canvas magazine | follow the leader | december 2015

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EMPOWERING MARKETING SERVICE PROVIDERS DECEMBER 2015 Making strategic innovation work How to have better sales conversations 5 leadership mistakes you should avoid

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Page 1: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

EMPOWERINGMARKETING

SERVICEPROVIDERS

DECEMBER 2015

Making strategic innovation work

How to have better sales conversations

5 leadership mistakes you should avoid

Page 2: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015
Page 3: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CANVAS P1

16

DECEMBERVOLUME 9 • ISSUE 12 • PRINT EDITION • DECEMBER 2015

Page 4: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

Inside this issue| Publisher’s Note

BOILERPLATE

BOILERPLATE

Publisher’s Note: John

STAT PACK

CORNER OFFICE

Do you need some FAB?

Five criticalmistakes that blunt leadership effectiveness

Book rec: The Silo Effect: Barriers

BEHIND THE CURTAIN

Noteworthy news from the industry

Mergers & Acquisitions

MSP SPOTLIGHTS

Neenah’s new promotion puts focus on selecting the right paper

06

ALSO INSIDE

22

P2 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

081412

28PLUGGING IN

10 tips for improving your connection skills

34 TALKING THE TALK

Why having better selling conversations matters

40Q&A: KAREN MURPHYOn creating the perfect

brand strategy

10

151 1

04

Making strategic innovation work

Page 5: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

Canon is a registered trademark of Canon Inc. in the United States and elsewhere. Océ and Océ VarioPrint are registered trademarks of Océ-Technologies B.V. in the United States and elsewhere. All other referenced product names and marks are trademarks of their respective owners and are hereby acknowledged.

© 2015 Canon Solutions America, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Page 6: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P4 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

BOILERPLATE

Inside this issue| Publisher’s Note

The holidays are always an emotional time. This year will be no different, as we lost a very dear friend, John, right before Thanksgiving. He was the father of my wife’s close friend, a grandfather to my kids’ buddies, and a mentor and counselor to me.

I often wonder why it takes heartache to remind us of what is truly important in life. It was not surprising that John was teaching lessons right up to his last breath. His last words to his wife and daughter were to take care of each other and that he loved them. And while that may be touching in itself, the fact that he was smiling while he said it was even more moving.

John always made us hold hands at Thanksgiving and share why we were grateful. He hosted my wife and daughter in Providence about six weeks before his passing. He made sure my daughter had her first lobster and took her to the best donut shop in town. He al-ways made time for me. In fact, he would bring his note-book to our coffee meetings and was all ears about how I could explore new ideas and run my business better.

I can honestly say that I never saw John without a smile on his face, and his death makes me realize why. He was always focused on supporting others. He doted on his wife constantly. He lit up when he looked at his daughter. And he was crazy about his grandkids.

You may say, “Sure, that’s his family. How could he not support them?” But he made everyone feel like they were important to him. The irony is that he was the one who was important.

Leadership is not embodied in some sort of bravado or moxie. In fact, I am not sure you really can define it succinctly. I just know it when I see it. Strike that, I know it when I feel it. And we all felt it in John.

Rest in peace, my good friend.As for this issue of CANVAS, we want to

make sure your brand is the type of leader that is evident to everyone. The cover feature, “Follow the Leader,” will help you ensure your brand is not only in step with the constantly changing busi-ness landscape, but one step ahead. Here, we give you a look at what you can do to help your products and services be a leader, not a follower.

In our second feature, “Strategic Innovation,” ex-perts and industry executives show us why this concept is all the stuff you want and need to do to get something done. When done proper-ly, the strategic implementation of your ideas is the best way to generate growth.

Enjoy the issue and be important by making others feel important.

JOHN

Leadership is not embodied in some sort of bravado or moxie.

Mark Potter, Publisher

@MarkRicePotter

Warmest wishes,

CANVAS, Volume 9, Issue 12. copyright 2015 CANVAS, All rights reserved. CANVAS is published bi-monthly for $39.00 per year by Conduit, Inc., 2180 Satellite Blvd., Suite 400, Duluth, GA 30097 Periodicals postage pending at Duluth, GA and additional mailings offices. Periodical Publication 25493. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to CANVAS, 2180 Satellite Blvd., Suite 400, Duluth, GA 30097. Please note: The acceptance of advertising or products mentioned by contributing authors does not constitute endorsement by the publisher. Publisher cannot accept responsibility for the correctness of an opinion expressed by contributing authors.

CANVAS magazine is dedicated to environmentally and socially responsible operations. We are proud to print this magazine on Opus® Dull Cover 80lb/216gsm and Opus Dull Text 80lb/118gsm, an industry-leading, environmentally responsible paper. Opus contains 10% post consumer waste and SFI and FSC chain of custody certification.

@THECANVASMAG 2180 Satellite Blvd., Suite 400, Duluth, GA 30097WWW.THECANVASMAG.COM

michael j. pallerino managing editor

brandon clark creative director

mark potter sales/marketing

lisa arsenaultMcArdle Solutionsgina dannerNextPagetom moeDaily Printingdean petrulakisRider Dickersondavid bennettBennett Graphics

EDITORIAL BOARD

THE CANVAS TEAM

GET IN TOUCH WITH US

Linda Bishop, President,Thought Transformation

@Linda_Bishop

PUBLISHED BY

David Waits FounderWaits Consulting Group

Nancy D. O’Reilly, PsyDPresidentWomen Connect4Good

@DrNancyOReilly

Karen MurphyChief Marketing OfficerCreative Mischief

Greg CoticchiaExecutive in ResidenceUniversity of Pittsburgh

@GregCot

Page 7: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

That’s why Western States Envelope & Label offers all-in-one packaging and mailing solutions for every industry. Scan the QR code or visit us at www.wsel.com/packaging/c to receive your complimentary packaging catalog.

Your products are special. They deserve to be in something special.

Order Online 24/7WWW.WSEL.COM

Page 8: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

STAT PACK

DID YOU KNOW?B2C marketers are allocating a higher

average proportion of their total marketing

budgets (32 percent) to content marketing

this year, according to the “B2C Content

Marketing 2016: Benchmarks, Budgets, and

Trends—North America” report by Content

Marketing Institute and MarketingProfs, and

sponsored by TrackMaven. On the social

side, Facebook continues to provide better

results, with 68 percent of B2C marketers

citing it as the most often used.

– Chobani marketing chief Peter McGuinness on why brands

have to be creative to be loved

Creativity matters,

because if you’re

not engaging and you’re not

entertaining, you’re not

relevant, you’re not resonant,

you’re not loved, [and] you

don’t have consideration.”

The percent of B2B companies that plan to increase their marketing technology budget in the near future, according to the “B2B Marketing Technology Strategy” report from Informatica, Dun & Bradstreet and Ascend2. The study also found that 46 percent expect their marketing technology budgets to increase marginally in the near future, 19 percent expect their budgets to increase significantly, 29 percent expect no change and 6 percent expect a decrease. The report was based on data from a survey of 135 marketing, sales, and business professionals who work at a wide range of company sizes.

