4 Fearless Predictions from the Fearless Competitor


Let’s have a bit of fun in this post. Shine up the crystal ball & make a few fearless prognostications.

What’s going to happen in the next 12-24 month? Here are 4 thoughts from the Fearless Competitor:

  1. Social media grows up, finally - This one’s pretty easy. I attended Social Media Camp Long Island and met with Geoff Ferris, EVP of Sales, for Visible Technologies. The remarkable attendance at Social Media Camp shows the high interest. Geoff gave me a good overview of the exciting future for Visible Technologies. Can’t reveal the details, as what was shared was confidential, but one thing becomes clear. Social media becomes THE hub for prospect communication and research in 2011.
    Marketing take-away - If you’re not getting into social media with a blog, Twitter presence, Facebook fanpage and Linkedin profile - you miss out. If you don’t know where to start, go hire a college kid or an expert like the Fearless Competitor.
  2. Mobile becomes the first screen - It’s coming, whether you like it or not. The first thing people look at will not be their computer monitor. It will be their smartphone, iPad, etc. Devices may change, but the bottom line is clear.
    Buyers will carry their viewing and communications device.
    Marketing takeaway - Make sure your communications, such as websites and emails, are optimized for mobile delivery today. If you don’t know how, look at Prediction 5.
  3. Remote meetings become routine - The ubiquity of high-definition televisions, high-definition cameras and high-speed connections means that tele-presence from companies like Cisco, Polycom, Teliris, and AT&T, as well as entrepreneurs with Skype and high-definition webcams begin routinely conducting business around the world. Unfortunately, this is bad news for airlines and hotels.
    Marketing take-away - Look at your travel spend. Put a critical eye on it and determine which of those meetings could have been replaced with tele-presence.
    Certainly you cannot replace all face to face meetings, but also consider how you can make meetings more frequent using Tele-Presence. For instance, with telepresence a weekly global staff meeting is doable.
  4. Small businesses and entrepreneurs rule - In this new fast paced world, the bulk of the innovation will come from small companies, able to switch on a dime.
    Marketing take-away - Look for those innovators and specialists to help your business. For instance, with worldwide fame and a syndicated blog, the Fearless Competitor offers Product Launch Services with tools and resources to help companies bring products to market - far better than most traditional PR firms.

What do you think? Do you agree with my 4 or would you like to suggest other predictions?  We love comments and we provide buttons to make sharing easy. If you like it, please share it. If you don’t, or just want to comment, we love to hear from our readers.

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Jeff Ogden, the Fearless Competitor, is President of Find New Customers, a top lead generation company.Lead Generation Made Simple.” He’s an expert in demand generation and also the author of three highly acclaimed white papers, How to Find New Customers and Definitive Guide to Making Quota, and a new one on email marketing, as well the e-book, Prospect Driven Marketing and holds a BBA in Marketing from the University of Notre Dame.

Find New Customers helps business develop and implement demand generation programs to drive more sales leads by improving the way they find and acquire new customers using best practices in lead generation.

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3 Tips for expanding to/from the USA


(Updated version of an earlier post.)

In the economic downturn, many companies look longingly at the Far East, Europe, South America, etc. for expansion. They think they may find new sources of revenue and balance out the ups and downs of single countries.

Having once lead sales and marketing for a UK search marketing firm (a light that’s green) that struggled and failed in the USA several times, I’m uniquely qualified to talk about this. The reasons for their continued failures are a lack of planning and preparation.

The essential thing to realize is that international expansion takes military planning and precision.

To hire a local rep and expect him or her to succeed is like air-dropping a single soldier armed with a knife on Normandy Beach.  That is not what the Allies did in World War II. They planned the D-Day invasion extensively.

Here are 3 tips you can use.

  1. Study the area, go visit and network.
    Get a feel for the market. Spend some time there.
    You need to commission a study of the market — to develop ideal customer profiles, buyer personas and crank up lead generation activity — particularly, thought leadership, long before you staff up.  You need to invest here because you can save by having only a single rep to follow-up on sales opportunities.
  2. Plan for a long battle — much longer than you expect.
    Give at least six months of air cover (lead generation) before you begin staffing up. Don’t plan on closing business for at least a year.
  3. Invest in good communication
    It’s critical.  Make sure you have the best video conferencing equipment you can afford.  Keep in constant communications.

In an earlier post, I told the story of an Israeli company that successfully expanded to the USA.

Of course if you’d like to discuss your company’s international expansion plans, please call (516) 284-4930 or send an email to jeff.ogden at findnewcustomers.com.

You need a Chief Content Officer.

Check out our Thought Leadership Interview series.

Join us every Thursday at 8pm ET/5pm PT for Twitter chat about b2b demand generation. Just go to http://tweetchat.com/ and enter hashtag #b2bchat.

Jeff Ogden, the Fearless Competitor, is President of Find New CustomersLead Generation Made Simple.” He’s also the author of two highly acclaimed white papers, How to Find New Customers and Definitive Guide to Making Quota, as well the ebook, Prospect Driven Marketing (and he’s about to start on his third white paper) and holds a BBA in Marketing from the University of Notre Dame.

