COMMENTS
I think that the biggest issue that startups have with marketing is treating it is something that you bolt on after all the technology development is done.
This is not the way it works if you want to create a successful company. Marketing is not a department!
Marketing starts with the product concept and continues with product development. It is the creation of a whole product that solves a customer need in a way that makes them want to tell their friends about it.
You can't find customers for your technology after you created the product. You have to know who they are beforehand and use technology to build a soltiuon that addresses their need.
You do that and you do not have a marketing problem.
Lance: Excellent points. I totally agree that startups would be best served if they *start* with a marketing strategy and a clear understanding of the customer need.
Unfortunately, I see few startups that have the discipline to do this in the early stages. Particularly those started by founders with primarily technical backgrounds.
As a marketer who works in the technology space, it's been an ongoing source of frustration in my career to see so many companies treat marketing as little more than a necessary evil.
All other things being equal, a company with good integrated marketing will do better than one without it. Just because we're not 'technical' doesn't mean we're useless.
re; Dharmesh
Exactly!
I recently started working at the Advanced Technology Development Center @ Georiga Tech. I see what you are talking about every day in the company's at the incubator. A few weeks ago a give a little presentation to try and demsytify marketing for them. When I get it on the Internet I will pop it your way.
This post resonates wth me more than I'd have liked.:)
" Most Startups Have A Marketing Problem". We certainly do :) With a little more broader take, I'd say that the biggest problem for (enterprise) software startups is to get the opportunity to prove it's worth, which requires effective marketing so that customers can find us, and willing to invest resources (time) to find out more about our product.
As stated in the post, we have technical background so development of the product is in our comfort zone. We are confident that our product addresses real needs, as our product embodies what we have implemented as custom solutions for customers in the past. We do have descent success rate once we get the opportunity to access talk to potential customers, but finding the customers and getting the opportunity to make the case has been the challenge.
IMHO, "don't look for customers, help them find you" is the most valuable advice in this post. Traditional methods of marketing is beyond the reach of most startups (too expensive with little ROI), we must make the best use of the tools available to us to enable customers who are looking for a solution to find us. There are several post on this site that provide guidance on how one can accomplish just that...
Fiat, one problem is that, historically, it's been very difficult to confidently match up cause and effect in marketing, due to a lack of data. So the process involved a lot of voodoo and BS -- which are inherently turn-offs to logic-heavy, empathy-challenged technical folk. As the process becomes more and more data-driven on the internet, I think you'll hear us techies change our tune. =)
In the meantime, here's a pithy insight for the technologist who turns his nose up at marketers and marketing:
"Hackers hack software. Marketers hack people."
Dharmesh, can you elaborate a little on #3 ("Don't look for customers")? Are you talking about SEO, or does it go beyond that?
For those wondering,
http://ninjawords.com/pithyGood post. TTE has got to be one of the biggest problems with web startups, because as you said, most founders don't approach their product objectively, distanced, to see how long it takes them to get convinced or "sold."
Anything that's demo-able on the web should have a big fat demo link right on the front page.
Sometimes a web product will make you get an account before you can play with it. While an extra (signup) page before gratification is bad enough, a lot of times they'll make you _confirm_ your email (forcing you to shift focus away from the site to check your inbox), and ask you to paste some funny password into a login form. I don't know how people can secure new signups that way. We can do better.
Excellent post..The first one is a biggie..That's where the most education and should be a major topic in any conference. Not just looking at each others technology. Its getting real experience on how to sell and market your cool stuff we are all smart people but not everyone has that marketing sales background and just assume the internet will do it all the work.
Number 4 "Reduce Time To Enjoyment" has been a great lesson to contemplate. Consider MyBlogLog; it was so easy to become a member and start enjoying it. I received an email, clicked on a link, and started using it. A MyBlogLog team member kicked things off in the Contact arena, and communities were automatically added with 10 visits. It was simple and almost immediate. The results - MyBlogLog grew quickly and was acquired by yahoo. Lesson learned.
I feel that it depends on the type of company and how it may evolve in the future to see if you need to do go after your customers. I think that in marketing that if you do not apporach a certain amount of your customers than your product should be more sought after than a Nintendo Wii.
I feel that although many companies can have passive marketing to retrieve more customers, I feel a face-to-face approach brings a sense of "honesty" that can't be reproduced on a phone, a conference, or in a brochure.
Although expensive and time consuming, this approach can also lead to a better understanding of the conditions of the customer. This information could be vital in evolving the product or changing the language by which one appraches a prospective buyer. All the knowledge of marketing cannot teach what you may learn in speaking to people about your product.
Great post - as a marketing guy at a start-up, your points resonate. Leverage has been the cornerstone of my marketing efforts. What that means for us is:
- Partner marketing: If you're an enterprise software startup, you *have to* work on those alliances with IBM, BMC, HP. You're dead without them.
- Channel Marketing: Identify your ideal reseller criteria, find them, and empower them to succeed. Less is more. Many startups are happy to sign on as many resellers as they can, and then lack the capability to follow through with marketing support.
- Customer marketing: Use your customers wherever possible. Have them present at conferences, sign them up for awards, do joint webinars. In fact, if I don't have a customer available, I simply don't do webinars any more - as a startup its hard to gain credibility without a customer speaking on your behalf.
Dharmesh,
It all starts with the notion 'If I build a great product, customers will just come calling'. Product development presupposes 'clarity of customer' but that is often sorely missing.
'Market-readiness' as defined by your product's readiness to the market rather than expecting the market to be ready for you, is key to success. But easier said than done! because it is all internal to the organization.
Ad that is my anguish!
As I was building my product, I started building the marketing platform for it. This platform is a blog but more than that. A community of people who come looking for solutions and answers. I started sharing lot of my knowledge through tips, articles and techniques. Today my blog is popular and now is becoming easier to spread the word for my product (
http://www.InfoCaptor.com)
But still I need to figure out some marketing details. The fun part begins now.
-Nilesh
http://www.infocaptor.com
This is a great article. I am currently looking at ways to "leverage" in our marketing initiatives - in line with point #2 in the article.
Over the past 6 months, we have completed our market research, conceptualized the solution and filed for a patent, are 50% through building a demo product and are 90% through with the marketing material (presentations and brochures). The solution is in the area of Two Factor Authentication focused towards small regional banks across the US.
Any ideas how I can obtain leverage in my marketing strategies? Thoughts? How can a startup like ours find our way into Banks and that too in a critical area like e-banking security using Two Factor Authentication?
I am in charge of marketing in our company. I'd appreciate some comments on when is the right time to invest in product branding. We already have a product which is working and we are now starting to meet clients.
One more to add to the list:
- No matter how fantastic marketing your have it all can be ruined in seconds by offering bad support.
There are endless of companies that simply underestimate the support side, but I can promise you a customer that have once been treated bad by the support department will never buy from you again - no matter how great marketing you got. But for startups this is great news because this is the single easiest way to steal customers from much bigger competitors. It is also a great sales argument for why your price is higher. And when words get around that you offer great service customers will start coming from everywhere.
So remember as a startup you have to position yourself a fantastic support/service.