Tag - branding

Products as nouns, products as verbs

I don’t really know how to process this yet or what to do with it, so I’m just plunking it on my blog and ruminating about it. From Pulse Laser via Signal vs Noise:

Products are not nouns but verbs. A product designed as a noun will sit passively in a home, an office, or pocket. It will likely have a focus on aesthetics, and a list of functions clearly bulleted in the manual… but that’s it.

Products can be verbs instead, things which are happening, that we live alongside. We cross paths with our products when we first spy them across a crowded shop floor, or unbox them, or show a friend how to do something with them. We inhabit our world of activities and social groups together… a product designed with this in mind can look very different.

Example …

Take Amazon: They don’t just sell products, they sell the whole life-cycle. You discover a book, select it using the reviews, consider it, hang onto it in your basket, finally choose to buy it. Wishlists and permanent book addresses (suitable for emails) understand that, even before you buy it, a book is a social object, present in our social world. Then afterwards you can recommend or review the book, and the site helps (even prompts!) you to sell the book on second-hand.

Lots to chew on as I develop products every day … how to design the product for its whole lifecycle:

  • Hearing about it
  • Seeing it
  • Wanting it
  • Learning about it
  • Getting it
  • Opening it
  • Examining it
  • Using it
  • Displaying it
  • Talking about it
  • Dare I say loving it?
  • Carrying/transporting it
  • Discarding it

How to make each of those experiences remarkable … even the one at the end, when you’re finished with the product or moving on to another product.

[tags] products, noun, verb, social, john koetsier [/tags]

I want people this passionate about the tools I’m building

Thomas Hawk just bought a Mac after 18 years of wandering about in the valley of the shadow of Windows.

Here’s what he has to say:

I never in a million years would have thought that the design of a laptop would ever matter to me at all. It’s not about the aesthetics of a machine. It’s what it does for you right? Well, maybe. But this machine is damn sexy. I love the way that the keyboard is lit at night so that I can work in the dark. I love that glassy screen. There is something about the feel of the polished aluminum as I hold, no caress, the thing in my hands. It types perfectly. I love how I can use two fingers on the touch pad to move my screen down. I love how it has a hidden built in microphone and a small little video camera in the screen so that I can do video phone stuff through Skype super easily. I love how the little power supply has a magnet built into it and just kind of plugs itself in. And yes, I even love that glowing little Apple logo on the back of the case that I’ve scoffed at in the past at the various conferences and tech meetups that I’ve gone to.

(Every time I see some crappy Dell laptop or an IBM/Lenovo ThinkPad I look at all the sharp angles, notches, odd bulges, and unsimple lids and just shake my head.)

That aside, however, here’s the point: how extravagantly wonderful is it when people rave like this about a product, service, or tool that you’ve create? I passionately want people who use the stuff I build or contribute to to passionately love them.

(And yes, I am building something. Still pre-alpha, though.)

As I saw recently on a design site: design like you give a damn.

[tags] design, mac, thomas hawk, john koetsier [/tags]

Yes, it blends!

Scoble has already linked to this so the whole world probably knows, but I just can’t resist. This is absolutely perfect 100% genuine beautiful shiny social media marketing in all its amateurish grainy goodness:

What’s so perfect about it?

It’s short, remarkable in a they-did-that!?! type of way, is relevant to the company’s products, builds/reinforces the brand, isn’t too contrived, is well-executed but clearly unprofessional (which is good), and doesn’t try to do too much.

[tags] blender, social, media, marketing, john koetsier [/tags]

Why do you blog?

I just saw perhaps the best answer I’ve seen to this question:

My blog is my bio, resume, idea archive and networking hub all at once. It is my personality online.

That’s a quote by Rohit Bhargava in a guest post on Strumpette.

Of course, I happen to think it’s the best answer because it’s the same as my answer.

Your answer may vary …

[tags] blogging, Bhargava, john koetsier [/tags]

Wishing is not a valid strategy

Whoda thunk it? Apparently wishing is not a valid business strategy.

