Radical Marketing: Stop telling the market–and start asking

How business managers are using Radical Marketing during turbulent times.

The “new normal” of today’s economy is forcing business leaders to find new ways to drive their companies forward. It’s time for something radically different, and marketing has a leading role. Torque, a Chicago-based marketing agency, is sharing thoughts and inspiration in a series of seminars on Radical Marketing – new ways to break from the media frenzy, new ways to go viral and new ways to get intimate. Our goal is to show the business world that it is now the job of marketing to help drive the business model. Come hear how sharp marketers have taken over the boardroom and businesses. In short, they have moved to radical marketing.

Panelists:

Release New Revenue Via Modern Licensing Strategies
Jeff Christensen relates how companies can wake the sleeping giant and tap new revenue streams hidden in their brands, while sidestepping the cost overhead normally associated with building a new business unit. Follow Jeff’s entrepreneurial story of business invention in his own career at Jim Beam and Wilson Sporting Goods, and how he has mastered the art of business and marketing judo, using other people’s momentum and leverage to form powerful business delivery models.

Beyond Crowd Sourcing
Kim Kleeman will talk about building a powerful business model around content strategies and content experts that you manage (rather than leave content to the whim of the online public). Kim will tell her story as an entrepreneur, how she built a textbook publishing machine using hundreds of subject writer experts nation-wide, then saw the business dissolve as state education budgets vanished. She has subsequently rebuilt her business to deliver scholastic quality and compelling content to businesses that realize the consumer and B2B world wants good information.

Bringing Startup Innovation to the Enterprise
Kit Mueller, entrepreneur, relates his experience in startup ventures and his methodology for bringing startup innovative practices to the enterprise. By doing this he injects nimbleness and innovation into large-scale business. Kit has pioneered digital and social media marketing practices, and sees marketing as a means to drive business rather than a tactical discipline. He has moderated many panels and discussions, covering everything from the legal implications of social media to Fortune 500 CMOs who build enterprise digital marketing.

Date
May 25, 2010

Time
6:00pm – 7:45pm (networking 5:30pm – 6:00pm / 8:00pm – 8:30pm)

Location
Metropolitan Club of Chicago
Willis Tower / 233 S Wacker Drive
Chicago, IL 60606

Room
Michigan Room, 66th floor

Details
Admission is free. Light appetizers, cash bar

Sign up
RSVP online by May 19, 2010

Judith Wright: Do Men and Women Lead Differently?

We’ve been anticipating a fascinating evening on April 29—and the bar just went up: we’re thrilled that Judith Wright will guide the MENG Evening Leadership event. Judith brings a long-standing career of business and leadership coaching experience, with a depth of material specifically on the subject of “brain sex,” the cognitive differences between men and women.

Join us on April 29, 2010, for an exploration of how gender affects leadership in top marketing roles. We know from popular books and media that men and women approach many things differently and we can often learn from the opposite sex. How does this also apply to leadership in the workplace?

Judith will lead the event in a discussion about these questions and more:

• Do men and women lead differently?

• Every leader develops their own style. How is that style informed by a person’s gender?

• Has political correctness created perfect gender blindness in today’s workplace?

Whatever your experience has been, participating in our conversation will get you to think about leadership differently—and give you ideas to apply to your particular leadership situation or challenge.

Come network, share, and learn. Program details are below, and registration is open at http://bit.ly/agvbUS

See you there!

April 29, 2010
Location: Information Resources Inc., 150 N. Clinton St, Chicago
Refreshments:  Yes!—drinks and a hearty hors d’oeuvre buffet
5.30p – 6.30p networking
6.30p – 8p program
8p-8.30p networking
Admission: $30 members, $40 non-members

Register: http://bit.ly/agvbUS

MENG thanks SymphonyIRI for generously providing the facility for this event.

Do Men and Women Lead Differently?

