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| February 2008 Archives |
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Events: Building The Bridge To Customer Affinity
Using Trade Shows, Conferences, and Other Meetings to Create Profitable and Long-Lasting Client Relationships
It is important for technology vendors and solutions providers to remember that every single customer touch point presents a valuable opportunity to create affinity. And, events are no exception. By organizing your presence at trade shows, conferences, and other types of face-to-face gatherings with the customer in mind, your organization can leverage your investment in events to build affinity. This, in turn, will lead to the kind of strong, long-lasting relationships that result in optimumclient satisfaction and retention, as well as sustained profitability and growth. Download the complete UBM white paper "Events: Building The Bridge To Customer Affinity.
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Posted on February 21, 2008 | Permalink | Digg | del.icio.us |
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| Tags: Best Practices in Technology Marketing
, Customer Affinity
, Events
, IT Purchase Decisions
, Improving Marketing Results
, Marketing Strategies
, Research
, Understanding Your Customers
, White Paper
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Why Are Our Targeted Weekly E-mails Getting Little Response?
Answer: When a marketing program does not work, always go back to the basics of marketing 101: right target, right message, right timing, right channel.
Despite advances in scenario-based Web design created to track customer online behavior and build profiles, or personas, for targeted marketing campaigns, your customers are still bombarded with tons of irrelevant messages—often the result of batch-and-blast campaigns sent by stove-piped e-mail applications and outsourced e-mail service providers—each day.
If you aren’t getting responses, it is quite likely that your customers view your correspondence as spam, rather than relevant or valuable information, regardless of whether or not they have opted to receive your e-mails. Relevance is key in e-mail. Read the complete article on BtoBOnline.
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Posted on February 21, 2008 | Permalink | Digg | del.icio.us |
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| Tags: Achieving Differentiation
, Audience Engagement
, Best Practices in Technology Marketing
, Capturing Attention
, Communications Strategies
, Content Relevance
, Effective Campaigns
, Email Marketing
, Improving Marketing Results
, Tracking Online and Real World Interactions
, Understanding Your Customers
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ROI Takes Center Stage At CMO Summit
Proving ROI, using new technologies and leveraging partner marketing were key topics at Red Herring's CMO 2008 conference in San Diego last week.
The conference drew more than 300 senior marketing executives, mostly from b-to-b companies, who shared strategies for competing in today's challenging business environment.
One of the hot topics was partner marketing, with presentations by several executives whose companies use channel marketing models.
Stephen DiFranco, corporate VP-corporate and channels marketing at chip maker AMD, discussed how the company has leveraged its partner channel to confront rival Intel Corp. Read the complete article on BtoBOnline.
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Posted on February 11, 2008 | Permalink | Digg | del.icio.us |
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| Tags: Best Practices in Technology Marketing
, Capturing Attention
, Channel
, Creating Awareness
, Creating Demand
, Data Analytics
, Engaging Partners
, Improving Marketing Results
, Marketing Metrics
, Marketing Spend
, Marketing Strategies
, Mobile
, Partner Programs
, Predicting Reseller Behavior
, Return On Investment (ROI)
, Social Media
, TV
, Video
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Creating E-Mail Surveys That Work
E-mail marketing managers love to include quick surveys in their e-newsletters—so much so that they risk overdoing it.
Melissa Read, VP-research and innovation at Spunlogic, an Atlanta-based full-service digital marketing agency, believes managers send surveys too often, causing respondents to burn out on the novelty of providing feedback. Eventually, she said, they’ll stop responding.
“Surveys should only go out when you want to understand something about the business respondents,” Read said. Otherwise, “it will become the survey who cried wolf and the next time you really want to know something, respondents won’t be as interested in telling you.”
Paring down the number of surveys is a good start, she said. Read offers these other helpful tips... Read the complete article on BtoBOnline.
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Posted on February 07, 2008 | Permalink | Digg | del.icio.us |
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| Tags: Best Practices in Technology Marketing
, Effective Campaigns
, Email Marketing
, Improving Marketing Results
, Information Gathering
, Marketing Metrics
, Marketing Tools
, Newsletters
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How Can I Grow My E-Mail List Responsibly?
Answer: I am always amazed at the still-prevailing idea that list size trumps list quality. Don’t get me wrong: Volume is good. Every record in your e-mail address list has an inherent value that can be reduced to a dollar amount. This leads us to the idea that your database should be viewed as capital and should be treated just like any other useful marketing asset. So why, then, do so many marketers mix bad data into their lists?
A bad e-mail address can have a dramatic impact on your ability to market with e-mail. Bad e-mails come in the form of addresses from third parties (list renters, etc.), complainers who have not been removed from your list and dormant addresses—e-mail addresses of people who have not opened your e-mail in more than 90 days. ISPs view all with equal disdain. While it is not illegal to send to these “bad” e-mail addresses, doing so is a sure way to increase complaints and damage your sender reputation. It’s also a good way to waste money.
So how do you build your list and maintain quality data? Consider these tips: Read the complete article on BtoBOnline.
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Posted on February 07, 2008 | Permalink | Digg | del.icio.us |
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| Tags: Audience Engagement
, Best Practices in Technology Marketing
, Capturing Attention
, Communications Strategies
, Customer Management
, Effective Campaigns
, Email Marketing
, Improving Marketing Results
, List Management
, Marketing Strategies
, Opt In/Out
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