marketing communications and brands in business markets

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Marketing communications & brands in business markets Lancaster University Management School March 13, 2017 Duncan Chapple Web business-school.ed.ac.uk Web KeaCompany.com Slides slideshare.net/dchapple Blog InfluencerRelations.com Twitter @DuncanChapple

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Page 1: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Marketing communications & brands in business marketsLancaster University Management SchoolMarch 13, 2017Duncan Chapple

Webbusiness-school.ed.ac.ukWebKeaCompany.comSlides slideshare.net/dchapple BlogInfluencerRelations.comTwitter @DuncanChapple

Page 2: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Stepping stones

Professional

• Ovum: CRM industry analyst

• Omnicom: PR Business Group Director

• Deloitte: Senior comms manager

• Lighthouse: IR/PR board member

• Octopus Group: Associate Director, MR

• Kea Company: Managing Partner, AR

• University of Edinburgh Business School: Faculty member

Educational

• Manchester: BA Humanities

• City: MSc Business Analysis

• Leipzig: Entrepreneurship

• UCLA/EDHEC: Exec program

• LBS/Dartmouth: MBA

• Edinburgh: PhD (ongoing)

Page 3: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

1.Start marketing directly to account

networks, not to online personas.

Page 4: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Three in four of these sell mostly B2B

Page 5: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Neglecting the importance of networks is an easy trap to fall into. Influencer networks have changed, but their role and significance in B2B buyers' decision making hasn't. Why would it? Product selection is only marginally less risky for the buyer — personally not necessarily corporately — than it once was.

IanHookWarwick

MBA

Chief Operations

Officer

Cognia

Page 6: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Long sales cycles and big, diverse buying teams change the dynamics. It's a long game.

Doug Kessler

Cornell BA

Creative Director

Velocity Partners

Page 7: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Persona-based, content-driven online marketing is easier to formulate (or in this case reduce to contextual messages around appealing to generalized personas) because B2B value propositions are much more difficult to communicate in real terms on the one hand and on the other that depending on networks to drive sales can cause fear of lack of market exposure due to a “behind the scenes” approach

Joel Terwilliger

University of Technology

Sydney MSc

Fundraising and stakeholder

relations

UTS, University of Newcastle,

Washington State

Page 8: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Easier to execute without value propositionsShow the feature. Where’s the value?

Booker: https://booker.wistia.com/medias/7r6acgd017

Page 9: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Must content-driven marketing attract low value

customers and turn marketers’ focus from high

value networks?

Page 10: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Business marketing differs from consumer marketing

• More embedded role of networks (of organisations and executives) between the producer and the consumer

• Ambiguity of the value of the solution on offer.

Modern marketing has become laser focussed onto content-driven online marketing targetted to general models of potential purchase influencer: personas.

The reified over-reliance on persona-based marketing means that measurable clicks are displacing brand equity approaches, based on relationships that trust, emotion, relevance and a resulting price premium.

Page 11: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

2. Segment on material

and emotional benefits,

not just lead scores

Page 12: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

There isn't just one B2B. The enterprise sector, small and mid-sized business and start-ups all differ. Many B2B marketing plans are copies of approaches originally tailored either big corporates or start-ups. Speaking about B2B in general, without designing for segments, is a mistake. Often that generic approach leads to an misunderstanding about where and how choices are made. Some small businesses work like consumers while larger businesses have complex decision-making processes.

Victoria Rusnac

LBS MBA

Head of Marketing

Adzuna, Intuit, EE,

Orange, Nestlé

Page 13: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

The largest problem I have seen in B2B marketing is the tendency to focus on your features and benefits rather than your client’s business problem, its cost and how your offer will solve it.

Robin Stacpool

eLBS Sloan

Fellow

Energy industry business

development

Shell, Weatherhead,

ComStrat

Page 14: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Rankings, click-throughs, online conversations, are all measurable outcomes which — ultimately for marketing it is where the rubber hits the road. But like any statistics, they only tell part of the story. A lot, of the problem here is the management generation. Marketing has got more complex, more opaque, and they are either still trying to catch up or never got it the first time round. Which drives them to drive marketing for the here and now.

IanHookWarwick

MBA

Chief Operations

Officer

Cognia

Page 15: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

B2B buying decisions are always based on a Value for Money calculation and the associated business case. Therefore you need to understand the business case, and how the features and benefits of your products and services apply to it. Key in marketing is to engage and move their business case to fit your commercial and technical offering ahead of your competition's VfM evaluation.

Nick Richardso

nNewcastle BSc

Business development

consultant

The Logic Group, Thales

etc.

Page 16: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

What interim solutions exist

between mass content marketing and very tailored

engagement strategies?

Page 17: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Undifferentiated

lead scoring is displacing

benefit-based segmentation.Marketers buy lists, and then

aim email and telephone campaigns at those lists,

successively narrowing their focus on customers who keep

on responding.

The operational logic of that is clear: you can’t call 5,000 executives, but you can send one email a month and then after half a year call the 100 who seem to have opened most of them. Instead of concentrated marketing aimed at the most valuable segment, or differentiated marketing based on competitive positions, you have an approach that focusses on the most externally-informed, and time-rich, buyers rather than those with the highest benefit from your solution.