Find New Customers helps business develop and implement programs to improve the way they find and acquire new customers using best practices in lead generation.

The Four Fundamentals of Successful Asia Pacific Market Entry — a guest post


After 20 years of bringing American entrepreneurial IT companies to markets across Asia Pacific, I have learned that there are four crucial elements to successful Asia market entry. They are: Market, Offering, Strategy and Team.

The answers to the critical questions for each element will vary across the extremely diverse nations of Asia Pacific including Japan, China, Korea, Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Maldives, Pakistan, Australia, and New Zealand.

While each company will have its own unique issues to address, here is a guide to get the ball rolling for an Asia market entry initiative.

Market: The only element beyond your control is the market for your product. Even though you can’t control it, you need to be able to answer each of the following questions for each national market.
* How big is the target market for your offering in Asia?
* Who are the buyers?
* How mature is the market? Will you be pioneers and evangelists or are you coming to the party late?
* Do the customers buy on the same basis and process as similar customers in your home market?
* What is the competitive landscape?
* Who are the major channel companies and which ones would be interested in carrying your product?
* What are the potential revenue opportunities in 6, 12 and 24 months?

Anybody can answer these questions about their home market, but collecting and assessing this information for Asian nations and determining which one(s) to enter first can be very challenging for the uninitiated.

Offering:
* Is your offering acceptable “as is” or will some functionality, interface, packaging, branding, or pricing modification be necessary?

Again, this is a very basic question to answer for your home market, but it’s quite challenging to collect that information for a region with so many languages, currencies, religions, systems of governments, development status, economies, demographics, infrastructure, types of customers, cultural norms and much more.

Strategy: “Give the People What They Want”
* Who are “your people”
* What do they want?
* How will you get it to them? What go-to-market model is best for that market within that country?
* What elements of your value chain will have to be replicated, modified or rebuilt to serve Asian customers and are your home office people and budgets prepared for the challenge?

Team: Many Asia entry attempts fail because the sales teams mobilize far before the rest of the company is ready to support. You must make sure strategies are aligned and everyone on the home office side is on the bus.  You also need to fully answer:

* What team configuration will you need in the region? What support must they get from HQ? Who will do that?
* What skills, relationships and experience must each member of the Asia team have?
* How will you recruit, retain, manage and reward the team? What legal entities and physical environments will you need to support the team?

Overall, I believe team is the most important, and most challenging, element. Success in Asia is not about brilliant strategy or touchdown passes. Success in Asia is about stellar execution - solid blocking and tackling day in and day out.

There’s only one thing on earth that can provide solid execution: people. Specifically, you need people to introduce you to customers and partners; people to present and demonstrate your offering; people to sell; people to support and people to train. Clearly, a start up can’t hire an army of people to do these things across Asia. So, the strategy and business model must be designed such that the army of people materializes off-payroll and can be effectively recruited, enabled, monitored, and rewarded.

The first step to getting all of these elements aligned correctly is to gain consensus for an Asia plan internally. Selling in Asia can be very easy if you first “Sell Asia” within your company. Make sure everyone who will have to contribute to the effort is on the bus and happy about it. The plan should have an elevator pitch conclusion along the lines of ,”We are going to build a business of X size in Asia in Y years and we are going to do it by doing Z things.” You need laser focus on this or you won’t get the support you need from home to be successful in the field in Asia.

About the Author:
Greg Lipper is CEO of Asian Century Solutions (ACS), a Singapore-based company that enables clients to assess, launch and grow their business in 18 countries across Asia Pacific, including Japan, China, India, Indonesia, Singapore, Australia, Philippines, Vietnam and other Asia Pacific markets. ACS helps clients generate revenue - and develop Asia market knowledge, perspectives, and relationships - BEFORE making HR, infrastructure and other long term business investments in Asia.

Multinationals: Lessons from McDonalds


In a recent post, I explained the problems in the search industry on international expansion. For instance, a UK vendor spent hundreds of thousands of dollars without signing a single US client, while a US vendor did the same thing in the UK. What gives? How do companies get it right? Let’s look no further than that iconic American hamburger vendor, McDonalds.

Look at the Big Tasty burger. Never heard of it? Just to to Brazil, Portugal or Italy to pick one up. It was dreamed up in a test kitchen in Germany and then tweaked, trialed and launched in Sweden in 2003, where it was a huge success. But to quote Fortune, the Big Tasty has become more than a giant burger: It is a prime example of how, in this era of global business, the tail can end up wagging the dog. 

Yet, as McDonalds has been discovering, running a successful global company requires some significant changes in corporate behavior. Going “glo-cal” as management consultants like to call it, requires striking a balance between managing a brand on a consistent basis and appealing to different tastes (culture) in dozens of markets. It means delegating authority and letting things happen; it is not a job for control freaks.

McDonalds also has clear rules on where the limits lie. Country managers can create their own campaigns but cannot fiddle with the logo.

As the article points out, this is not easy to do. What’s hard is creating a culture, corporate structure and work environment that fosters innovation whereever it takes place. “It takes a high degree of sophistication to do something like that.” says Till Vestering, who runs the Singapore office for Bain and Co.

Learn lessons wherever you can. You can learn a lot from a burger company.

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