Archive for December, 2007

Thought Leadership Marketing

Monday, December 31st, 2007

I just started reading Get Slightly Famous (2nd ed.) by Steven van Yoder when a friend forwarded below article to me which I think is worth reading as almost every business owner would want to be known as experts in their own field.

Thought Leadership Marketing

By Steven Van Yoder

When David Silverstein launched Breakthrough Management Group (BMG) in 2001, he sought ways to establish BMG as business performance improvement specialists in the financial services, healthcare, and manufacturing industries. Knowing that advertising was not a viable strategy, he embraced thought leadership marketing to establish BMG in key target markets.

Silverstein spoke at industry conferences and commented on industry trends in his Leadership and Business blog. He coauthored INsourcing Innovation, a book that articulates BMG’s approach to developing core business competencies that drive innovation. He offered his expertise to the media, helping BMG garner coverage in over 100 publications, including the Wall Street Journal, Business Finance magazine, and Investor’s Business Daily. He also appeared on CNN’s Squeeze Play.

In roughly five years, thought leadership took BMG from an unknown startup to a global organization with eleven offices on five continents. “Our reputation as a thought leader helped us expand into core markets, including Asia and Latin America, where credibility and name recognition go a long way,” says Silverstein. “Our reputation now helps our sales team get their foot in the door in key markets.”

The Age of Thought Leadership

Marketing used to be about “getting in front of” prospects, delivering your pitch and making the sale. Today, the Internet has permanently changed the way people and companies find and evaluate products and services. Consumers now find companies through their own efforts, often through a search engine.

Moreover, buyers increasingly distrust marketing “claims” and expect businesses to show, not tell, when demonstrating their products and services. They shun self-serving salespeople and seek businesses that focus on making a difference, not getting a sale.

Thought leadership centers on earning trust and credibility. Thought leaders get noticed by offering something different—information, insights, and ideas, for instance. Thought leadership positions you and your company as an industry authority and resource and trusted advisor by establishing your reputation as a generous contributor to your industry.

Thought Leadership in a Virtual World

The Internet has permanently transformed marketing. Regardless of your company’s size or industry, people expect to find basic information about your company at the click of a mouse. The Internet empowers prospects that now expect easy access to information about your products and services.

Prospects often form a Virtual First Impression ™ of your company in an Internet browser. They expect your company to be “findable” on the Web, and demonstrate a credible record of results. If you appear lackluster compared to your competitors, you lose potential clients or customers and risk becoming obsolete.

To make the Internet an effective part of your thought leadership strategy, you must focus on showing your value, demonstrating your worth, and making a difference. Your website should provide fresh, educational content that helps prospects see your business as a solution.

Elements of a Thought Leadership Program

Thought leadership centers on sharing your knowledge and giving your expertise generously and frequently in a variety of formats.

Thought leaders position themselves as centers of influence who are always “present” within their target markets. Seek opportunities to be seen, read, and heard on a regular basis by the people who matter most to your company.

Media Strategies

The public values the media, and so should you. In one way or another, the media reach and influence everyone with a direct impact on your business. As a thought leader, your should establish relationships with editors and publications in the trade, and in local, national, and international media to enhance your credibility, build your brand, and reach far more prospects than you could in person.

The Internet

Share your knowledge by creating and distributing content online contributes incrementally to growing your business brand. As the Internet evolves to an interactive online community, new technologies collectively labeled “Web 2.0” enable people to collaborate, co-create, and share information online rather than simply peruse information.

Syndicate articles on web sites that reach your marketplace. Embrace blogs, podcasts, social networking websites, social bookmarking websites, and online communities as virtual platforms to demonstrate your expertise and engage in two-way dialogue with your prospects.

Speaking

Speaking can be the fastest, easiest, and cheapest way to establish yourself as a thought leader, and it gives you tremendous credibility that increases over time.

Identify trade shows, associations and conferences that customers and industry influencers are attending, and get on their panels or lead workshops. You don’t have to be personally present to give a talk that reaches your target market. Online chats and teleconferences, using your own or others’ Websites or telephone lines, can help you reach a lot of people eager to hear your message.

Publish Valuable Content

Thought leaders create and distribute information, such as white papers, books and reports, that educate their target market about issues related to their business.

White papers can be easily created in Adobe pdf format and offered from your own or others’ web sites. When done correctly, a white paper is a powerful vehicle for a thought leadership marketing strategy that attracts prospects via search engines and other online channels.

Thought Leadership Starts at the Top

Regardless of a company’s size or industry, thought leadership always starts at the top. When you are deemed a thought leader, it is a broad acknowledgment that your company, in a real, authentic sense, leads the thinking in your industry. Thought leadership is most effective when led by a company’s top management, who develop and express new ideas that keep a company at the forefront of change.

Steven Van Yoder is an internationally recognized expert on public relations, executive branding and thought leadership marketing and author of Get Slightly Famous ™: Become a Celebrity in Your Field and Attract More Business with Less Effort (Second Edition). This article was originally published on the Get Slightly Famous WebZine, an online publication offering free articles, resources, white papers, podcasts and resources focused on thought leadership marketing.

Lessons Learned on the Journey to the Top

Friday, December 28th, 2007

I received a book from the moderator of DearReader.com,  Suzanne Beecher   - the book is called From the Sandbox to the Corner Office: Lessons Learned on the Journey to the Top by Eve Tahmincioglu.  The book features interviews from CEOs of different companies and corporations about their journey to the top. It’s obvious that these people became leaders not because of their DNAs but with sheer hard work and perseverance.  It’s also amazing to note that Winston Churchill and Abraham Lincoln emerged as most idolized personality; almost everyone loves Jim Collins’ Good to Great — maybe this is because almost all business owners wants their business to be really great and not just good; most of them fear “failure,”  and when asked how they’ll describe themselves, “ambitious” is the most used word.

Journey to the top is not that easy - whether it’s business’ journey or life’s journey. Every step we make gives valuable lessons each of us should never ignore to be able to make it to the top.

Amazon Kindle at your Service

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

No time to read? How can anyone claim such a lousy excuse when technology is at our command? Jeff Bezos, the founder and CEO of Amazon.com introduced Kindle last month. With the screen size of 4.5 inches by 3.5 inches, and the whole device measures 7.5 inches by 5.3 inches, with 0.7 inches thickness, who wouldn’t love this gadget? Kindle weighs about just a little over 10 ounces. It’s just slightly larger than a mass-market paperback yet weighs far lesser!

 

Amazon Kindle has a cell phone modem in the device, making it capable to wirelessly download books, magazines, newspapers and blogs. It can accommodate up to 200 books, more if an SD card is added. There’s also a full-alphabet keyboard at the bottom of the screen for easy navigation, for easy searching, and for annotating. A word help is available with a few clicks of a button. A web browser is also included that allows users to surf for free. Not perfect by everybody’s standard, but what is? The battery life is pretty decent but can still be improved. The public is also already looking forward to an advanced feature of a colored screen…

 

With Kindle at your fingertips, you still cannot read a book? Think another excuse. Another company will surely benefit from your whine!