Marketing in the Recommendation Age

May 15, 2008

“Why on Earth would your company want a blog?” “Aren’t you afraid of what people might say?” “What about your brand?” As the guy who championed the idea of the blog at LUCRUM, and regular blogging evangelist, I am asked this question almost daily. My answer is simple. “I trust our people to do the right thing.”

My coworkers at LUCRUM are smart - much smarter than I am. I know that when they talk about technology, they are passionate about it. They speak from experience and they speak from the heart. They are sincere, and that is different. They are interesting. They are real. They are the essence of “The Brand.”

I also trust the readers of the site. They can smell disingenuous corporate speak from a mile away. Yeah, I could hire professional writers to put together a brand strategy for our blog. We could toil endlessly on the exact wording of every phrase - but why? It would not be real. It would not be different. It would invisible.

Thankfully, it is real. And… it is really fun to be involved with.

Just today, we were contacted by a talented IT Professional who was so moved by Andy Erickson’s LinkedIn profile and the honesty of the blog site that she sent in an amazing letter with her resume expressing her desire to join the LUCRUM team.

This is the result of conversation.

What we hope to achieve is not just conversation, but also recommendation. In this day and age reputation is so important. What you do is far more important than what you say you do. What you do IS the marketing. It is about customer service, employee relations, innovative thinking, and delivering real value for Clients each and every day.

We are working on building a tribe. A loyal group of eager participants, fully engaged in the experience of LUCRUM. We want to create evangelists. We aspire to deliver greatness. That aspiration lives in each of us, and thus the blog serves as the platform for sharing our honest hopes and dreams for the firm. It is a metaphor for the business as a whole. It is about being “recommendable” or perhaps more properly put “remarkable.”

Are we there yet? Nope. But we have taken the steps necessary to start the journey. Each and every day we learn. Each and every day we evolve. Hopefully, we listen, we grow, and we improve along the way.

Why blog? Well if what we do is to solve business problems by using technology, than why not embrace technology to identify those problems and uncover the solutions? Why not engage our people to drive innovation at every level of the organization? Why not give everyone, including our clients and the world at large, a voice in the conversation. Why not become recommendable?

Check out the link below for a great article about marketing in the recommendation age.

Marketing in the Recommendation Age | Small Business Solutions - TheStreet.com

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We Win When We Talk About Them

April 17, 2008

I never thought I would pick up sales tips from James Carville, but sure enough it has happened. Over the past weekend I was watching one of the Sunday morning political shows, and Carville, joined by his wife Mary Matalin, was discussing the 2008 Presidential Campaign. Specifically he discussed one of the tenets of running a great campaign he learned from former President Clinton, who love him or hate him, was a great campaigner. The idea he put forth was so simple but so correct. “If we are talking about them, we are winning.” “If we are talking about us, we are losing.” Now, the idea behind his comment is perhaps a little different in the context of a political campaign as opposed to a sales call, but how incredibly insightful is that. The best sales calls often involve very little “selling.” If the person across the table from you is talking, and you are discussing them - not you - you are winning. I have experienced sales calls where you trot out every feature, function, advantage, benefit, company history, past clients, and on and on, only to walk away saying to myself, “I just don’t think we will win that one.” By the same token, many of the best calls I have ever made, involve asking questions, and then listening to someone else talk about themselves. Yes I can tell people LUCRUM is Cincinnati’s best provider of Data Warehousing, Business Intelligence, Collaboration, (all of which I believe) until I am blue in the face, but if I don’t understand them first, I am losing.

I observed this first hand today while on a sales call with two of my colleagues. We had a great meeting that lasted well over an hour, very little of which was spent discussing LUCRUM. In doing so, we identified numerous business problems LUCRUM can solve through our understanding of technology. More importantly we took the first steps toward building a new relationship with them based on understanding of their unique business needs. No pushy sales pitch. No dog and pony show. Just having a real and meaningful conversation about them When we are talking about them… we win.

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LUCRUM, Meatballs, and Marketing

April 10, 2008

Meatball SundaeYesterday I, along with the LUCRUM business development team, got the opportunity to listen in on a live conference call with author Seth Godin, courtesy of SFEntrepreneur.com. It was excellent and extremely relevant to the future of business.

Seth discussed his latest book, Meatball Sundae, which is about the revolution that is taking place in business thanks in large part to the growth and expansion of the web and other associated technologies. Seth claims that the old model for business, and thus Marketing, is broken and dying.

