Thursday, 14 April 2011

It’s not the markets for your products …..

At a recent ‘marketing’ (?) presentation I heard the presenter state that ‘marketing is all about finding people to buy the products and services that you make.’

In my opinion this is totally incorrect!

What he was describing was a ‘sales orientation’ and not a definition of marketing. Though the sales function, in its many forms, is a very important part of the process, it simply focuses on ‘Place’,  just one of the 7 P’s of the marketing mix.

It should not be the driver of a company’s orientation and approach.


Marketers and marketing see the world the other way around. I believe that marketing is about finding out what products and services customers want – and then making and delivering those in ways that create value for both parties – Using the sales  force as one of the possible routes to market.


Other sales methods include the Internet, dealers, retail outlets, franchises, business partners and so on. This combination forms the basis of a channel strategy.


There are several definitions of marketing – but they all address the basic question: ‘What is it that the company does better and differently to its competitors, in ways that add value to and are valued by its customers, that can’t be easily copied.

Customers are at the heart of the world view for marketers and not products!
This is a very good definition of the marketing concept of ‘Sustainable Competitive Advantage’ (SCA) the fundamental outcome of marketing orientation, where the customers’ wants and needs are placed at the centre of everything that the organisation is and does.

All of the main marketing processes; Mission, Marketplace Assessment, Objective Setting, Strategy and Tactics should be synchronised and developed with this outcome in mind.

It’s not the markets for your products that are important – It’s the products for your markets!

Saturday, 26 March 2011

What is Strategy? - Michael Porter explains


The fundamental truth behind Marketing.

This is so good!

I often ask organisations:


What is it that makes you different and better from your competitors, in ways that add value to and are valued by your customers, that can't be easily copied?


99% of the time they can't answer! - or say something like 'We are the market leader'...'We have been in business for 50 years'...'We have a great brand.'

None of these responses answer the question. Remember past success is no guarantee of future performance...ask any banker!

Strategy is all about answering this question - Creating your unique position in the market that anticipates, identifies and satisfies customers wants and needs better than anyone else?

That is a Strategy!


A BRILLIANT video on the Social Media Revolution

Friday, 7 January 2011

Cool tip from The Harvard Business Review

JANUARY 6, 2011
State Your Mission in 8 Words or Less
Whether you are a non-profit organization or a for-profit company, a crisp, clear mission statement can help you attract investors, rally your employees, and win customers.

Unfortunately, those statements are often riddled with jargon and grandiose pronouncements that are too abstract to be acted on. Try to state your mission in eight words or less.

Use the format: verb, target, outcome. For example, "Improve African children's health." Keeping it simple will help others understand what it is you do and get behind it. It doesn't end there though.

Once you know precisely what your company is good at, you need to measure it to prove your worth.
Harvard Business Review BlogToday's Management Tip was adapted from "The Eight-Word Mission Statement" by Eric Hellweg.

Friday, 2 April 2010

Checkout these Social Media monitoring tools.

Google Alerts

These are an absolute basic minimum, that everyone should be doing. Set up a Google account and set up some Alerts, for you, your brand, your company or any keywords you want to track. As soon as it is mentioned on the web Google will tell you about it with an email to your inbox!

Tweetdeck

If you are a Twitter user, then this is an absolute must. The ability to track real-time what is being said about whatever you choose, is very powerful indeed. It is easy to use and set up, and it will even play you a sound when someone has mentioned you!

Addictomatic

This is just superb, and also fun to use. Put in a simple search, and it will show the results in a page full of widget type boxes across a whole range of platforms - video, blogs, networks, search networks etc. Love this!!

BoardReader

Now this is a novel site. It lets you monitor discussion groups and forums. This is great for knowing when a new group or discussion begins about you, your company or your brand.

Backtype

This is a real time conversational search.They index and connect online conversations from across the web in real-time, so you can see what people are saying about topics that interest you.

BackTweet

Brilliant at monitoring when your tweets (on Twitter) have been shared - or re-tweeted.

Filtrbox

See what others are saying about your company in real-time on Twitter, social networks, blogs and thousands of online news outlets. There is a cost attached here, but they will give you 15 days free as a starter which is worthing doing just for starters.

SocialMention

Nice! Just like Google alerts, but for social media instead. It does produce different results as well!

IceRocket

Like some of the others here, it searches across anumber of different social media platforms across the web

Twittersearch

The superb search engine of real time info on Twitter. Search your topic, and set up the RSS feed for the results to flood into your RSS Reader. It only searches Twitter, but that is where the real time conversations are happening!!

Saturday, 27 March 2010

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Best regards,

Peter Rees DipM FCIM MCIPR,
Chartered Marketer

Managing Director,
PR Strategic Marketing Ltd.

www.prstrategic.com
www.prstrategic.blogspot.com  

+44 (0) 7929 193 330