P6 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

Page 9: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CANVAS P7

KEEPING WHAT YOU HAVEBrand awareness. Customer engagement. Customer satisfaction. Where do today’s

marketers focus the most attention? According to “The CMO Dilemma: Bridging the

Gap Between Love and Money” report by Oracle Marketing Cloud and the Aberdeen

Group, customer retention leads the list of CMO priorities. The report, based on a

survey of 447 marketers at B2B, B2C, and mix-modeled B2B and B2C companies from

around the world, took an inside look at some of the biggest items on their to-do lists:

Report shows customer retention as key goal

81% 74% 67% 54%RETAININGCUSTOMERS

INCREASINGBRAND

AWARENESSIMPROVINGCUSTOMER

SATISFACTIONINCREASINGCUSTOMER

PROFITABILITY

Page 10: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

Perspective | Leadership | Insights CORNEROFFICE

Do you need some FAB?

W e can get inspired. We can learn how to upgrade our skills,

but if we’re not in the right culture or helping to create the

right culture, we’re missing out on our best work opportuni-

ties. Culture is an important component of any company. In

fact, I would argue it may be the most important component.In most peoples’ minds, when you say the term FAB, they think you’re talking

about a laundry detergent by Colgate Palmolive. Or it could be a recent e-com-merce company that spent $200 million in two years, only to declare, “We have no business model,” and then shut it down (they have since been resurrected).

But when I hear the term FAB, I hear the acronym: Features, Advantages and Benefits.

As a young retail salesperson at a Pittsburgh-based music store, I remember clearly one Saturday morning when a sales representative from St. Louis Music came in to teach us how to sell a new line of Alvarez brand guitars. We carried and sold some of the best brands (Gibson, Martin, Guild, etc.), but Alvarez was new for us.

In the mid-’70s, Alvarez – which went on to become the favorite of musicians such as Bono and The Edge of U2, and Carlos Santana – wanted to compete with the guitar market giants. To do so, it sent out its distributor sales repre-sentatives to teach us the basics of sales.

That began with FAB.We huddled with the St. Louis Music rep in one of the small lesson rooms

to hear his presentation, and the importance of FAB was revealed. The rep asked us to FAB everything we saw – the music stand, the carpet, the ashtray. He wanted us to emphasize the importance of thinking in this manner about any object, so that we were prepared when a prospect wanted to talk guitars.

We learned – and were able to discuss – all of the features, advantages and benefits of the Alvarez guitar line. The FABs for the Alvarez guitars were not only better and different than the other major brands, but there were more of them.

The lesson was not lost on me. In my lifetime as a sales and marketing per-son, FAB has become essential to unlocking the value proposition for many of the products and/or companies I have represented.

Why features are overratedOne of the biggest lessons I’ve learned over the years is that nobody buys fea-tures – it’s all about the benefits, especially in B2B marketing and sales.

Most of us confuse or don’t really understand the difference between fea-tures, advantages and benefits. It is important to be able to state, “What dif-ferences do these features make to the customer,” and for benefits, ‘How will their outcome be better because of these differences?’

So, let’s have a look at these three words:

FeaturesThese are some of the easiest things to identify. These are facts or character-

istics about your business, products and services. Here’s an example that should be familiar – “His mobile phone has email support.”

AdvantagesThese are what the features do. An advantage describes how a product or a product feature can be used to help the buyer. Advantages are more persuasive than features. Most ad-vantages can be expressed in the form:

Because of ___ (feature) you can ___ (ad-vantage). These tend to be factual and aren’t connected to a prospect’s need. For example, “Because this mobile phone has continuous access to your emails, you can keep in touch with your business on the move.”

BenefitsThese answer why someone should value the advantage. It connects the facts about your product to a solution for your client. For ex-ample, “Continuous access to your emails means you can be confident that if a customer sends you an email, you can respond quickly.”

Here’s the full FAB statement:“Our mobile phones offer continuous access to your emails. Now you will be able to have access to your emails wherever you go. And continuous access to your emails means you can be confident that if a customer sends you an email, you can respond quickly.”

Can you see how this helps connect your pros-pects’ desire to your product? Now, of course, if that is something your prospects or target market doesn’t value, it doesn’t matter.

Turning FAB statements into marketing messagesOnce you identify your various features, ad-vantages and benefits, compile them into succinct marketing and sales messages. The FAB statements exercise will help you con-nect better with your prospective clients.Try it yourself. Put together a list of your product features, and then go back and add the corresponding advantages of each. Next, add the benefits.

BY GREG COTICCHIA

One of the biggest lessons I’ve learned over the years is that nobody buys features – it’s all about the benefits, especially in B2B marketing and sales.

P8 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

Greg Coticchia is an award-winning technology executive with more than 25 years experience in high-tech products and services. As CEO and co-founder of eBillingHub, he grew

the company from inception to establish it in a leading market position that led to its sale to Thomson Reuters. Today, he teaches business-to-business marketing and entrepreneurial leadership at the University of Pittsburgh’s Katz School of Business.

Page 11: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

MISS AN ISSUE?CHECK OUT THE

ONLINE ARCHIVES.

WWW.THECANVASMAG.COM

Page 12: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CORNER OFFICE

Perspective | Leadership | Insights

Five critical mistakes that blunt leadership effectiveness

Mistake No. 4 – Wearing the wrong hatWhat hat do you wear? Dreamer. Trainer. Moni-tor. Cheerleader. Fixer. Disciplinarian. Did you say all of them? Most? The challenge is not only knowing what hat you should wear, but also the right one at the right time. It’s impor-tant to be participatory in your leadership style, regardless of the hat. Your style shifts. Your hats change. Your leadership flexibility is regularly challenged. Change hats as often as the fluid-ity of circumstances dictates and be cognizant of your leadership style.

Mistake No. 5 – Not taking responsibilityThere are things you cannot control. Stop wasting time and precious emotional energy on these. There are things you can influence. Stop being passive on the things you can in-fluence. There are things you can control. Stop making excuses for the things you can control. Get busy and act. Take responsibility for your own actions, attitudes and words. Leverage your influence as a leader. Lead by example.

If you can avoid these five common critical mistakes, you will be able to leverage your powerful positive influence as a leader. As you do, instead of people withdrawing, disengag-ing or leaving, they will passionately follow you. You are the most important element of the success of your team.

David Waits, founder of Waits Consulting Group, is a highly sought after consultant, speaker and author. His clients include Quest Diagnostics, General Dynam-ics, Major League Baseball, Wal-Mart and Walt Disney World. For more information, visit www.DavidWaits.com.

ince 2000, studies have shown that less than one-third of U.S. workers are actively engaged in their work. Pretty startling, right? So, how do we fix the problem?

Leaders account for as much as 70 percent of the variance of employee engagement. A Gallup study of 7,272 adults in the

United States revealed that one in two had left their job at some point in their career to get away from a manager in order to improve overall quality of life. But people don’t leave jobs; people leave people.

