COMMENTS
Brian,
Great read! You wrote under the section: Changes In Knowledge Creation & Retrieval "Those few extra mouse clicks help the company, but might not do anything to fundamentally improve their bonus that year. This is a somewhat pessimistic view, but I suppose some of their rationale might be that information is power and the lack of transparency increases leverage." - Would love to see an article written or your thoughts on more examples of "tearing down the wall of sharing knowledge". Especially around companies where employees must share data to work more efficiently.
This lack of sharing might be one of the root causes for low adoption rates around the technology.
Brian,
This is an awesome article - well thought, and well written!
You've touched on how these changes affect software sales process before - I enjoy reading your thoughts on this topic, please write more! :)
- Michael
http://michael.hightechproductmanagement.com
Brian,
Well done!
I have also seen quite a few startups struggle with Adwords. Generally, there is a problem overcoming the "noise floor". And depending on how small the niches are, there can also be a problem with the proliferation of landing pages (for those cases where the web site IS easy to maintain and which uses referral context). If the startup is in the "long tail" kind of product/service, then perhaps landing pages might not work at all - there may be just too many different small offerings to hook enough of the tiny consumers. One thing I am trying to understand, and I think a lot of people are trying to understand, is what the noise floor looks like for blogs. Similarly, is a search engine or SEO the way to try to maximize blog impact or is word-of-mouth they way, or is there a combination? Setting up a blog is easier than setting up a web site with landing pages. But ongoing blog maintenance can be high in terms of people-hours per week, depending on the contributers. We are tring to distribute the load among several people at my company. I'll let you know how it goes and if we see some changes.
Brian,
Thanks for the article! I'm w/ Kevin on wanting more on changes in knowledge creation. Your points on figuring out what is self-serving for the user is critical. That's not always clear... why was del.icio.us better than previous bookmarking sites? IMHO, because of tagging, and then that is also a key link between people... the tags.
And I completely agree with your point about market efficiencies, and eBay being a great example, but the Pez thing was a PR story, not a real story. I encourage folks to read _The Perfect Store_, which is about the start of eBay. It covers this point, but more importantly it covers the customer focus that led to the great success, against many strong, well funded competitors.
Again, like others said... thanks for the thoughful article!
Great article. However you are wrong about EBay. The pez dispenser story was invented by a public relations person and is pure fiction. EBay's owner started it to become rich and I guess the pez dispenser story sounded better :<).
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In so many ways you've made me realize the importance of sharing when there's so many that don't know the significance of gaining that extra edge from taking that extra step in order to reach that next level of excellence.
This is an excellent article!
Right on. I'll add that data isn't the same as knowledge. Feeding it in and disseminating it in a meaningful, organized way - whether to a small business owner or her consumers -- is the Holy Grail. Google Ad Words comes replete with 150-word glossary of terms. It's a classic Dilbert cartoon! - not intuitive. I'm a marketing, and a savvy one at that. Your product makes my blood pressure go down. When that happens I know I'm on to something.
@Cindy -- Our making your blood pressure go down sounds like goodness to me. Thanks for the comment.
Great article! I believe that so many business owners and corporate managers still severely under estimate the power of the internet. Recently, I opened my own physical therapy & wellness practice in a highly competitive market. The success of my practice depends on communicating the differences between our clinic and our competitors. One of the most significant differences is our focus on establishing lifelong relationships with our patients. Leveraging internet technologies gives us a great way to communicate with customers and helps to continue the connection even after therapy is finished. Using the Hubspot methodology and CMS is helping us establish our website as a healthcare resource for our community.
Bud.
Glad to hear from you on this article and on my blue ocean article.
I think that the web is great for attracting customers and then engaging them over long periods of time, as you pointed out.
I think we'll look back in 20 years and talk about a marketing revolution that took place in this decade akin to the marketing revolution that happened 50 years ago when television started.