The old way is: big media, big advertising budgets, limited communication channels, top down, interrupt people with average, sanitized messages about average stuff made for the masses. This is the Meatball part of the Meatball Sundae and represents the old way of doing things - classical marketing and advertising.

The new way is: infinite communication through infinite channels in all directions, constantly evolving conversations, consumer oriented, niche focused, web enabled, search driven, and completely at odds with what used to work. This involves employee development, R&D, a commitment to making something remarkable, listening, problem solving, blogs, wikis, social media, word of mouth, and other emerging forms of technology in marketing. It is the Sundae - the whipped cream with a cherry that everyone wants to put on top.

The problem many companies face is that they try to keep the old (Meatballs) and then combine the new (the sundae). What you get in the end is not something great, but rather something that just does not work. A Meatball Sundae - Gross. You can’t just take the old way of doing things, slap some “new marketing” on top and expect it to work. What is needed is a whole new mindset. One that is about empowerment, accountability, open communication, transparency, honesty, and creativity.

I believe that Seth is absolutely correct in his analysis of the current state of business, and that what he says can be applied to what we are doing here at LUCRUM. When I started here at LUCRUM a few months ago, I had just read this book for the first time. I am now re-reading it. We are trying to make the leap from yesterday into the future, and as a result we are making fundamental changes to who we are as a company. It is a new mindset. A mindset that is focused on how we can make our organization one that thrives in the world of new marketing, and not how to we use the new “cool tools” to support our old structure. Our cultural and structural changes have been a widely discussed topic as of late - even making the paper (meatball). Many of these challenges are not unique to LUCRUM, but rather represent the changing world around us. Further, our recent struggles merely validate the ineffectiveness of the old way of doing things and serve as an impetus for change.

We are striving to be the best in the world at using technology to solve the business problems of our Clients. I believe that our leadership team is committed to achieving this goal. Our blog represents this change on some level, but what I hope to ensure is that I am not the architect of a giant, disgusting meatball sundae of my own. I am very encourage by the fact that I see people here embracing a mindset centered on delivering incredible results for Clients. I see a company transforming into something amazing - something far bigger than “hey we have a blog now.” Yes, the blog is amazing. Yes I am very proud of it. Yes I am fascinated by the contributions of my colleagues to this experiment in marketing. But more importantly, I am fascinated and amazed by what it represents. Our people care - all of our people. Our people have a voice - all of our people. We are focusing on giving our clients and customers a voice too - all of our customer and clients. More importantly, we want to listen to that voice. No more of the highly sanitized corporate speak that plagues IT consulting firms. Just real, honest communication. We are on a journey. We have a long way to go. Still, look how far we have already come.

Back to the book… In it, Seth does a great job of identifying 14 of the trends that are shaping the future of business. They are as follows:

  1. Direct communication and commerce between producers and consumers
  2. Amplification of the voice of the consumer and independent authorities
  3. Need for an authentic story as the number of sources increases
  4. Extremely short attention spans due to clutter
  5. The Long Tail
  6. Outsourcing
  7. Google and the dicing of everything
  8. Infinite channels of communication
  9. Direct communication and commerce between consumers and consumers
  10. The shifts in scarcity and abundance
  11. The triumph of big ideas
  12. The shift from “how many” to “who”
  13. The wealthy are like us
  14. New Gatekeepers, No Gatekeeper

If you want to know what is driving the thought process of our Marketing, simply study these trends (or just read Seth’s blog). We will look to embrace these ideas wherever and whenever possible as we shape the future of LUCRUM. Everything we do is marketing, and thus everyone gets the opportunity to take part.

Thanks to Seth Godin and SFentrepreneur.com for putting the call together.

Live Call with Seth Godin Presented by SFentrepreneur (April 9th) by SFentrepreneur | Connecting the Entrepreneurship Community in San Francisco Bay Area, Silicon Valley, San Jose and Oakland

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People, Technology, and Learning

March 25, 2008

As the new marketing manager for LUCRUM, there is so much that I do not understand about what we do. Here is the good news. I know that I can learn.  I was reminded of this as I was reading one of Seth Godin’s latest posts about learning.  There has never been a time in history where knowledge has been so readily available.  The problem now becomes one of attention - picking what to learn out of the vast choices of information.  I am lucky to be surrounded by technology experts, all willing to share information about the technical aspects we deliver to our clients.  Here at LUCRUM, we regularly have employees present internally on emerging technologies through our Lunch and Learn and Brain Brew programs.  Learn by teaching is deeply engrained in our culture.  This only helps to make our consultants more effective with our clients, and our team better equipped to meet the evolving needs of business.  I know I have a lot to learn.  What is better is to know that I work somewhere where I am not only encouraged to learn, I am expected to.  Combine the culture I work in with the endless knowledge provided on the web, and there is really no excuse not to learn something of value every day.  Occasionally, I might test that knowledge here - soliciting your feedback to yield even greater understanding.  What an amazing time to be alive, and what an amazing place to be living it!