Effective leadership not only requires doing the right things, but also under-standing what not to do. Here are five mistakes to aggressively avoid:

Mistake No. 1 – Failing to schedule time for learning conversationsYou do what you schedule. When you listen, you learn. Leaders should only be doing what no one else can do and no one can listen to your team mem-bers like you. Schedule regular opportunities to ask clear, concise and clarifying questions to your team, and then discipline yourself to actively listen. This will provide you with vital intelligence to implement two of the main functions of a leader, removing obstacles and providing resources. How can you know the true obstacles impeding success and the resources needed if you aren’t consistently scheduling highly interactive learning conversations?

Mistake No. 2 – Failing to consistently affirmAs a leader, are you encouraging, an encourager or neither? One of the most powerful tools to energize your team is the power of affirmation. Affirming sim-ply is catching people doing things right and telling them about it. Don’t just think it – express it. Effective leaders always seek opportunities to answer soul-felt questions from their teams, such as “Do I matter?” and “Does what I do around here matter?” Be specific about their positive actions. Always tie those actions to the beneficial business outcome. As a leader, being encouraging is something that you do, but being an encourager is something you are.

Mistake No. 3 – MisdiagnosingDoctors always ask a succession of questions, and then follow-up with what-ever tests are needed before prescribing anything. It’s all about what’s right for the patient. If you’re always making decisions in business as if you live in the Emergency Room, the health of your business will be in a constant state of trauma. To make the right decisions for your company, you need a proper diagnosis of its “ailments.” This means gathering the appropriate and accu-rate information (see avoiding Mistake No. 1). Many leaders seek outside help to treat a problem that has been inadequately diagnosed. Before doing that, answer this: “What do you want to accomplish?” Clarify the question, and you can make an effective decision.

As a leader, being encouraging is something that you do, but being an encourager is something you are.

BY DAVID WAITS

P10 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

Page 13: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CANVAS P11

Perspective | Technology | Insights CORNEROFFICE

NIGHT TWEETING

WWW.YOURCOMPANYHEREIn today’s highly technical marketing age, the good old fashioned company website still is the most important marketing channel. According to Oracle Marketing Cloud’s “Cross-Channel Marketing Report 2015,” 57 percent of marketers say their company website is critical to their efforts, followed closely by email at 48 percent. The research is based on a survey of over 400 client-side digital marketers and ecommerce professionals. When asked what three marketing channels offer the greatest opportunities in 2016, here are some that topped the list:

BOOK REC

Functional departments. How many times does

this gameplan lead to work silos that hinder

work and stifle creativity? In The Silo Effect,

Gillian Tett shows how some people and

organizations are breaking down those silos to

unleash the innovation within.

Tett, a former anthropologist and Financial

Times writer who delved deep into the 2008

financial crisis, shares a series of failure and

success stories that illustrate how people behave

when they are mastered by silos and what can

happen when they learn how to master them.

Featuring ideas about how to organize office

spaces and lead teams of people with disparate

expertise, Tett shows how people can better

organize themselves and interact with each other.

As you set your goals for 2016, The Silo Effect

could be a valuable tool in your playbook.

BOOK REC

The Silo Effect:The Peril of Expertise and the Promise of Breaking Down BarriersBy Gillian Tett

This much we know – through 2018 the use of behavioral marketing data will increase. That’s

the takeaway from Millward Brown Digital’s “Getting Digital Right 2015” study, which says that nearly 70 percent of marketers currently are using behavioral data to make marketing decisions. Interestingly, only 14 percent of marketers say they are “confident” in their use of data, the study found. The study was

based on input from more than 400 marketers spanning brands, media

companies and agencies.

46% Social media marketing

37% Website

37% Email

26% SEO

21% Paid search

Page 14: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P12 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

Awards & Around the industry | Mergers, Acquisitions & Personnel movesBEHINDTHE CURTAIN

Awards & Recognition

Mohawk has been honored with a 2015

PPI Award for its “Bringing Paper to Life:

Innovative Printing & Writing Campaign

of the Year.” Mohawk’s Maker Cam-

paign, developed by Hybrid Design,

was recognized for celebrating the beauty of print and maker

culture through the use of high quality papers that effectively

demonstrate the versatile use of paper. Presented annually,

the PPI Awards honor leadership, vision, innovation and stra-

tegic accomplishments within the pulp and paper industry.

They are the only global awards dedicated to recognizing the

achievements of companies, mills and individuals in the forest

products industry.

Sappi North America’s multi-media campaign promoting

print to creative designers, printers, advertisers and corpo-

rate communicators was selected as the 2015 winner of the

annual Positively Print award at Graph Expo. The two-part

Communicator’s Guide used printed brochures, six neurosci-

ence video shorts, a micro-site, and live events with noted

neurologist Dr. David Eagleman to showcase both advanced

research on media and perception, and case studies from

Apple, BMW and the World Wildlife Fund on their use of

print in integrated communications.

EFI received nine awards at this year’s

“Must See ’Ems” graphic arts technol-

ogy competition at Graph Expo – the

most presented to any company. The

winning products included: EFI Fiery

Smart Estimator for Specialty Toners (Sales and Order Entry); EFI

Fiery Job Parallel HyperRIP Technology (Prepress and Premedia);

EFI Metrix Layout Engine for EFI Pace Software (Prepress and

Premedia); EFI Fiery CMYK+ Technology (Color Management

and Quality Control); EFI DirectSmile Cross Media Software,

version 7 (Variable, Transactional and Multi-Channel); EFI Super-

Draw Ink (Pressroom: Wide-Format) EFI VUTEk H2000 Pro Clear

Ink (Pressroom: Wide-Format); EFI PrintFlow Software for Pack-

aging (Management Systems); and EFI Fiery Final Fix Software

(The Future of Print).

Gary Jones, assistant VP, Environmental, Health, and Safety Affairs

(EHS) for Printing Industries of America (PIA) has been named

the recipient of the “2015 William D. Schaeffer Environmental

Award.” Established in 1990, the award recognizes an individual’s

focus on advancing environmental awareness and action in the

Around the industry

Canon Solutions America Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of

Canon U.S.A. Inc., has launched a strategic and expansive part-

nership with the University of Notre Dame. Led by Canon Solu-

tions America’s Higher Education Advisory Team, which comprises

senior strategy and operations experts within its Enterprise Man-

aged Services Division, the partnership will specifically address the

unique needs of Notre Dame Athletics by supplying the highest

levels of quality and customer focus. The Higher Education Advi-

sory Team (HEAT) was formed specifically to bring research, best

practices and process improvement strategies tied to the long-

term goals of higher learning institutions.

EFI has joined the Sustainable Green Printing Partnership (SGP) as a Gold Level Patron. The SGP Patron program provides financial

support to the organization driving sustainability in the printing in-

dustry and provides benefits to the certified facilities. Suppliers to

the printing industry can participate in the SGP Patron program as

Silver, Gold or Platinum patrons.

Personnel Moves

Sam Errigo has been named executive VP, sales

and business development for Konica Minolta Busi-

ness Solutions U.S.A. Inc. Errigo will be responsible

for sales strategy and execution, and lead the com-

pany’s dealer and direct sales, enterprise accounts

and government markets.