My friend Mike Wagner at Own Your Brand just posted a delightful little baseball parable. Here’s the moral:

Stretching your organization by aiming high is admirable – even desirable. However, it must be done in a truthful and realistic way which is supported by actionable plans.

So, when asked for next year’s sales projections, just remember: Wishing is not a business strategy.

The applications are many, and they go way beyond sales projections:

  • Projects – completing
  • Committments – fulfilling
  • Promises – keeping
[tags] mike wagner, wishing, business, strategy, john koetsier [/tags]

Aww shucks …

Leo Bottary at Client Service Insights said some really complementary things about this blog today. Thanks – and I’m humbled.

I’m in awe of blogs like bizhack, for example. John Koetsier teaches me something new about the medium nearly every day. And there are certainly other blogs that fall into this category as well.

The most important thing I can bear in mind about the world we live and do business in today is that the only constant is change. Which means that we are all learning, all the time. My goal is simply to keep learning.

The only certainty is that I’ll make mistakes. Say something wrong. Misplace a fact. Underestimate a trend. Dispell a rumor that turns out to be true.

But I refuse to stop thinking, talking, drawing conclusions, writing … out of fear of error. That way lies paralysis.

You miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.
– Wayne Gretzky

What I will do is be open, honest, humble, admit mistakes – and correct them when I make them.

To me, that’s the beauty and the magic of blogging.

. . .
. . .

(By the way, Leo has some great insights of his own. In particular, I thought his best client service lesson ever was one of those great foundational principles that we need to embed in our bones before we’ll ever, ever be able to understand what great client service is for our specific clients. Hint: truly understand the client first!)

[tags] bizhack, leo bottary, client service insights, blogging, mistakes, john koetsier [/tags]

5 ways to get positive product reviews from bloggers

You’ve got a new product. How do you get bloggers to review it positively?

  1. Call it a beta
    Even if you think your widget is really, really good, tell bloggers that you’re still in testing, but wanted some early feedback. That way, if they find something that you didn’t know was wrong with it, they aren’t overly surprised or disappointed.

  2. Offer a free production version later
    If the demo model you’re giving out now can’t be kept by the blogger you’re sending it to, promise to send a production version later. The blogger will probably still be honest about what he or she finds, but will usually avoid calling you the Son of Sam in hopes of getting free gadgets later on.

  3. Pre-cushion
    If your think your product might have a couple of warts, mention them upfront. It’s better to hear about problems than to discover them, and it lets the blogger know you’re not a complete idiot.

  4. Be straightforward
    If your product is a really early iteration, and has major problems, present it that way. Tell bloggers that it sucks, and ask for help to make it better. Let them know that you’re not planning to take it to market as is, but are just looking from some good product input.

  5. Don’t. Just don’t.
    Be brutally honest with yourself. If it’s really bad, or just stupid, go sell it on the Shopping Channel or local weekly newspapers or some other meatspace MSM outlet. Don’t bring it within a hundred feet of bloggers, or you’ll lose control of your branding, positioning, and marketing almost instantly. (Assuming you have any to begin with.)

Whatever you do, if you’re tempted to give free stuff to bloggers, think twice. Is it good enough? If not, stop. You’re in for a nightmare. Unless you think no PR is bad PR.

If you ask me, I’d rather get positive spin.

[tags] product, reviews, bloggers, blogging, social media, marketing, pr, john koetsier [/tags]

Why Google is your brand

How many companies know that to smart technical web people, their brand is what Google says it is?

I’m reading Chris Anderson’s The Long Tail right now, and this paragraph jumped out at me:

For a generation of customers used to doing their buying research via search engine, a company’s brand is not what the company says it is, but what Google says it is. The new tastemakers are us. Word of mouth is now a public conversation, carried in blog comments and customer reviews, exhaustively collated and measured. The ants have megaphones.