Seth’s Blog: Things you don’t understand

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Blog Training at LUCRUM

March 25, 2008

Today, I was given the distinct privilege of presenting to my fellow LUCRUM employees on blogging. More specifically, I was tasked with teaching them how to blog. I was given 90 minutes, which is a long time to talk about something that is really quite easy to do. I spent some time discussing why it is important to blog.  I touched on the changing state of marketing from that of a dialog to an interactive monologue, and stressed that their voices matter.  I then went on to talk about ways to construct posts, do’s and don’ts of blogging, and then showed them just how simple it is to use WordPress.  We touched on tools like RSS, digital cameras, Google Blog Search, and plain old note cards as ways to develop content.  We even got into some emerging tools like Alltop and Snipshot.  Overall, I think that everyone was interested.  It is tough to present to such a diverse group - especially when many are far more versed in technology than I.  The true test of the presentation will be very easy to measure.  If you see more posts from more people, it worked.  If not, I will go back to the white board.  I am convinced that the people here at LUCRUM are some of the best and brightest in the world.  My challenge is convincing them to share that brilliance with the rest of the world.  If I can, what an amazing experiment this will turn out to be.  Hopefully today was the first step in making that happen.  Thanks to everyone who attended.  You were a great audience.

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So You Think You Have What It Takes

February 28, 2008

I work with this amazing marketing guy, Dave Bowman. I call him Mr. Dayton because he knows, well, everybody in Dayton. He changed my life in about 1/2 an hour teaching me the farther reaching concepts of social media and how to market myself. Anyway, Dave is looking for 2 undergraduate students to fill Marketing Coordinator positions at our offices in Downtown Cincinnati. If this can grow into an internship or a co-op position for you, let’s talk and determine how we might be able to do this.

Let me tell you a bit about the position. Our Marketing Coordinator will fill a critical role in the execution of integrated marketing campaigns. Okay, what the heck does that mean? The Marketing Coordinator adds to the success of the LUCRUM’s Sales and Marketing team. You’ll support our sales and marketing efforts. How? You’ll assist with items direct mail, marketing fulfillment, database management, web management, blogging, social network development, market research, proposal development, event coordination, sales support, and more. Imagine that. You get paid to blog. In fact, it will be part of your job description.

If you have great communication skills and are looking for a cutting edge marketing opportunity, please apply. Really. We’re looking for folks with “can do” attitudes and a hunger for learning by doing. If you are the right person, LUCRUM will work around your schedule needs to make this fit for you. And I can promise you that you’ll walk away from LUCRUM with an amazing ability and some astonishing new skills to market yourself when you’re done.

You’ll be communicating with a broad range of individuals from co-workers to CIOs, so you’ll need to write well and have a solid phone and speaking presence. You’ll manage small projects from start to finish, so you’ll need to have command of your personal time management habits along with a demonstratably strong work ethic. Don’t get me wrong. This is no cushy job. We’re going to squeeze 8 hours of work out of you during your 4 hours here. You’ll also leave with bleeding-edge personal marketing skills and business relationships that could help you land your dream job out of college.

LUCRUM is not constrained to Business or Marketing majors. If you think you have what it takes - and you’ll want to really think about that first - please take the time to introduce yourself to us. We are looking for 2 great people that we can employ, and in return offer some cutting edge skills to help further your career. If you want to give this a shot, complete the contact form behind the Contact LUCRUM link at the top of this page and let us know how to get in touch with you.

As stated earlier, the position offers tremendous schedule flexibility. Each of the 2 candidates will be expected to work 2 to 3 days per week for approximately 4 hours per day. Ideally we will find one candidate to work on Monday & Wednesday, and another for Tuesday & Thursday - with Friday being used as needed.

LUCRUM will pay $10/hour and reimburse downtown parking costs.

You can find additional information about LUCRUM at our website, www.lucruminc.com, and more information about the people of LUCRUM right here on these pages.

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