Former IBM Corp. senior executive Linda

Sanford has been elected director of Pitney Bowes

Inc. In September, the board expanded from 10 to

11 members, with her appointment filling the ad-

ditional vacancy. Her term runs through the 2016

annual meeting, where she is expected to stand for re-election.

graphic communications industry. Over the years, Jones has worked

closely with the federal and state-level Environmental Protection

Agencies (EPA), Occupational Safety and Health Agency (OSHA),

Department of Transportation (DOT), and other agencies.

Page 15: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

Visit fujifilminkjet.com to: INFO Order Samples VIEW Watch Videos WEB Attend a Webinar

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When we asked high-volume wide-format printers what it would take to upgrade to Onset, they quickly shared their wishes. Give us a more affordable option without compromising Onset’s renowned speed and quality – and while you’re at it, provide us an upgrade path for the press that increases throughput as our business grows. Wish list granted.

Now for little more than you’d invest in a mid-range press, the Onset R40-LT will deliver press productivity to up to 40 5’x10’ full-size beds per hour. Plus, there’s an easy upgrade path to grow as your business grows.

The first upgrade boosts output to 58 beds an hour by adding bi-directional printing, and the second upgrade increases capacity to 80 beds by adding one of three automation options.

The Onset R40-LT comes loaded with everything you need to produce crisper images, finer lines, sharper text and smoother tonal gradations for your clients. Drop-on-demand printhead technology offers precise ink drop placement. Inca’s iNozzle technology allows the press to maintain Onset print quality like the day the press was first commissioned. Automated nozzle mapping finds and compensates for any deviated nozzle – giving you dependable print quality. You can also choose four- or six-color configurations, including white – and achieve faster job changeovers with our patented 15 zone vacuum bed.

To learn more about how Onset quality and productivity is now right within your reach, visit fujifilminkjet.com today. Upgrade as you grow!

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Page 16: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P14 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

BEHINDTHE CURTAIN

GETYOURNEWSHERE.

WHAT’SGOINGON?LET USKNOW!

People news. New products. Trends shaping the way our industry does business. If you have a news item, CANVAS wants to hear about it. All you have to do is email us the information and a photograph, and we’ll do the rest. Send your information to [email protected].

Mergers & Acquisitions

La Crosse, Wis.-based Inland has purchased the customer base

and certain assets of Monet Graphics Inc., Downingtown, Pa.,

a leading flexographic label printer. Under the agreement,

Steve Dudley, a partner and executive VP of Monet, will join

Inland and continue to manage the operations at its current

location. Founded in 1995, Monet Graphics employs 23 people

at a 30,000-square-foot facility. The plant will serve as an addi-

tion to Inland’s three facilities in La Crosse, where the company

employs some 300 people.

Midland Paper, Packaging + Supplies has entered into an

agreement to acquire the assets and business of Shaughnessy, Kniep, Hawe Paper Co. one of the oldest independently-

owned paper merchants in the country. Founded more than 135

years ago, Shaughnessy is a full-line, full-service distributor of

printing and writing papers, book publishing papers, magazine

and catalog papers, digital and specialty substrates, wide for-

mat graphics, graphic supplies and packaging. The company,

which has more than 130 employees, houses its principal ware-

house and administrative offices in St. Louis. It also operates

warehouses and sales offices in Kansas City, Kan., Indianapolis,

Louisville, Springfield, Mo., Evansville, Ind., Des Moines, Iowa,

Tulsa, Okla., Houston, Chicago, and Calgary and Toronto

Awards & Around the industry | Mergers, Acquisitions & Personnel moves

Donna Dunn, CAE, has been named

executive director of the Flexographic

Pre-Press Platemakers Association (FPPA).

The association also named The Markens

Group Inc. (TMG) as its new full-service

association management firm.

John Copeland has been named executive di-

rector of the National Association for Printing

Ink Manufacturers (NAPIM). Copeland, a NAPIM

Board member for eight years, currently is serv-

ing as board president through 2015.

Paul Steinke has been named national sales

manager for Standard Finishing Systems,

a leading supplier of post press and paper

handling solutions.

Page 17: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CANVAS P15

MSP PRODUCTSPOTLIGHTS

Download the MSP Resource Guide app

Products and resources just a tap away

All about the textureNeenah’s new promotion puts focus on selecting the right paper

Research shows that you have roughly three to five

seconds to capture a customer’s attention. Thanks to

Neenah’s ROYAL SUNDANCE Papers promotion – “Let

Texture Define” – you can make every second count

when it comes to choosing the right paper.

“Let Texture Define” uses all five of the ROYAL

SUNDANCE collection’s finishes and a combination

of colors to showcase identities for companies in four

different verticals. The portfolio includes letterhead,

envelopes, business cards, and promotional pieces

such as a menu, invitation, oversized postcard, book-

mark and gift card.

“Texture can influence our decisions as it creates an

emotional connection,” says Kathy Kemps, Neenah

senior brand manager. “It’s important to communicate

a brand’s personality, and create a memorable first

impression, through every touch point, starting with a

company’s identity system.”

EDUCATIONALMATERIALS

>> To see how ROYAL SUNDANCE Papers can help define your message or your brand’s personality, pick up a copy of “Let Texture Define” from your local merchant or visit us at www.neenah.com.

“It’s important to communicate a brand’s personality and create a memorable first impressionthrough every touch point, starting with a company’s identity system.” – Kathy Kemps, Senior Brand Manager, Neenah

Page 18: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P16 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

PERSPECTIVE

Page 19: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CANVAS P17 CANVAS P17

Cover Story

By Michael J. Pallerino

Page 20: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P18 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

Follow the leader

But the smart companies – the leaders – know that it is much more than being able to offer what everybody else does. It’s about staying ahead of the pack. While keeping up with an ever-changing business landscape, i.e., following the crowd, is important, it is much more strategic to make sure everybody is chasing you.

Being a leader trumps being a follower every time.And while you may think that throwing more money at the

situation is the key (it doesn’t hurt), one of the keys can be found in a recent study of the world’s top innovators by Booz & Company. The Global Innovation 1000 sought to find what gives innovative companies (Google, Amazon, Samsung, etc.) their competitive edges.

Interestingly, it wasn’t more time, more money or greater resources, it was that they provided their people with bet-ter platforms for brainstorming, sharing and experimenting with new ideas. “Businesses that succeed in the long-term have leaders with a long-term perspective,” says Bolivar J. Bueno (BJ), founder of The Cult Branding Company. “They have an inspired vision. They can see the latent poten-tial in their people and within the enterprise itself. Innovation

and marketing go hand in hand. The more you stay ahead, the more you have to create demand for the future.”

With clients like Kohl’s Department Stores, Turner Classic Movies and the Los Angeles Lakers, to name a few, Bueno has built a reputation based on his insight and expertise into building brands.