Page 18: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

3. Prioritise the emotional promise, not

clickbait

Page 19: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Case study: Evian

Page 20: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

#evianBabyBay

https://youtu.be/OWG3rtGoIlI

Page 21: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

What product brand could not use that creative approach?

Does that approach echo the Evian brand?

If you swap in another brand, does it still work?

Is this about the Evian brand if it could work just as well for Coke, Nike, Gillette, or Samsung?

Page 22: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Evian once used babies in an on-brand way

Page 23: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

The association between the message and the brand’s value is slipping away. Mostly shocking, awkward, or somewhat entertaining adverts

are everywhere and the most you can remember is the logo but how it will help/why buy doesn’t linger – mostly just remembering how annoying, stupid, or simplistic (I already knew that) it was

Joel Terwilliger

University of Technology

Sydney MSc

Fundraising and stakeholder

relations

UTS, University of Newcastle,

Washington State

Page 24: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Sadly too often marketers get distracted by the process of marketing rather than focussing on the purpose of marketing

Andrew

YuilleMSc (Dist.)

Marketing & Managemen

t

Head of Risk Business Solutions

Thomson Reuters

Page 25: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Case study: SaleCycle writes one of 2016’s ten most-shared B2B marketing posts

180-strong online marketing firm, headquarters hear Durham

Marketing focusses on blog, but 10 posts produce most traffic

Conclusion: make less content, focus on what gets the most traffic (How to… educational posts)

Widely shared and praised viewpoint

http://bit.ly/lumsb2b

Page 26: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

The tech that's driving new stuff is going to drive your careers more than you imagine. The machine learning account exec sounds like fiction but so did driverless cars...

Sandy Purewa

l

Chairman

Octopus Group

Page 27: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Are there strengths to these approaches that compensate for the weaknesses? In some ways it's the old problem of marketers confusing tactics/execution with strategy.

Content marketing is critical. But it is a process not a strategy.

IanHookWarwick

MBA

Chief Operations

Officer

Cognia

Page 28: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Should B2B brands focus on the content that gets the

most views?

Page 29: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Content marketing often uses echoes, not emotional promises.

If you give people the content they seem to want, then they

will value you as a content source and consume more of

your content. But should you focus on the

content people want to read?

The biggest problem with that is clear from a glance at the SuperBowl adverts or the advertising firms that win the Lions at Cannes: you end up entertaining people rather than reasserting the value of what you have to sell. Of course, the best brands can produce engaging advertising that is on-brand, but many are on the road to cute puppies, monkeys and babies but no emotional promise of the benefits they provide.

Page 30: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

4. Focus on relationships,

not easy campaigns.

Page 31: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

It's not about hanging with the ad agency, but working with the sales force.

Mark Ritson

Lancaster BSc & PhD

Marketing professor

Melbourne Business

School

Page 32: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Graduate marketeers are preoccupied with learning about digital marketing. Rightly so: many organisations are still learning. But this is no substitute for understanding the buyer, understanding their buying process, their influences, and ensuring their marketing programme is founded on a rock solid strategy, the tenets of which haven't changed since the days of Kotler.

IanHookWarwick

MBA

Chief Operations

Officer

Cognia

Page 33: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Do marketing metrics develop short termism

rather than customer- or relationship- orientation?

Page 34: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Marketing is focussed on webalytics,

not satisfaction or

repurchase.Because business marketing

sells to networks of influencers, and because the

initial purchases are often unprofitable, the

management of client accounts should be more

important to marketers than new business development.

Because our value proposition evolves over time, we to need to use the decision to buy from us as an opportunity to increase our understanding of each client's developing problems and opportunities. But marketing also needs to understand how far we are meeting our promises, and which new benefits are being realised, so that our marketing is in line with the value we really produce. Technology-driven marketing points marketing and sales people away from that, and towards a conveyor belt of content marketing campaigns focussed on up-sell and cross-sell opportunities.

Page 35: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Summary

Start with networks, not personas

Lead scoring is displacing benefit-based segmentation

Content marketing is turning marketing from an emotional promise into an echo chamber

Up-sell and cross-sell replaces relationship-based fulfillment

Page 36: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Recent, valuable opinion

• How B2B Sales Can Benefit from Social Selling - HBRhttp://bit.ly/2mlQXfe

• How B2B digital leaders drive five times more revenue growth than their peers - McKinseyhttp://bit.ly/2n6pFI9

• 10 Fearless Predictions for B2B Sales and Marketing - Gartnerhttp://gtnr.it/2lDUUgy

• How b2b CMOs can align sales & marketing - Branding Magazinehttp://bit.ly/2n6dtHh

Page 37: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Questions? Comments?

Page 38: Marketing communications and brands in business markets

Marketing communications & brands in business marketsLancaster University Management SchoolMarch 13, 2017Duncan Chapple

Managing Partner, Kea Company

Work KeaCompany.comSlides slideshare.net/dchapple BlogInfluencerRelations.comTwitter @DuncanChapple