audiences are find-able.
  1. Do you have a passion for this target audience? If your product or service is for accountants who work for nonprofit associations, you better make sure you LOVE accountants who work for nonprofit associations; that you can relate to them and that you can pour your energy into serving them and making their lives easier. The target audience for Freshpet (fresh, refrigerated dog and cat foods), is well-defined: empty nesters age 45 to 54 with household incomes of $100,000-plus. “These are people whose kids are now busy with high school or off at college or in jobs now, and who are now lavishing their affection and attention on their pets, which they basically view as their ‘children,’” says Freshpet VP, marketing Kathryn Winstanley.

The benefits of selecting a target market for your business are many. But before choosing a core audience, ask yourself these two critical questions: Is my product or service relevant to these people? Will these people care about what I have to offer?

5 Short and Sweet Reasons to Target a Specific Audience

Today’s guest post comes from Michael DiFrisco (a.k.a. The Affordable Branding Guy”  He’s decided not to overwhelm us with too much information and instead, just layout the benefits of focusing on and targeting a specific audience.

Choosing a specific audience for your business is a powerful form of focus. Targeting means you reject the idea of believing the best way to build your business is by hitting every living person in your area. It allows you to focus on the specific customer or client types that are most desirable.

Here are some of the other benefits of targeting a specific core market:

  1. You’ll eliminate the bottom-feeders and those people who will simply not value what you offer
  2. You’ll have more effective marketing spending
  3. You can better focus your messaging—tailored to focus on their needs, not the needs of the entire universe
  4. It’s a better use of your time—more spent serving your best customers and less time spent pursuing low-value prospects
  5. You’ll build a stronger referral base—once you penetrate a target market and educate them on the value of working with you
Now — get out there and start targeting!

We’re All in the Marketing Business

This article originally appeared on the AMEX Open Forum.  I’m writing about “marketing” in general.  But you can easily make this apply to market research.

With today’s technology, it’s easy and much more fun to integrate functions that were considered separate departments – but now can work together.

 

Why are you in business?  Let’s cut through all those warm and fuzzy reasons and get right to it.  You’re in business to make money (preferably you keep more than you make).

I’m not here to minimize the significance of the products or services that you sell.  After all, if it weren’t for what you’re offering, you wouldn’t have a business.  But this is where we all get caught up in a modern misconception that we are in the widget business.  And it’s this fallacy that is actually at cause when sales are slumped.

Mousetraps don’t sell themselves

Your mouse trap really isn’t going to sell itself.  Go ahead and give it a try.  Build a bunch of product and pile it from floor to ceiling and watch what happens.  “Of course nothing happens,” you say “because you need sales people to sell it.”  This is very true.

Now, go get some sales people and show them your product.  If it’s small enough, they might be able to actually carry it around and push it on their mothers and neighbors.  Some will be wildly successful and many won’t.  That’s because selling in today’s environment requires what I like to call an “attractor strategy”.  You might call it marketing.

Throwing sales people WITHOUT a marketing strategy and marketing support is what we do when we think we’re in the widget business.

You might think that I’m going to take you down the long argument about what’s sales and what’s marketing.  I won’t.  For small businesses who wear ten hats at a time, they are one and the same.  When you hire a sales person and don’t give them marketing materials or a web site or anything, they will eventually start creating marketing materials themselves.  Not elegant, not pretty, but the only way they’re going to have a chance at being successful.

What happens when you decide you’re in the marketing business?

The first thing that happens is you take your attention OFF the widget and put it ON the people who are most likely to give you money for it. Take a moment and do that.  Ignore the widget and focus JUST on the people who will give you money.

If you force your customers to  focus on the widget, then they don’t see any difference between your widget and the other guys.  So they complain about price and everything else.  Widgets don’t have value –value is what you uncover about the person who will give you money.

Your customers will only give you money if you address what’s important to them when they are buying what you are selling.  Think about FedEx.  They don’t sell envelopes or boxes – they sell “getting your package delivered by 10:30am” because THAT is what’s important to their customer and that is what their customers pay top dollar for.

Come up with a list of five to seven items that are important to your customers.  Don’t list features, list things they might actually say to themselves.  For example, if you were a mover, what might be important to your customer is that you don’t break their stuff.  The feature might be the wrapping, or packing, but they don’t care how you wrap it or carry it, just that their stuff shows up looking exactly like it did when it left their home.

It’s this magical list of five to seven items that trip your customer’s  trigger that should drive how your widget occurs out in the marketplace.