You know and I know may know it … but so many people in our organizations don’t get it yet. Give them this book – it’ll help. As Goethe said, “a good book is as an axe to a frozen lake.”

Crack that ice!

[tags] long tail, chris anderson, goethe, google, blogs, word of mouth, john koetsier [/tags]

High-tech astroturf from Exxon

Astroturf is fake grass. Astroturfing is fake grass-roots advocacy.

As Brains on Fire reports, the Wall Street Journal has uncovered what looks like an incredibly inept piece of astroturfing by the DCI Group, possibly on behalf of client Exxon.

It’s one thing to create a video for a corporation or interest group and be aboveboard about it … disclosing any interests or loyalties. It’s another to try to pass off propaganda as citizen-generated media. Especially when the result is so incredibly inane.

The video is incredibly clumsy – attempting to portray Al Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth as incredibly boring without even attempting to refute its thesis.

Whoa. To my mind, that’s an endorsement of the documentary’s message … and another reason to see it.

Just think of the mindset that goes into a production like this: what a incredibly insultingly low view of people the creator of this piece must have. In essence, what this video is saying is that climate change might be happening, but it’s boring. Go on, stupid citizens, amuse yourself to death.

Whoever did this is evil. Whoever did this is arrogant.

Ultimately, whoever did this is more foolish than he or she thought people are.

[tags] video, youtube, astroturf, astroturfing, propaganda, PR, Exxon, oil, al gore, global warming, climate, inconvenient truth, john koetsier [/tags]

Paris & YouTube: not hot?

I subscribe to LabelNetwork‘s Global Youth Culture weekly emails on pop culture. In this week’s was an interesting take on the recent YouTube and Paris Hilton mashup:

Even though Warner Brothers’ head of new media, Robin Bechtel, thinks that YouTube and Paris Hilton are both “pop culture phenomena” and therefore are meant for each other, it’s questionable if they really understand who’s on the site and just why it’s popular. Not to mention how over people are of Paris, and therefore by having her as the first spokesperson, appears woefully out-of-touch.

More details here.

LabelNetworks is fairly 1.0 in terms of the web, but they are incredibly hip to emerging teen and 20-something culture. Interesting.

[tags] paris hilton, youtube, culture, pop, music, video, labelnetwork, john koetsier [/tags]

Mind candy

Amazon delivered some goodies today:

The downside is, the stack of books to be read grows larger. The upside: I’m really looking forward to Robert Scoble’s Naked Conversations, and Debra Weil‘s Corporate Blogging book may be having some immediate personal relevance.

(Yes, that’s a veiled hint, and no, I won’t be specific. For at least another week or two.)

[tags] books, naked conversations, corporate blogging, robert scoble, debra weil, john koetsier [/tags]

Pinko marketing: towards a new language

Those of us that believe that traditional marketing is no longer working for huge and influential swaths of people are listening and learning how to operate in a world without big media messages.

One bucket term that Tara Hunt has coined to hold all the things that we think will work is Pinko Marketing.

Loosely defined, pinko marketing is marketing where we acknowledge that we have limited control over “our” brands – and how our product is perceived and used. And it’s marketing where we acknowledge that what the community of clients and could-be-clients and definitely-not-clients says and thinks and does around our products and our companies is a lot more important that what we’re putting in our brochures … so we better sit up and listen hard.

But a problem with this revolutionary idea is – as with any revolution – language. Those who own the language have already tilted the debate in their favor. Don’t think that’s important? Consider the 30 million results for the counter-revolutionary term “consumer generated media.”

Counter-revolutionary?

Yes! And not only counter-revolutionary … it’s an oxymoron, just as bad as jumbo shrimp and progressive conservative, British humor and American culture.

(Sorry, low blow! Just joking! Somebody give me one for Canada and I’ll stick it in – we can all be equally insulted.)

Consumers consume, right? Only producers produce. So how can consumer generated media (CGM) be both consumer AND generated? Contradiction in terms.