Gender differences are perhaps the oldest—and among the most poignant—discussion our culture knows. Geoffrey Chaucer treated the topic with timeless wit and relevance in his Canterbury Tales. Centuries later, scholars continue writing about Chaucer. My father, Michael Masi, was one of those scholars, and his last book was on Chaucer and Gender.

~

~

Fast forward to April 29, 2010, when you can join us for the next MENG Evening Leadership Event, an exploration of how gender affects leadership in top marketing roles. We know from popular books and media that men and women approach many things differently and we can often learn from the opposite sex. But, does this also apply to leadership in the workplace?

~

~

But don’t wait to make your point: send me your answers to these questions now, so we can tee-up more ideas for the evening event!

• Do men and women lead differently?

• Every leader develops their own style. How is that style informed by a person’s gender?

• Has political correctness created perfect gender blindness in today’s workplace?

Whatever your experience has been, participating in our conversation will get you to think about leadership differently—and give you ideas to apply to your particular leadership situation or challenge.

Come network, listen, share, and learn. Program details are below, and registration is open at http://bit.ly/agvbUS

See you there!

April 29, 2010
Location: Information Resources Inc., 150 N. Clinton St, Chicago
Refreshments:  Yes!—drinks and a hearty hors d’oeuvre buffet
5.30p – 6.30p networking
6.30p – 8p program
8p-8.30p networking
Admission: $30 members, $40 non-members

Register: http://bit.ly/agvbUS

MENG thanks SymphonyIRI for generously providing the facility for this event.

The New Normal: Strategic Planning In a Time When Past Lessons Don’t Teach All

The Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce Midmarket Forum was pleased to open the 2010 speaker series season with Ram V. Iyer, founder of The Midmarket Institute. On March 16, Ram spoke to an enthusiastic room of 75 people, at the Nixon Peabody law offices, 300 S. Riverside Ave., Chicago.

Central to his talk was to identify midmarket companies and the common issues they face. He focused on providing market data, tools, and most of all, the offer to participate in a community for ongoing dialogue, for everyone involved in the midmarket.

Ram’s process: midmarket companies need to understand the macro economy, as it relates to them. Their approach should be to hold onto their core customers and focus on understanding what they do best – their core business. Then they can evaluate options available to them.  This enables midmarket companies to use many available tools to effectively turn around, or to really thrive in their business.

So what characterizes a midmarket company? They are defined mostly by the common challenges they face, not just their revenues or employee count. They face marketplace challenges, such as limited access to funds, broad economic issues that often hit them disproportionately, and new non-traditional competitors. Further, they face internal challenges, including CEO succession with one strong leader supported by a relatively weaker bench. Operationally, they are generally good but impaired with knowledge lockboxes, individuals who perform specific tasks rather than practices and procedures. And they tend to hold onto vendors too long. But overarching everything is that midmarket companies are “too busy doing” to develop good strategic plans (making sure they are working on the right things and applying the right resources). And without strategic plans, midmarket companies are in peril.

Times might be tough for midmarket companies, but they shouldn’t waste a good crisis: theirs, their customers’ or their suppliers’.

Midmarket companies have the opportunity to wake up to the new normal. What is the new normal? Many of the “old rules” don’t work.  Consumer spending in the US is down and is expected to remain below recent historic highs. Most of the growth will occur overseas. Globalization is ‘spiky’ and requires new skills that are scarce in smaller companies. Regulatory changes create enormous uncertainty. All of these events characterize the foreseeable marketplace future, to which midmarket companies must adapt if they want to thrive.  Let’s continue the dialog.

Strategic Planning: the Difference Between Getting it Right and Wasted Opportunity

–>

This post is about strategic planning, and a preamble to a series on the subject. If leaders make the mistakes commonly made in planning, they waste the lives and fortunes of their stakeholders. This is an exploration of these pitfalls, and a look at a quantified strategic process that can change all that. The result: planning that has the potential to help organizations to perform their best, to maximize potential revenue, profit, market share, as well as lead to great satisfaction for investors, managers, employees and customers.

