Wednesday, April 15, 2009

White Papers in the High Tech and Software Marketing Mix

There are many marketing methods in Software and IT marketing that can be appropriate in some, but not all situations. I'd put White Papers in that category. The term "white paper" is a broadly used term, and can mean different things to different people. I define a white paper as a document written to provide insight or expertise specific to a market, process or product category.

PRODUCT & MARKET APPLICABILITY

White Papers are used far more often in B2B marketing than in B2C marketing. I have seen them used in a B2C environment, but only infrequently. A White Paper is most often useful when there is complex technology or work processes involved. In a B2C environment, they would usually only be used in an "early adopter" market where a product concept is new, and prices and sales cycles are still long.

MARKETING RATIONALE FOR WHITE PAPERS

Why use a White Paper at all? The best reason is to build credibility for your company or product. White papers are most frequently accessed by prospects early in the sales cycle, when a prospect is just beginning research on a product category. These documents allow company personnel to show off domain or technology expertise, which should reflect well on the product you eventually want to sell the prospect. The white paper shows off your company as thought leader in your category. It also allows you to subtly and gently position your company and product in the prospects mind, very early in the sales process. It is often helpful to designate one (or a few) people in the company as the author of the white paper and as an expert in the field.

THE "RIGHT WAY" TO DO WHITE PAPERS

So what are the key factors to creating a successful white paper? Here's a few:

* Written by a domain or technical expert
* Succinct-no fluff or overt marketing, to the point
* Aimed directly at your target prospects
* Provides valuable information to your target
* Mostly solution-agnostic, any product or company promotion must be subtle

WHAT NOT TO DO IN A WHITE PAPER

And what are the things to avoid a wasted effort? Keep these points in mind:

* Can't be a product brochure -no relentless promotion
* Don't make it the length of a book
* Never stretch the truth
* If it's too general, so that no one will invest time to read it

BEST USES FOR WHITE PAPER

What can you do with your white paper, once you've put in the time, money and effort to create one? There are many good uses--here's a few to consider:

* It will contribute positively to Search Engine Optimization on your website
* An excellent item to use in a PPC campaign offer
* A great email marketing campaign offer
*An important intermediate step in the sales process; often useful just after a website visit, but prior to a webinar or product trial
* Versatile as "lead bait"; regardless of the medium or campaign, you should require contact info from the prospect prior to a white paper download
*Assists in moving a prospect along without "high touch" interactions--helping automate the sales process and shorten the sales cycle

SUMMARY

White papers can be very valuable tools in a number of market segments. These documents should be used to differentiate your company as a progressive thought-leader in your market category. The optimal goal for a successful white paper is to position your company as a preferred vendor or serious alternative for prospects in your market segment. This is accomplished by demonstrating expertise and providing credible, valuable and unbiased information which is valued by the target prospect. It is NOT accomplished by "tooting your own horn", playing fast and loose with facts, or duplicating your company brochure. If you want to be a successful white paper marketer, it's important to restrain yourself from tactics in the latter category. That's what I think about making white papers an important part of your marketing mix. Please post a comment and add your experience and thoughts on this topic.

Phil Morettini
PJM Consulting
www.pjmconsult.com

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Sunday, January 28, 2007

Marketing and Selling Technology Products through the Value-Added Reseller (VAR) Channel

Selling through multiple channels is one of my preferred strategies in technology marketing. If done properly, it allows a company to fully exploit its expensive, hard-earned intellectual property to the maximum extent. One of the most popular channels (and one of my favorites) used to sell B2B software and hardware is the Value-added Reseller, or VAR channel.

VARS ARE THE DISTRIBUTION HOLY GRAIL FOR MANY STARTUP COMPANIES

In fact, with a great many startup software and technology companies, building a VAR channel network to sell their companies products is the first thing they want to do, upon releasing their first product. This is especially true when the founding management team primarily comes from a technical background. The thinking goes; they are technologists who have created a great product. They don't have a lot of experience selling or marketing--and most of the startup money has gone to, and will continue to go to developing products. Why not just recruit a bunch of resellers to market and sell their product for them? Sounds like a great idea on the surface, doesn't it?

Unfortunately, there are few strategies that are more flawed, and which have continuously led to failure than this one.

Let's contrast the realities of the VAR channel, against this simplistic notion that has been tried again and again, without success:

WHAT VARS DON'T DO

1) First of all, VARs DON'T market. At least not YOUR products, anyway (they may market their services). So the very first flaw in this strategy is that it is based on a gross misconception of what a VAR typically does.

2) VARs don't create new markets. VARs are great at selling into established markets and further expanding already growing ones. Missionary sales: brand new markets, categories and products? Not so much.

3) They don't sell a wide variety, or a large assortment of products. In fact, VARs are focused on actively selling VERY FEW products--if they are even focused on selling products at all.

4) VARs aren't motivated by high product margins.

5) The individual VAR does not exist to help YOUR company make money.

Now if you're not a sales or marketing professional with experience working with the VAR channel, you're probably very confused by the list just above. So what is it that VARs actually do? And why is it worth dealing with them at all!