When it comes to separating yourself from the pack, Bueno advises his customers to start with your greatest resource – your customer. “This process starts by valuing your best customer. Relating to your customers is a lot like relating to a partner, friend, family member or colleague. To relate requires interest in the other person. It requires us to let go of our preconceived notions and to listen carefully and observe.”

Market leadership – the part that keeps you at the front of the line – means becoming a steward of your brand. It’s about capturing a big vision for your brand and its future. “When you sit down with your best customers, you take ac-tions that are based on information,” Bueno says. “You’re playing to the highest standard and valuing what your best customers have to say.”

top for a minute – now think about the forces that are driving the industry. In the race to get your customers what they want when they want it and continually exceed their expectations, at the very

least, you must stay in step with what the competition is doing. Keeping up with the Joneses is an age-old practice that every company, in every industry, in every country in the world follows to heart.

Your most important work is always ahead of you, never behind you.

– Stephen Covey

Page 21: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

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Page 22: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

Follow the leader

P20 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

THE LITTLE THINGS WORK, TOOPerhaps Scott Steinberg, leading business keynote

speaker and CEO of management consulting and mar-ket research firm TechSavvy Global summed it up best. When it comes to being a leader, it isn’t always about cutting-edge breakthroughs or game-changing tech-nologies. Simple shifts in business strategy or a different outlook can be every bit as powerful.

Sometimes, things like innovation are simply a mat-ter of perspective and a process of constant reinvention. And to note, even the little things can be disruptive, says Mark Speece, founder of Speece Brands and a leader in brand positioning and brand architecture development.

“I still see these – the simple shifts in strategy – as dis-ruptive,” says Speece, who has helped reposition and re-name brands such as Boston Scientific, Coca-Cola, Gen-eral Motors, J&J, Microsoft, Proctor & Gamble, Turner Broadcasting and Visa over the years. “They may not be disrupting the market, but disrupting their own ways. This constant ‘movement,’ by default is disruptive. It disrupts how the competition competes and shows the market that the brand is not stagnant in anything it does.”

More than anything else, Speece says the key to stay-ing ahead of the pack is relevance – not differentiation. “We have been led to believe for years that you had to be different. But to keep customers interested and engaged, you must remain relevant – the standard for which varies by segment/category. But an overarching idea or common thread is that the consumer should feel that X brand is not stagnant – that it is also in a constant state of innovation and improvement.”

Regardless of your approach and how you get there, being a leader is always a much better proposition than being a follower, especially in the eyes of today’s ever-investigative consumer. More than ever before, consum-ers are inundated with options – direct (advertisers) and indirect (social media, etc.) at every turn.

In many marketplaces, this has forced consumers to be in a constant state of evaluation – constantly weigh-ing their options and loyalties to the various brands they once took for granted and who took them for granted as customers.

Speece says that through social media, consumers now are able to be rewarded for being brand advocates, especially for those brands that are leaders. “Think about how often you see a friend/contact posting about a res-taurant they ate at, or a trip they took, a car they bought, a website they love to shop,” Speece says. “The brands that lead those efforts are out in front. Those that ignore the user-centric brand building are going to fall many, many steps behind.”

Page 23: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CANVAS P21

WAYS TO STAY AHEAD OF THE PACK

KNOW YOUR ROLE Understand and embrace the fact that your job is to compete for the customer, not with the competition.

REMAIN RELEVANTStaying a step ahead of the curve has got to be based on intrinsic quali-ties – the original, inspiring idea that became a brand. It is not about one-upping the competition. The brand’s customer bought that brand for a reason. The company must genuinely understand what that reason was and constantly work to make everything about it better, e.g., the product, the service, the role as a corporate citizen, how and where it communicates … everything.

LISTEN TO YOUR CUSTOMERS Not just their customers, but also the competition’s customers and the defectors – their former customers. Ask why they are, used to be or never were customers.

WATCH WHAT THE COMPETITION IS DOING It is imperative that you keep a close eye on what is happening in the marketplace around you. Watch, listen and learn.

KNOW THE TRENDS Understand what is shaping your customers’ world beyond your slice of their wallet. What trends are impacting their industry, their lives – how, when and why they’re buying today versus tomorrow?

Page 24: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P22 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

PERSPECTIVE

By Lorrie Bryan

Making strategic innovation work

Page 25: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CANVAS P23

Feature Story

Why is it so difficult for businesses to build and maintain the capacity to innovate?

The problem likely is caused by a lack of strategic innova-tion – a commitment to a set of coherent, mutually reinforcing policies or behaviors aimed at achieving a specific competitive goal. Businesses must have a strategy that methodically aligns their innovation efforts with their goals. If your mission is to dis-rupt your industry, here are some steps you can take to facilitate strategic innovation:

Identify your best strategy according to your mission

Michael Porter, professor at The Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness, based at the Harvard Business School, iden-tified three different strategies that companies can pursue for growth; cost leadership, differentiation and customer fo-cus. Your strategic innovation should support your company’s selected corporate strategy.

“Brands need strategic innovation to achieve their mission,” Porter says.

Terry Mitchell says constant innovation really is a requirement to stay ahead of the competition, regardless of which strategy is be-ing pursued. “If the mission and vision of the company is to create cost leadership, then strategic innovation should align with find-ing ways to reduce cost without sacrificing customer value (think Southwest or Costco),” says Mitchell, VP of marketing, FUJIFILM Graphic Systems Division, FUJIFILM North America Corp.

Businesses must have a strategy that methodically aligns their innovation efforts with their goals.

t is the resounding cry of businesses today. Despite prevailing imperatives, the list of companies that fail to innovate and subsequently perish continues to grow.

Add Radio Shack and Sears to the doomed trilogy that includes Borders, Blackberry and Blockbuster. These companies perhaps talked about innovating, they planned to innovate, even invested time and money. But at the end of the day, they failed to innovate and, subsequently, to thrive.

Page 26: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P24 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

Game planning

Alternatively, if the corporate strategy was to pursue dif-ferentiation, then strategic innovation would be focused on finding ways to optimize differentiators most relevant to the customer served or a specific set of needs of a target group of customers (think Apple or Nike). “If serving customers better is the overall mission, then strategic innovation should focus on finding ways to really wow customers with legend-ary service (think Zappos or Nordstroms),” Mitchell says.

Mitchell says Fujifilm’s strategy is to create differentiation. “We strive to bring new value to customers by bringing new products and new technologies to market. Today, a good percentage of Fujifilm sales are from products that were not in our portfolio five years ago. The brand values must con-tinually reinforce the strategy to ‘hold its place’ in the minds of the customer. Fujifilm needs to continually stay ahead with new technologies and incorporate these new technologies into products to benefit customers.”

Reinforce and share your visionIt’s all about sharing your vision. Communicating your com-pany’s vision and making sure everyone is on board is para-mount. “I believe you need to create a shared vision of the future with every employee,” Mitchell says. “If you are pursu-ing differentiation as a core strategy, then you need every em-ployee thinking about what they could do to help achieve this goal. When everyone understands the vision and how they contribute to achieving the vision, great things happen.”