Before examining a best practices framework for strategic planning, let’s look at some common mistakes. There is a right way and a wrong way to go about strategic planning. Or more accurately, there some right ways and many wrong ways, which is troubling since most professionals tasked with planning (or tasked with executing without a plan!) will likely get it wrong without formal training or a methodology.
So let’s begin with wisdom from Peter Drucker: “Business strategies are a firm’s theory about how to compete successfully”

This may sound pretty straightforward. However, how many companies or corporate divisions are focused on a goal such as making more money? Of course making money is critical to profit, competitive advantage, business success, return on value, etc. But as a strategy, it leaves a business vulnerable to competitive threats and market demand blind spots because it doesn’t focus on how customers choose to buy. In other words, a strategy of “making more money” is not focused on the marketplace.

We need rules.

Ask 10 people what strategy is, and you’ll get as many answers. Strategic planning is not intuitive. Unless a set of rules can be established, understood and agreed upon, it is very difficult to get it right intuitively. Strategic planning becomes the domain of the few with the most forceful personalities, rather than of collaborative teams and rigorous process.

By following a clear set of quantitative rules and marketplace data, very accurate strategic plans can be developed. This is not to say that there is one and only one right way for a business to go to market. And of course a good strategic plan does not guarantee successful execution. But a strategic plan that satisfies critical structural requirements and disciplines is a superior platform for success.

To clarify Drucker, a firm’s theory of how to compete successfully is not about improving on one’s past. Successful competition comes from understanding need in the market, developing the ability to provide significant value, and helping customers to distinguish from among available (competing) options.

The pitfalls of the usual ways of developing strategy

“Offerings that are positioned as incremental modifications to the leader, using “er’s” and “est’s” are unfounded and unsupportable.” —strategist, Jeff White

So often, strategic planning begins with a discussion of aspiration: “What do we want to be great at doing?” This deductive process begins with a review of: “What are we good at now, what are we passionate about, and how can we get a lot of attention doing it?” The problem is that without a system, there is no test for the answers to these questions. A niche player may choose a strategy such as becoming “innovation-driven,” while ignoring the market leader’s much larger R&D capability. Or a market leader might get caught up in rebuffing challenges in the marketplace from number two or niche players, which distracts from their authority as the leaders.

Worst of all, companies often come up with strategic plans to add incremental promises to existing discussions: cheaper, better, faster, etc. This leaves the customer confused and uninspired, with no way to substantiate the difference or to evaluate the truth of these claims.

The risk of avoiding competition

Some business managers avoid framing the competition as context for their strategic plan and brand identity. There can be many reasons: they believe they compete against themselves; they feel competition is taboo; or they measure against their own past performance.

These companies want to play their own game, focused on great offerings and on making money. The risk: their customers are comparing them with the competition. If the company does not do the work of clarifying the differences, they are leaving it to the customer to distinguish. In such cases, customers often become confused about their value, and make no choice at all…or they choose the safest option: the leader. Such was the case in the cellular telephone marketplace in the late ‘90’s, where the offers from Verizon, Sprint and others became so complicated customers simply ended up reverting to the leader, AT&T.

An introduction

The above concepts are an introduction to The 12 North Strategic Planning Framework, which has been developed by strategist Jeff White, in the context of over 20 years of consulting and strategic planning for midmarket and fortune 500 businesses. In addition, I bring first-hand insights and examples from my own work as an agency principal providing brand marketing services for 18 years in a variety of industries.

In subsequent posts, I will introduce five dimensions of  The 12 North Strategic Planning Framework:

  • Dimension 1—Three types of strategy: corporate, business and functional strategies
  • Dimension 2—The goal of competing and successful competition
  • Dimension 3—The phases of market maturity and relative competitive positions
  • Dimension 4—Category structure and evolution
  • Dimension 5—Brand identity and category competition

0

Until then, consider the bottom line of planning: committing to the wrong strategy wastes time, resources and opportunity. Disciplined use of the 12 North Planning Framework supports the development of accurate business and marketing strategies.