What happens time and time again is that a technologist startup CEO will pursue the VAR channel as their exclusive distribution channel, without knowing any of the points in the list above. Their effort will fail miserably, and they will then scramble to begin selling their product directly, or through some other means. They will swear off the VAR channel forever, and I do mean swear:


"Those !!@#$%^^* resellers are good for nothing. They take a big cut of your margins, while adding no value in return. I'll never deal with them again."

I can't tell you how many times I've heard some version of the quote above.


But the VAR channel is a major force in the technology business, and if you know what you're doing, it can be used to great leverage by your company. So let's now take a more realistic look at what VARs CAN DO:

WHAT VARS ACTUALLY DO

1) First and foremost, VARs are in business to sell their own HIGH MARGIN SERVICES. That is why they exist, and how they put bread on the table. This revelation may be discouraging to some product vendors, but you must understand and respect this above all, if you hope to leverage this channel. The only exception to this is the "core" product, which will be discussed later in this article.

2) VARs are very interested in things that apply to their own vertical focus. Although it wasn't so true many years ago, most successful VARs these days have a very tight vertical focus.

3) Many VARs act as "thought leaders" for their corporate customers. So they are very interested in "what's new" in the market, so they can stay on top of trends and remain market experts for their clients. This means that they will sometimes spend a lot of time talking to you about your new product, but never find the time to actually "sell" it (even if they have the best of intentions). In the busy world of the small VAR, client demands and selling the core product and services usually soak up all excess time.

4) VARs are often used as "aggregators" of purchases by corporate clients. This way, the corporation can use a single vendor point of contact for their technology purchases, greatly simplifying their purchasing process. They can also leverage the VAR as an evaluator/validator of new products and technologies. This makes them a very important part of the purchasing chain for many corporations.

5) If they put any real effort into selling products at all, it is usually into one or two "core" products that they have built their service offerings around. If you aren't a product that pulls services, forget about getting high mindshare with the VAR.

6) When it comes to selling "non-core" products, VARs are almost completely driven by the demand they see in their installed customer base. They won't often add in new products that they don't see a demand for, unless they are really techie, early adopter types. And these techies will often add a product, but never find time to actually offer it (let alone sell it) to their customers.

7) The VAR channel is EXCELLENT at fulfilling demand for great new products into their existing, installed customer base.

8) VARs can be an excellent proxy for a vendor in installing, configuring and offering first level support. This can enable a vendor extend its reach and to leverage the VAR channels existing infrastructure rather than building out a large field organization (which depending on the product category, may not even be feasible).

So given the points outlined above, what are the "best practices" to follow when you are seeking to build and leverage a VAR channel?

VAR CHANNEL BEST PRACTICES

*Always sell your new product directly in the beginning. Even if you don't plan to build a direct sales force and sell directly in the long run, it is critical to establish that the product works, and can be sold successfully. If you can't sell your own product, no VAR will be able to either (and few smart ones will be willing to try). De-bug and systemize the sales process, make sure that your end user price points are right, and build a small reference account list--at a minimum. Only at this point should you begin to approach VARs to distribute your product.

*Marketing the product is the vendor's responsibility. Do not naively think that the VAR will market the product for you, or that since you have VARs to sell, you don't need to market at all. Remember, VARs are great at fulfilling demand among their existing customers--and very poor at creating it among new customers. The vendor must position its products in the market and create demand for them--otherwise your channel efforts will certainly fail

*Treat VARs like the valued business partners they should be. If you do sell direct, don't "steal a deal" and take it direct just to make a few more points on one sale. Nothing is more short-sighted. Not only will this VAR not do business with you again, in any given vertical it's a small community--and word gets around fast. You risk becoming a pariah in the VAR channel, and losing all the hard work that you put into building your network. My philosophy is: when in doubt, cut the VAR in on the deal. If you don't feel he's adding any value to your business, eliminate him from your network after the deal. But don't use your low opinion of a particular VAR to convince yourself to cut him out of the deal. You risk cutting off your own nose in spite.

*Be realistic in what the VAR channel can do for you. If you have a non-core offering, be happy that they "make it available" to their customer base, rather than expecting them to sell it actively. Remember, VARs are key influencers of their clients; just being available to endorse your product as something they offer, to a customer that hears about the product elsewhere, can be very valuable.

*Provide a reasonable margin, but don't "throw margin away" thinking that it will motivate a VAR to actively push your product--if they otherwise would not. It won't work, and you'll just be giving away money for no reason--that you could use creating demand instead.

*For most products, make sure that you don't over-distribute by signing up more VARs than your market will support. Even though greater margins might not make a VAR push your products, the erosion of margins to near zero will cause a VAR to eliminate your product from their portfolio. It's better to leave a few deals on the table, than to risk demotivating your entire reseller network, because they are 6 competitors are bidding on every deal in an particular area. The exception to this is if you represent a "core" product that pulls significant service revenue, you can get away with a lot more stuff, because the product margins are trivial to the VAR compared to the lucrative service revenue. But in this case, be careful when using your market strength to abuse partners. People have long memories, and "what goes around, comes around."

SUMMARY

That's my primer on how to approach, and even more importantly, how NOT to approach doing business with Value-Added Resellers. Post a comment or send me an email to delve into this important topic further.

Phil Morettini
PJM Consulting
http://www.pjmconsult.com/

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