Marketing systems have value to customers and to buyers

In his bestselling book Built to Sell John Warrillow’s character, Alex learns that a business that runs a like a system or money machine increases in value as well as in appeal to buyers and owners alike.   Alex develops a marketing system that includes a standard product and service.  Then he created a standard way to sell, create, deliver and pay for the service.  The changes that he made turned his business into a repeatable, teachable, sellable business that customers valued and he enjoyed running.

Being in the marketing business is more fulfilling

Being in the marketing business (even if you make physical product) is so much more fulfilling because you spend your days looking for ways to make your customers happier than they were the day before.  It’s like being Santa every day.

If you aren’t really a people person, then, by all means, run your business from where you get  the most joy and can bring the most value.  But be sure to find someone to run that business that LOVES your customers and is committed to bringing them more satisfaction and ease in living their life through your product and service.

Putting your company in the marketing business doesn’t negate your product or service.  It brings more depth and differentiation to it.  When you focus on identifying your ideal customer, and providing a product or service that’s important to them – you will reap more profit for it.

4 Smart Ways to Expand Your Small Business

Today’s guest post is from Carol Roth, author of Entrepreneur Equation.  This post is adapted from the book.


A new ADP survey says companies with fewer than 50 employees increased payrolls by 117,000 last month — the biggest hiring surge since 2006. AndPaychex Inc., which manages payroll accounting for companies with fewer than 100 workers, said checks per client rose 2.8 percent from a year ago in the first quarter of 2011, the biggest gain in two years.

For many small businesses — particularly sole proprietors and mom-and-pop operations — expanding brings with it challenges as well as opportunities. The key to growing your small business is to do it the smartway. Here are some tips that may help.

Learn to delegate.

You were smart enough to start your own business. Now use those smarts to figure out a way to simplify, standardize, automate, and delegate tasks in a way that can’t be screwed up by the average employee (think McDonald’s). Create a list, and every time you have a task you would delegate to an employee, add it to the list. Not only does it get you in the habit of delegating, but over time you have created a job description so that you know who you’re looking for when you’re ready to hire.

Hire thoughtfully.

Beware of “hiring gotchas.” For example, spend time putting together a hiring strategy and good questions in advance. Educate yourself on what you can’t by law ask in an interview, and research what other companies pay for such a position, as well as benefits you’re willing to offer (beforethe applicant asks). You might want to steer clear of hiring friends and family. If you’re clueless about how to find a good pool of candidates, consider using one of the new, low-cost virtual services, such as Elance.

Expand by outsourcing.

Let’s say you’re ready to offer new services to your existing customers, but in order to motivate these customers and woo new ones, you have to do social marketing. The problem is, you have no clue how to do it. That’s okay! Smart business owners don’t try to do everything themselves — they outsource professionals to help them focus on what they do best. There are great new online enterprises like Deskelf that will match your needs with virtual helpers — from accountants to social media marketers. And they don’t have to be expensive — Fiverr, for example, links you to professionals who do tasks for as little as $5!

Partner up.

Imagine you’re a professional photographer/videographer who’s got more gigs than you can handle. Find another business owner in your profession and partner up so you can take on more jobs without having to hire new employees. Another way to grow your business is to expand your menu of services. For example, you have a lawnmowing/landscaping business and you find someone who maintains pools. By partnering up, you can offer your clients a twofer — weekly pool service and property maintenance. Finding complementary businesses that don’t compete for customers creates a win-win for both small businesses.

Carol Roth has been helping businesses grow for over 15 years, ranging from solopreneurs to multinational corporations. She has helped them raise more than $1 billion in capital, complete hundreds of millions of dollars in M&A transactions, secure high-profile licensing and partnership deals, create brand loyalty programs, and more. A popular media personality on Fox News, MSNBC, and WGN-TV Chicago, among others, she has an award-winning blog at www.CarolRoth.com. Her new book is The Entrepreneur Equation: Evaluating the Realities, Risks, and Rewards of Having Your Own Business (BenBella Books, March 2011) — #4 on the New York TimesBestsellers List and #1 on the USA Today Money Bestsellers List.

How to Write a Market Research Plan

market research strategy chartIn the past, we BUDGETED for market research.  This usually included our annual customer satisfaction survey and then we simply looked at our marketing plan an set aside a budget for the new product research we were going to do in the next year.

These days things are a little different.  I find myself recommending a market research plan over and over to small businesses and that means that I had better start explaining what a market research plan looks like.

Why You Need a Research Plan NOW – When You Didn’t Need One in the Past?