The term is counter-revolutionary because it defines you and me … and everyone else who buys a stick of gum from a corner store … as consumers. And we aren’t. We’re producers. And fathers. Mothers. Sisters and brothers. Business owners and employees. And yes, we eat and buy stuff too.

But we hate it when people wearing shiny suits in big offices in tall buildings tell us how we will be defined. No one axis captures all our complexity.

So we need a new language. We need new terminology that describes us, and describes what we are trying to do. It’s new language for new marketing.

Don’t be mistaken. We’re not getting utopian here. Just because there’s been an increased level of realization that people matter, communities matter, grassroots matters, and our megaphone is being taken away to be chopped up into a thousand pieces and used by a thousand publishers doesn’t mean that we don’t have products to sell.

But we want to understand and be clear: what are the connotations behind the denotations? What are the critical terms we should be thinking of?

Here’s a few that I’m thinking of. (By no means is this list complete or canonical – please add/edit/extend it if you wish!)

Some examples:

  • Consumer
    This is the most obvious one. When I hear this I think of a big fat mouth opening wide to devour anything it can. What can we replace this with?

    The most obvious is producer. And it’s a good term – for some. Let’s be honest. In many communities (Digg, Slashdot, political parties, clubs) the producing members are a fraction of the total.

    But that doesn’t mean the others are consumers. I wonder if a better term isn’t citizen. A la Citizen Agency?

  • User-generated
    I don’t like the term user either, and I say that as a technologist who has often used the term to refer to people who are “using” my sites.

    But what do we replace it with? All kinds of awkward constructions like “people media” come to mind. But ideally a term must be simple and elegant, and I’m not sure that one is.

    A thought: what do we call media that “users” don’t generate? Media that “producers” or companies produce. Do we call it simple media or movies or articles? If so, do we really need separate terms for media based on who produced that media? Just a thought – I’m not sure, personally.

    Citizen media might be the best. Tell me what you think.

  • Marketing
    For most, marketing is brands and brochures, maybe with some databases and client profiling thrown in. What’s marketing in pinko terms?

    All kinds of organic terms come to my mind …. seeding, planting, watering, tending, weeding, nurturing. That’s because in pinko terms for marketing to be effective it has to be owned by the community, by the clients, by the people who care about it.

    But what also comes to mind is Seth Godin‘s statement that while markets are conversations, marketing is a story. In that sense, marketing is storytelling. Humans are natural story tellers and story listeners, after all, and compelling stories get told more often than boring or irrelevant ones. So maybe good marketing is the art of telling good stories.

That’s all I have time to go into detail on today. But here are other terms that require thought:

  • producer
  • public relations
  • advertising
  • content
  • community
  • publishers
  • participant
  • customers/clients
  • viral/infectious
  • seeding
  • social networking

In the next few days I’ll come back to this list and try to expand on some of these terms. But I’d hugely appreciate input and advice from others in the comments and on your own blogs. And what terms have I missed?

Language matters
If you don’t believe that language matters, look at who calls Hizbullah “terrorists” and who calls Hizbullah “freedom fighters.” Words embody belief systems. Believe systems get translated into words.

Let’s get ours right.

[tags] marketing, marcom, PR, user, user generated, CGM, consumer generated media, pinko marketing, advertising, consumer, tara hunt, seth godin, john koetsier [/tags]

Ideavirus: seeds, seeding, seedlings

Seth Godin kicks ass. Sorry for putting it that way, he just does. He also costs me a lot of money at Amazon.

(Guy Kawasaki just reviewed Seth’s new book Small is the new big. Now I have to buy it.)

The growth of ideas is of critical importance to me and to anyone else who is passionate about a cause, a product, an opinion, a company, a person. How do ideas grow?

(Note that I don’t say spread, because you can spread a lot of manure without it sticking anywhere, and deservedly so.)

