Hanging Your
Net Shingle, Part 3: Customers
by Tim Smith, PhD, March 8, 2002
<back|
|next>
Corporate web sites are communication tools that can
influence decisions and encourage positive actions. In this third
part of a five part series discussing the content of new venture
web sites, we will explore Itron's new site, www.itron.com, with
an eye to how it speaks to potential customers.
Itron is not a Chicago firm but they are one of the
largest wireless data firms providing both hardware and software.
The sell wireless meters modules, wireless meter reading devices,
and meter reading validation software to water, gas, and electric
utilities. If your Peoples Energy gas meter was upgraded with a
new radio frequency attachment to it, Itron provided the unit that
reads the meter, transmits the data to a mobile meter reading device,
and then forwards that data for your bill. While this kind of wireless
data communication may not be on the forefront of our minds, it
is on the forefront of technology that has real ROI.
As an audience, Itron's customer group will include
technologist, field meter readers, and C-level finance people. Each
of these customer roles will want to be able to quickly determine
the companies product marketing message. Some of them will then
want to see the details such as a technology description, list of
benefits, points-of-parity with similar offerings, and points-of-differentiation
as well. They may also want to see some of the information that
an investor would be seeking such as Company background and referenced
Client List to support that the company will be around to support
the solution in 5 years and that the technology works.
For addressing customers, a convenient product marketing
message could fit the form of: For This Target Customer, who need
To Solve This Problem, we are the best at This Product Differentiating
Value Offer because We Have This Product Attribute. Most firms are
not going to be this succinct and blunt, but it is useful if a prospect
could put this kind of a sentence together after reading a product
marketing message on a web site. Itron conveniently highlights this
kind of information for each of its products. For instance, their
MV-90 is described in three, easily understandable, paragraphs as
a software product that receives and validates meter reads. In creating
a product marketing message, we could state from reading their web
site, For utilities who need to collect, validate, and edit their
meter reads, the MV-90 is the most complete solution as demonstrated
by its acceptance as the most popular solution on the market. Even
if the product differentiator appears weak, this message is acceptable.
It tells us who their customers are, what the product does for them,
and addresses on of the primary concerns of risk adverse utilities
it is proven technology.
Often, the customer audience will be driven to a corporate
web site through a prior experience such as a sales call, meeting,
exhibit, VAR, or contact with similar customers. Because the customer
audience will be addressed by the firm in numerous occasions, it
is necessary to have a cohesive message across the customer facing
portion of the firm. The web site can be used as nice place both
for the initiation of conversation and for the following up of prior
interactions. While brevity and clarity are useful in guiding customers
through a firm's product material, completeness is also necessary
for customers requiring further information.
For prospects requiring more than a simple product
marketing message prior to taking action, Itron goes on to list
both benefits and use cases, then combines these stories with customer
case studies and numerous relevant press releases. From the list
of benefits, a careful reader could determine the points-of-parity
and points-of-differentiation in conducting a product comparison
with Itron's products. Even if a firm is lacking case studies and
press releases, it can produce and publish its own white papers
and product brochures on its web site. While clearly not as rich
as a set of customer stories, firm produced publications demonstrate
the depth of thought that has gone into making a product to solve
a set of problems. This is, in itself, a testimony that the product
or services are sound.
Itron has nice clarity in addressing customers, yet
the test comes in turning one way communication through a web publication
into two way communication of email, phone, event attendance, or
meeting. With clarity of a marketing message, clarity of appropriate
decisions making and action can follow.
---
Tim Smith, PhD is a principal at Wiglaf, a Market Research and Sales
and Marketing Strategy consultancy serving tech-driven businesses
operating in business markets. Small and medium sized businesses
select Wiglaf for our quantitative and fact driven approach. www.wiglaf.biz.
----
The May Report, TECH BUSINESS BRIEFS,March 8, 2002
<back|
|next>
|