Leadership at Fujifilm helps build and foster a culture of innovation around two values and four process steps. “First, we challenge employees to imagine how changes to our products and services would benefit customers,” Mitchell says. “We call this creating ‘wow.’ We also empower em-ployees to take ownership to find out more about what cus-tomers want, and take initiative to develop a product con-cept or change that would benefit customers. The process steps involve being close to customers to truly understand their needs, being open and collaborative to exchange ex-pertise, acting swiftly to respond to customer needs, and adopting a flexible attitude toward new approaches to have ideas translate to reality.”

Thing big, and don’t be risk-averseTim Leberecht, author of “The Business Romantic,” says

the ability to think different and big is the most important element in your company’s strategic innovation.

“To encourage innovation you must build a culture that can afford to say no to the pressures of efficiency,” says Leberecht, who also serves as CMO at NBBJ. “True innova-tion always starts with waste, as harsh as that may sound. Leadership must create space for exploration and cultivate

“True innovation always starts with waste, as harsh as that may sound. Leadership must create space for

exploration and cultivate the fringes by cultivating the rebels and outliers.”

– Tim Leberecht, CMO, NBBJ

Page 27: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CANVAS P25

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Game planning

the fringes by cultivating the rebels and outliers. If you are a disruptive innovator like, say, Elon Musk (CEO and product architect of Tesla Motors), you must be an adventurer and a dreamer who risks being laughed at by others.”

Leberecht, the founder of The Business Romantic Society, a consulting network that helps organizations innovate, says that when he worked at the innovation consultancy Frog Design, a lot of Fortune 500 compa-nies came to them wanting to know how they could “do what Apple did” or how to get better at innovation.

“They were eager to learn about innovation meth-odologies, ethnographic research, open innovation, in-novation ecosystems, design thinking, and all the other buzz-worthy techniques and tools that seemed key to ‘solving innovation,’” Leberecht says. “But innovation can’t be solved. Like life, it is a mystery to be expe-rienced, to use the philosopher Soren Kierkegaard’s words. There are some cues and best practices, but there are no formulas.”

Disruptive innovation is always a leap of faith, a big bet on something outlandish – an idea that often starts with a joke – like the crazy idea of Airbnb, where you rent your home out to strangers via the Internet.

Today, Airbnb has more than 1.5 million listings in 34,000 cities and 190 countries, and NASA recently con-firmed evidence that there’s water on Mars.

With strategic innovation, the sky is the limit.

“If you are pursuing differentiation as a core strategy, then you need every employee thinking about what they could do to help achieve this goal.”– Terry Mitchell, VP of Marketing, FUJIFILM Graphic Systems Division

Page 29: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CONDUIT, INC.MAKES IT HARDERFOR YOUR CLIENTS

TO DROP YOU.DON’T GET DROPPED.

WWW.CONDUIT-INC.COM

Page 30: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P28 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

COMMUNICATION

PLUGGING INtips for improving your connection skills

By Nancy D. O’Reilly

Page 31: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CANVAS P29

Feature Story

hat? You didn’t get the memo. Competing with others is out. Connecting with others to share ideas, work together on projects and offer support is in. And here’s the

thing – taking your connections to the next level doesn’t have to be as difficult as you may think. It may even be fun.

Page 32: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

Plugging in

P30 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

The world is making a shift to what I call “Connecting 2.0.” It’s more meaningful than the “mile-wide and inch-deep” type of connecting we associate with social media. It’s based on sharing and co-creating, not self-interest. It’s authentic, it feels good and it works.

This deeper approach to connecting works so well that individuals all over the world are creating an ever-expanding network of resources offering expertise and support to people in business, government, education, philanthropy and other fields. The idea is not just to advance our careers and make money, but to make life itself richer, more exciting and more creative.

Let’s get one thing clear – the Connecting 2.0 move-ment is not that let’s-exchange-cards-and-move-on networking most of us do today. Don’t get me wrong, connecting with other people can pay off in amazing ways, but the rewards flow organically from a genuine desire to make a difference in the lives of others.

While many people are naturally good at connecting, it still doesn’t happen automatically. You have to make the effort. Most of us are so busy and overwhelmed that we just don’t make it a priority to connect with other people.

That’s why you have to be deliberately purposeful about it. The benefits of connecting with other professionals within your industry and community are incredible. Don’t you owe yourself and your brand that benefit?

So, where do you sign up? The answer is “everywhere.” This is not some exclusive club. It’s open to anyone with passion, enthusiasm and a yearning to live a richer, more fulfilling life. It may even change the world. Here are 10 tips to get you started:

BALANCE IS EVERYTHINGFind a good mix of online and face-to-face connecting. Anybody can send an email, or share, like and follow on social media. And while there is nothing wrong with social media, it’s also no substitute for real-world human inter-action. The Connecting 2.0 movement depends on both types of connecting: virtual and face-to-face.

JOIN A NEW GROUPFind a group you like and attend the meetings. It doesn’t matter what the activity is based on, what’s important is that you’re getting together with other people who shar e a common interest. It’s the shared passion for the activity that generates connections.

GO ALL PHILANTHROPICFind a cause that speaks to your heart. When you care enough about others to volunteer your time, talent and treasure, you meet good people who tend to be “other-oriented” and want to make new connections, too.

Think about what you need and want to learn

about, and then seek out mentors who can

help you learn to do it.

FPO

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Page 33: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

FIND A MENTORThink about what you need and want to learn about, and then seek out mentors who can help you learn to do it. And don’t think about it as asking for something for free, because you’re bringing something to the table, too. Find people who can benefit from your knowledge and experience. It’s good karma and it can pay off in unexpected ways.

TAKE A CLASSWhether it’s continuing education for your job or a cre-ative writing class at the local community college, actively pursue new knowledge and skills. This will help bring new and interesting people into your life who have a zest for life and learning.

GO ON THE SPEAKER CIRCUITI know – you probably hate public speaking. Who doesn’t? But taking to the podium is a powerful way to get your voice heard, build confidence and make new connections. Check out the local chamber of commerce or rotary club. The possibilities are endless.

FPO

Beautiful Places

2016

January

May

September

February

June

October

March

July

November

April

August

December

production notescover / topkote gloss cover 95lb

4-color process aqueous coating

text / topkote dull text 100lb 4-color process spot aqueous

design / launchpad-creative.com

There’s one reason people come back to TopKote time and time again. Its consistent problem-free performance. TopKote’s smooth fi nish produces perfect dot fi delity and excellent runnability. Its bright, balanced shade virtually enriches color. Basically, you’re getting premium performance. And if that’s not beautiful, we don’t know what is. For more information on TopKote paper, please contact your local paper merchant.

Email us today for the new 2016 calendarat [email protected]

Page 34: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P32 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

Plugging in

Nancy D. O’Reilly, PsyD, is the founder of Women Connect4Good and one of the authors of “Leading Women: 20 Influential Women Share Their Secrets to Leadership, Business, and Life.”