The short answer is that it’s a response to several trends that are going on in our lives today – that weren’t there in the past:

  • Social Media – The ability to use social media as a tool to collect feedback and analyze text and chatter from your marketplace about your company and your brand is a relatively new phenomenon.  The challenge is that if left unmanaged and under-leveraged, it goes to waste as a resource of valuable market research information.
  • Time Slicing – This is an interesting behavioral trend among all of us.  You can easily compare it to multi-tasking.   Time slicing, however is more like inserting short tasks in between larger tasks.  Such as checking emails on your mobile device while waiting in line.
  • Mobile Devices – The use of mobile devices as computers and communication tools and quite literally “time killers” opens up a new way to reach our respondents when they have just a few minutes to spare.

The Market Research Plan Outline

  1. Set Goals:  I think it’s important to set a general goal or direction about what decisions you’re going to be making over the course of the year.  For the sake of this outline, I’m treating goals as more general statements such as “Start marketing products online.”  The benefit of making a general goal statement is that it gets your mind focused in a particular direction and allows for some flexibility – which you’re going to need as you start strategizing around the information and feedback that you’re planning on collecting.
  2. Set objectives:  Every research project has objectives and every marketing plan has objectives.  So it stands to reason that your research plan will too.  In this case your objectives around the research plan might include the decisions that you are trying to make right now around that general goal of “marketing products online”.  Some possible objectives might include understanding who our customers would be online, or how our target customer shops online or to what degree do they use mobile devices to shop or research products and services.
  3. Lay out your collection channels. You’ve heard the term distribution channel, well in research I call it the collection channel.  This involves listing all the possible ways that you can collect feedback and information from your target audience.  These might include online surveys, MicroPoll, IdeaScale (Crowd sourcing), mobile device surveys, social media, and some others.
  4. Brainstorm a list of questions.  Now you can start brainstorming questions that will help you make your decisions.  I like brainstorming questions first because it focuses your mind on exactly what you want to know and why you want to know it.  We can always edit the questions later based on what collection channel is best suited for the question.
  5. Assign questions to the collection channels. Again none of this is cast in stone.  But it helps you get your mind around how to best leverage the collection tools that are available to you.  Start assigning your questions to the channels that will provide the best information.  For example – treat your social media channels as you might a focus group. Start conversations with your Facebook Fans and ask questions.  LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter are all ideal channels for getting your target audience involved in helping you develop more specific questions around the issues that your customers care most about.  Not only are you getting input into how to frame questions and what to focus on – you’re getting some additional marketing and PR buzz about your mission and vision about what you’re developing.
  6. Use crowd sourcing tools like IdeaScale to prioritize suggestions.  Now that you’ve gotten ideas from social media conversations – create an IdeaScale space and seed the space with the feedback you’ve learned.  Then launch that page to your social media community and ask them to vote and continue the feedback on this space.  Don’t forget to visit the space and offer feedback to the community on how your development is going.  Again – this is more marketing and PR.
  7. Start putting your online surveys together. Now you might be ready to put some online marketing surveys together.  Keep in mind that NONE of your respondents want to spend more than 5 minutes on a survey.  Just like online videos. their attention span is about 2-3 minutes at best.  After that they are bored and tired and leave.  If your survey takes longer than 5 minutes – you will need to look for alternative ways to ask those questions.
  8. Use MicroPoll to supplement your online survey. MicroPoll is underutilized as a survey instrument.  People LOVE polls because they are short and they offer immediate feedback.  If your online survey takes longer than 5 minutes.  Take a look at which questions you can transfer to MicroPoll.  You can launch a new MicroPoll every week.  This will keep your audience engaged and involved in what you’re up to.  (I think that’s more marketing and PR – while doing research – that’s what I call leverage and multi-tasking)
  9. Can you take it viral? Another important question to ask yourself is if you can take your online survey viral in order to collect feedback from a broader market segment than you are able to reach.  One word of warning.  Viral surveys are most successful when you are asking very broad and socially relevant questions.  In other words – questions around topics that people in a broader community can answer.  NOT technically sophisticated questions or questions that contain customer or sensitive information.  A good question for a viral survey might be “What percentage or sales do you spend on market research?”  This is a general enough question anyone can answer AND the answers across industry segments would be valuable.

Last Minute Tips for Successful Market Research Plans

  • Keep it short and simple.  No more than 5 pages.
  • Leverage the free and low cost tools that are available
  • Brainstorm great questions.  This is the key.  No respondent wants to answer bad questions.

In future posts – I will break some of these down into more focused practical how-to’s.  In the meantime — do YOU currently do a market research plan?  What are your tips, Do’s and Don’ts?


Use This Easy Brand Audit Survey Template BEFORE You Put Your Marketing Plan Together

building your brandThe Canary in the Coal Mine: How a brand audit can indicate the “marketing health” of you business

“Surveys, focus groups, and other voice-of-customer inputs will be invaluable as you formulate new ways to position your offerings, differentiate your business, and stand out in a crowded marketplace.”