Seth says that people don’t communicate an idea farther unless four criteria are met:

  • Intellectual
    They get it.

  • Emotional
    They like it.

  • Benefit
    They get a benefit from communicating it.

  • Simple
    It costs less energy to communicate than the benefit they get.

Some of my thoughts on each of them, from the perspective of a person who is trying to stimulate the growth of an idea:

Getting it: building seeds
The first one is surprisingly hard to achieve. The best way is to have a simple but memorable message. How do you do that when your product or its benefits are so great and varied and complex?

Build seeds.

Maybe there are 5 important things your product does. Probably you think you can’t communicate any one of them in less than a paragraph. But identify each and build a seed for each … one sentence that captures the essence and invites further investigation.

Liking it: positioning the seeds
No one’s passionate or emotionally attached to things that don’t matter. Build your seeds around results and outcomes that your potential client or audience is passionate about.

Ergo, you need to know your potential client or audience. Ergo, you have to talk to them … or at least listen to them.

Then craft your seeds to match their passions. If you can’t, throw out your seeds. In fact, you may have to throw out your products.

Communicating: spreading the seeds
How can your audience benefit by spreading your seeds?

Make them look like experts in their field by providing e-books that credibly say things they’re already predisposed to believe. Give them an avant-garde aura by presenting your product as cutting edge. Give them conversation-starters by showcasing a funny or ridiculous use, affect, or incidental attribute of your product. Help them present their compassionate side by presenting emotionally compelling or charitable aspects of your product or service. Let them benefit others by being able to give them a special rate, or a private deal.

Figure something out. Figure many somethings out. Try them all … different people are, by definition, different. And you want your idea to grow in and through many people.

Simple
The energy required to care enough about your idea to invest the time to understand it is significant. The opportunity cost is significant. The sharing cost should be insignificant.

Add a Digg this button. Stick a Add to del.icio.us link. Email and print. Offer help to communicate it. Ask people to blog it. Give them a personal benefit if they spread the idea.

[tags] seth godin, guy kawasaki, ideavirus, new big is small, communication, marketing, advertising, john koetsier [/tags]

Announcing SLOB

In complete and slavish (but very flattering) imitation of Liz Straus’ SOB program, I am (somewhat) proudly announcing the SLOB top blogs awards: for startlingly loquacious & outstanding bloggers.

(Cue assorting clapping, cheering, plus a couple of boos from the peanut gallery.)

See the newly inaugurated SLOB hall of fame right here. (This being the first week of its existence, there are only 9 members. But I think you’ll agree they’re all very, very worthy members.)

9 Weekly SLOBs
In any case, every week from now until I get bored or completely fascinated by some shiny piece of scrap metal, I will pick 9 SLOBs … 9 startlingly loquacious & outstanding bloggers … and throw them on the SLOB page, errr, vote them into the SLOB hall of fame. That bestows upon these happy souls the much-coveted privilege of displaying the august and revered SLOB logo.

Becoming a SLOB
Do you want to be a SLOB? (But of course you do.) Simply email me and suck up (or down, as the case may be). I am bribable. Money is verboten, unless it’s really lots and lots and in small bills and untraceable. Links are best.

Here’s to SLOBs! May they live long and propser – I mean prosper.

hic.

[tags] SLOB, SOB, bloggers, outstanding, HOF, hall of fame, silly, amazing, highly coveted, glorious, beautiful, bribable, yummy, john koetsier [/tags]

FlickrTagFight: Coke beats Pepsi

Want to know if something is popular?

The indexers of the social web know. Google Trends knows. Alexa knows. And Flickr knows too.

Apparently, savvy web 2-ish relatively wealthier photohounds prefer Coke. All you have to do is check the TagFight:

Here’s a handy place to start: FlickrTagFight.

(Thanks Steve Rubel for the link.)

[tags] flickr, flickrtagfight, steve rubel, coke, pepsi, branding, trends, popular, john koetsier [/tags]

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