FORM A POSSEHandpick five to 10 powerful individuals in your industry or community, and then ask them to participate in an event. It could be a roundtable discussion at an industry conference or a community fundraiser. Think about it – you not only align yourself wit h like-minded leaders, but you also forge new relationships with power people in the know.

STEP OUTSIDE YOUR COMFORT ZONETry getting on a different team at work. We all tend to stay in our comfort zones. But if you can shake things up from time to time, you can find out what the other side is doing. When you work with different people on projects, you can learn, grow, and often discover vital new talents and interests.

IF YOU’RE INVITED, GOWhen someone invites you to an event or gathering (in-dustry trade show, party, etc.), just go already. There are always reasons to say no, but life rewards action. Meeting new people opens up a world of new opportunities.

SET A NUMBERPut meeting “X” number of new people per month on your to-do list – and then hold yourself to that number. If you take this metric seriously, you’ll figure out how to make it happen. And while meeting isn’t the same as connecting, it’s the essential first step.

While many people are naturally good at

connecting, it still doesn’t happen automatically.

You have to make the effort.

Page 35: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CANVAS P33 CANVAS P33

Page 36: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P34 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

SALES

TALKING

Conversations about marketing

metrics help you differentiate yourself

from competitors and position

your company as a superior partner.

Page 37: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CANVAS P35

Feature Story

By Linda Bishop

THE TALK

Why having better selling conversations

matters

Page 38: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P36 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

Talking the talk

“You look busy,” said Barry, who was one of her co-work-ers in the marketing department at Mega Technologies.

“I’m working on the communication plan for our new product rollout,” Diane said. “The graphic design team is working on collateral now.”

“It’s the biggest launch we’ve had in a decade,” Barry said. “With all the new collateral you’re getting ready to print, I bet Frank calls you every day.”

Frank was their print rep. A likable guy in his 40s, he was the go-to guy for big projects at Mega Technologies.

“I’m not using Frank to print these materials,” Diane said.“Why not?” Barry asked. “Have you ever met Lana Donald from PrintCo?”

Diane asked.Barry thought for a moment. He remembered receiving

several postcards and calls from her. “I haven’t met her, but she’s called to request a meeting,” he said.

“I like Frank, but after hearing from Lana multiple times, I began to get a sense that she might have some-thing different to offer. So we met. It was a much differ-ent call than I have ever had with Frank.”

“What do you mean by different?” Barry asked.“Instead of asking what I printed, she asked how

I measured success in the market. Instead of talking about the printing presses in her plant, she intelligently discussed my goals. I decided to give her an oppor-tunity to quote on the collateral for the product roll-out. She impressed me again by providing several good suggestions to enhance the direct mail program, and improve ROI overall.”

“Does Frank know he’s not getting this project?” Barry asked.

“I told him yesterday. He was shocked and immediately asked if I would consider if he cut his price. I told him my decision was not based on price. It was based on value. In that department, he was clearly outsold.”

“The next time Lana comes in, tell her to stop by my desk,” Barry said. “I’ve got some projects coming up for next quarter and she sounds like someone I need to meet.”

Over the last decade, marketers have felt increased pressure to demonstrate higher ROI from their market-ing spends. They want partners who understand their concerns and who can have intelligent conversations about data and measurements and relate information to achieving goals.

You can approach your conversation by talking about marketing measurements in three basic areas:

• Market metrics• Customer metrics• Individual transactions

The marketMany marketers focus on market share. This number is sales revenue for a company, calculated as a percentage of total market sales revenue. Market share is a measure of competitiveness. As a general rule, increases in market share contribute to higher profit margins, because costs normally go down as share goes up. Market leaders often charge a premium price, too.

Companies don’t care about market share when they’re harvesting profits. When your customers adopt this strategy, they usually spend less on advertising and promotion, which may affect you.

Market share also is less important when a small group of customers generates a large percentage of total sales. For example, if you manufacture parts for automakers, you may be more concerned about growth with a specific customer than your overall market share.

s Barry approached Diane’s office, he could see that she was busy at work. Except for a small space directly in

front of her computer, Diane’s desk was covered with papers and stacks of files.

For sales professionals, new information creates new opportunities. Who should you have this conversation with on your list of customers and prospects?

Page 39: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

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Page 40: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P38 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

Talking the talk

CANON018-15-006_ImagePress_Ad_CANVAS_8.5x13.indd9-30-2015 10:24 AM Chris Martin / Chris Martin

1

JobClientMedia TypeLiveTrimBleedPubs

CANON18-15-006CanonCanon Print AdNone8.5” x 13”8.75” x 13.25”CANVAS

Job info

None

Notes

Art DirectorCopywriterAccount MgrStudio ArtistProofreader

NoneNoneNoneChris MartinNone

Approvals

FontsMyriad Pro (Italic), Whitney HTF (Book, Bold, Light, SemiBold Italic), Adobe Garamond Pro (Italic)

Images237953_01g_SHOT_03_A_V2_273_swop3v2.tif (CMYK; 636 ppi; 47.1%), 3B_slant_1_42m.jpg (CMYK; 519 ppi; 67.36%), CSI_Master_Logo_Black_CMYK.ai (14%), ImagePRESS-C10000VP_Logo.ai (83.29%), enabling_cre-ativity-06_KO_Canon red.ai (12%)

Inks Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black

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Saved at Nonefrom nyc03cmartin by Printed At

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To plan a sales conversation to discover more about your customer’s perceptions of market share and deter-mine where opportunities exist, consider asking your client these questions:

• How big is the total market?• Does your client have an estimate of his current

market share?• Who is the leader in the market?• Who is your client’s closest competitor in terms

of share?• What are they doing to grow market share?

For sales professionals, new information creates new opportunities. Who should you have this conversation with on your list of customers and prospects?

Customer-focused measurementsMany marketing measurements focus on individual customers. One common metric is wallet share. Wallet share is a percentage defined as the total number of services or products purchased by a customer within a category, divided by the total number of purchases they could make within that category.

To illustrate, consider the First Bank of Everywhere, known as FBE to its customers. Bob has a checking account at FBE. Benny has a checking account, a money market account, a car loan and a mortgage through the bank. When the marketers at FBE compare Bob to Benny, they can see they have a greater share of Benny’s wallet.

This metric is important to many customers, because it is a matter of fact that it’s less expensive to get more busi-ness from current customers than it is to sell to new ones. One niche positioning strategy for marketers is low market penetration with a high share of purchasing requirements.

When companies adopt this approach, they pursue rela-tively few customers, but want to build strong relationships with loyal ones. This is the strategy used by luxury hotel chains. Other customer-focused measurements include:

• Heavy usage indexes, when marketers compare average purchases in a category to people who buy much more than the average

• Customer satisfaction• Lifetime value

transactional metricsMany marketers want to increase company revenue by increasing profit margins on transactions with a single customer. They employ strategies to increase:

• The average size of a transaction• The number of transactions• The profit margin on a transaction

You often employ these strategies in your own approach to selling. For example, you up-sell. Once your client agrees to purchase, you sell them on adding an additional color to their printing project or choosing a better paper. When they agree, transaction size increases, often improv-ing the profit margin as an added bonus.