Your business’ brand is everything you do, everything, you say, and everything you stand for. It’s no less than the strategy of your organization. That’s why it’s important—no, critical—to take the pulse of your brand occasionally, and find out how it’s ticking.

Since early coalmines did not feature ventilation systems, miners would often bring a caged canary into new seams of coal. Canaries are especially sensitive to methane and carbon monoxide, which made them ideal for detecting any dangerous gas build-ups. As long as the canary in a coal mine kept singing, the miners knew their air supply was safe. A dead canary in a coalmine spelled an immediate evacuation.

So it is with your business—and your brand. You need to routinely check for leaks and missteps in your brand platform by checking in with your customers and, if possible, your prospects. Why? Because the marketplace is fickle. Trends, fashions, what’s hot and what’s not, and the economy, all conspire to make your customers and prospects a constantly moving target.

Surveys, focus groups, and other voice-of-customer inputs will be invaluable as you formulate new ways to position your offerings, differentiate your business, and stand out in a crowded marketplace.

A Simple Survey

While there is any number of ways to approach your target market to discover what they think about your business, you ultimately want to understand three fundamentals:

  1. Awareness (do they even know your business exists?)
  2. Engagement (are they currently using your products or services?)
  3. Satisfaction (are they happy with your current offerings and how they are delivered?)

When embarking on a brand strategy exercise or simply want to take the pulse of a business, I typically start with a line of questioning based on the following:

  • What does [Business Name] stand for in your mind?
  • What would you say is [Business Name’s] mission?
  • What is it about [Business Name] that makes it unique?
  • What is the greatest value [Business Name] provides to you?
  • What are [Business Name’s] greatest strengths?
  • What are [Business Name’s] greatest weaknesses?
  • What need does [Business Name] fulfill?
  • Why does society need [Business Name]?
  • Do you trust [Business Name]?

By deploying a simple survey, you’ll get to the heart of the awareness, engagement, and satisfaction questions, and you’ll be able to make the mid-course corrections necessary to keep your business communicating and acting in a way that your customers and prospects will respond to.

And even in the act of asking for their opinion, you’ll be providing value by engaging and establishing a relationship with customers and prospects, developing a dialogue with them, and getting to know your target market better.

About the Author: Michael DiFrisco is the brains behind BrandXcellence and the brawn behind the popular site How-To-Branding that coaches small businesses through the branding process.

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How Small Businesses Buy Technology — Like You and I

Industrial buyers are people too!

I used to go crazy working in a manufacturing environment and hearing sales people or executives go on and on about how “our customers” were different.  They were “industrial buyers”.  They were part of a buying center or committee — as if they had no pulse or something.  (Well, that part was true for some of them).  But in most cases, buyers are actually people; living breathing human beings who had a cup of coffee that morning or took their kids to school.  They thought about what they would do with that bonus and how they might get a little something nice for their spouse.

PEOPLE Make Decisions – Not Titles or Committees

So,  you can imagine how happy I was to see this latest study come out of Ivy Worldwide,  an integrated social media marketing company.  The short skippy of the results is that even when they are buying technology, business buyers behave like regular consumers.  Yup.  They buy computers and servers much like you and I buy a laptop or TV.

First they search the internet looking for what criteria they should be considering.  The same way that I’ve been searching for the internet trying to figure out how to compare these new HDTV’s; should I care about whether it’s 60Hz or 120Hz?  What about WiFi?  Nothing in the results points to any behavior that’s unlike standard purchasing behavior by the rest of us.

Next, they rely on word of mouth.  Once they understand what criteria they are looking for and which alternatives have that criteria, they are checking online reviews and  experiences by colleagues and friends.  The study also showed that most purchasers were not committed to a brand as they went through their purchasing process.

However, random conversations on Twitter and Facebook have little influence .

Buying technology for business is often an online purchase.  The study shows that 70% of their respondents purchase online.

And finally, the respondents said that large companies miss the mark when marketing to the small and medium sized business owner.  That’s no surprise.  I remember needing to update my virus software and going to McAfee.  While the site was very nice looking,  it was completely targeted to the large industrial IT buyer.  I couldn’t easily find the product I was looking for and quickly got frustrated and left.

What Can Provider’s Do

While this particular survey focused on technology purchases, I think the results are extremely useful for every company selling into the small and medium sized business market.

Who’s doing it well?  Hewlett Packard comes to mind (and was also mentioned in the survey) as a company that’s really committed to connecting with the small business.

I have personal experience with their small business marketing and they consistently show their commitment to connecting with and understanding the particular nuances of their market.

Download the full technology buyer results here and tell us what YOUR feedback is.

What company do YOU think does a great job at selling to you and which one does the worst?

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