Examples of companies using strategies to grow transaction-size revenues include:

• Hotels that hand you a coupon to the dining room when you check into the hotel, providing an incen-tive to spend your dining dollars on the property

• Retailers with point-of-sale signage that offer special in-store deals like “Buy 2 and get 50 percent off”

• The well-known McDonalds campaign where in-store associates asked, “Would you like fries with that order?”

Think back to some of the best sales conversations you have ever had. Great conversations get the customer excited. They’re engaged because you’re sharing new ideas that help them reach their goals.

Customer engagement creates opportunities for you. Conversations about marketing metrics help you differ-entiate yourself from competitors and position your company as a superior partner.

The average salesperson copes to survive. The best salesperson adapts to win. Customers are hungry for fresh ideas. Adapt and give your clients new food for thought – and a new outlook on the value you can bring.

Good selling.

Linda Bishop, a longtime veteran of the commercial printing industry, is the founder of Thought Transformation Inc. (www.thoughttransformation.com), which trains and consults companies and sales professionals on how to sell more and reach their full potential. You can reach her at [email protected].

Page 41: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

CANON018-15-006_ImagePress_Ad_CANVAS_8.5x13.indd9-30-2015 10:24 AM Chris Martin / Chris Martin

1

JobClientMedia TypeLiveTrimBleedPubs

CANON18-15-006CanonCanon Print AdNone8.5” x 13”8.75” x 13.25”CANVAS

Job info

None

Notes

Art DirectorCopywriterAccount MgrStudio ArtistProofreader

NoneNoneNoneChris MartinNone

Approvals

FontsMyriad Pro (Italic), Whitney HTF (Book, Bold, Light, SemiBold Italic), Adobe Garamond Pro (Italic)

Images237953_01g_SHOT_03_A_V2_273_swop3v2.tif (CMYK; 636 ppi; 47.1%), 3B_slant_1_42m.jpg (CMYK; 519 ppi; 67.36%), CSI_Master_Logo_Black_CMYK.ai (14%), ImagePRESS-C10000VP_Logo.ai (83.29%), enabling_cre-ativity-06_KO_Canon red.ai (12%)

Inks Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black

Fonts & Images

Saved at Nonefrom nyc03cmartin by Printed At

PRODUCTION SOLUTIONS

The imagePRESS C10000VP Series is designed to provide “no

compromise” printing. You can deliver outstanding customer

output while also benefi tting from impressive productivity and

reliability. The imagePRESS C10000VP Series is designed to

deliver the quality you demand at speeds that will delight. It

features intuitive operation and can help maximize uptime with

automated calibration.

The imagePRESS C10000VP Series achieves offset-like

quality through advanced features like Canon’s proven Gloss

Optimization technology. As for productivity: it kicks out up

to 100 ppm regardless of the media weight (up to 350 gsm**).

The result? You can help exceed your customers’ expectations.

Find out more about the imagePRESS C10000VP Series at

enablingcreativity.usa.canon.com

*Compared to previous imagePRESS devices.

**Based on 8.5”x11” paper size.

©2015 Canon USA, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Canon and imagePRESS are registered trademarks of Canon Inc. in the United States and may also be registered trademarks or trademarks in other countries. Apple and Magic Mouse are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries.

Introducing the new imagePRESS C10000VP Series

Setting New Standards for Speed, Reliability & High-Quality Output*

T:8.5”T:13”

B:8.75”B:13.25”

Page 42: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

P40 CANVAS DECEMBER 2015

FINAL THOUGHT

KAREN MURPHYOn point with...

Marketing guru Karen Murphy on creating the perfect brand strategyKaren Murphy believes that every customer is looking for an emotional reason to connect. That’s why the best campaigns are based on the understanding that your words and your im-ages must be an extension or reflection of what your audience believes and values. As CMO for Creative Mischief, an Atlanta-based award winning marketing firm, Murphy works closely with her clients to develop strategies that get to the heart of the stories they want and need to tell. Murphy’s multi-disciplined career spans more than 20 years supporting branding, audience growth and interaction across all channels of communications for individuals, corporations, non-profits, media, B2B, B2C, communities and events. Here are her thoughts about what it takes to compete in today’s marketing landscape.

Everybody talks about creating the perfect brand strategy. What does that take today?In an industry replete with plenty of jargon, pizzazz and hoopla, there re-ally is no magic potion for brand strat-egy. The best strategies are those that begin with a commitment to the fundamental principles of marketing. You have to start with your why, and then set your goals. Understand the passions, values, behaviors and pain points of your target audience. Find where your needs intersect with your target audience’s passions. Build a brand strategy that reflects who and what your audience aspires to be and what they value, while driv-ing toward your purpose and goals. Communicate through the channels your audience prefers and frequents. And finally, you have to test, test, test, analyze and refine.

How do you raise your brand above the noise?We call it human-centered or user-cen-tered design, which can inspire memo-rable brand experiences. Step away from focusing on communicating what you do, and start focusing on why you do it. Speak to and connect with who and what your audience aspires to be and how your brand can help people achieve those aspirations.

What are some of the things every marketer should have at her disposal? You have to have empathy, vision, strategy and purpose. After that, great writing and design are keys.

What’s the one question you should ask yourself every day?You should ask what your purpose and relevance is. It’s easy to get dragged back into the bad habits of one-off, reac-tive marketing, especially when dealing with quick-turnarounds, fire-drills and pressures by internal or external stake-holders. But when you and your stake-holders have a clear understanding of your purpose (preferably written down and shared somewhere), you can better determine whether a particular market-ing activity is actually relevant to your purpose. If it is not, you might ask wheth-er the activity is even necessary or what may need to change to make it more rel-evant. I find that keeping a commitment to purpose and relevancy helps stop the madness and re-centers your marketing for the best returns.

Heading into 2016, what trends do you see shaping the marketplace?Personalization of the brand is a trend that will continue to make its mark in 2016. This means exposing and cel-ebrating the faces behind your brand, enabling brand evangelists and inspir-ing memorable brand experiences that elevate your brand from a static entity to one that is active, adaptable and shaped by your audience.

The best strategies

are those that

begin with a

commitment to the

fundamental principles

of marketing.

You have to start

with your why,

and then set

your goals.”

Page 43: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

TOUCH ISTHE FINE LINE BETWEEN

read &

There’s a reason the smartest brands choose paper for important messages. Because holding something in our hands can shape how we feel. What we know. And, critically for marketers, what we buy.

See how brilliant brands use haptics—the science of how things we touch shape the way we feel— to create deeper connections with their customers. Visit sappi.com/haptics to learn more and request your own copy of “A Communicators Guide to the Neuroscience of Touch.”

remembered

Page 44: Canvas Magazine | Follow The Leader | December 2015

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Say hello to a new level of opportunity.

©2015 Ricoh. All Rights Reserved.

The new RICOH Pro C7110X helps you take advantage of lucrative new revenue streams you never

thought possible. Our new system offers users a fifth color station for clear or white applications at

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