B2Blog

Business-to-business (b2b) and industrial marketing blog.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Should you demo at the show? Maybe.


Fresh from walking a big trade show yesterday, I found this article: Why Demo at Trade Shows? which rails against demo-ing. Granted it's by Pragmatic Marketing, which focuses on product managers of software products.

Essentially, the author, Steve Johnson, feels that demo-ing your wares at a trade show doesn't engage the audience and is ineffective, and at worst, counter-productive.

The article has posted commentaries by several 'product manager bloggers' (didn't know there was such a thing), that are great reads on the subject, as well as on shows in general.

My opinion? Demos can be great starting-points for conversations with visitors. It engages them & qualifies them. If you don't know what my machine does, I've instantly learned a lot about you. Its when the demo is one sided that there is a problem (as illustrated in the image here).

Yesterday, there were two chickies at the bottom of the escalator, handing out invites to their company's sit-down demo. At the top of the elevator, there was a stack of these invites where attendees deposited them. And at their booth, I didn't see one chair filled--not even a staff-person. Why do they even try this stuff anymore?

Friday, September 21, 2007

B2Blog goes to Chicago

I'll be visiting Rosemont, Illinois next Tuesday to visit the big multi-show event being put on by Canon Communications. If there are any readers who will be there exhibiting, send me an email and I'd be happy to stop by your booth, or have lunch.

Canon had bought five different Midwest shows including National Manufacturing Week, and combined them into one mega-show. I'll be curious to see if this makes it an exciting, worthwhile show, or just a consolidation of weak shows.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Sanity for only ten bucks.

Late last year I told you that you needed Powerdesk software during "Gizmos Week".

Powerdesk is a a file browser that lets you have control of the 'gotta find that file' experience. I HATE browsing for pictures when Windows explorer randomly decides to list folders in thumbnail or filmstrip view, for example. The full software is $40, although the trial gives you 95% of the benefit for free (and just a splash screen when you close it.)

Well, a drive-by commenter to my blog pointed out the the Pro version is on sale for $9.95. I assume where I am pointing to you is an affiliate link, but they show the discount code of power995 to get the special price:

VCOM PowerDesk 6: Save 75%.

If you spend even half the time I do juggling files, you'll quickly appreciate this software. Sanity for ten bucks...go for it.

PS: Additional features: Zip/unzip, FTP, recent-folder list when saving files, and can display two folders at one time.

Friday, September 14, 2007

Shanghai IDC - smells scammy

Mix vague language, chinglish (chinese-english), and an important message about your brand...And you have a very rotten smelling email:

"We are Shanghai IDC Network Information & Technology Co.,Ltd, which is the domain name registration organization in China, which mainly deal with international company's in china. We have something important need to confirm with your company.

On the Sep 13, 2007, we received an application formally. One company named " XXX Investment (China) Co., Ltd" apply to register " YYY" as Internet brand keyword and Chinese domain name,which involve internet intellectual property right of your company.

These days we are dealing with it. In order to deal with this issue better, Please contact me by telephone or email as soon as possible. "
Some googling turns up a number of folks like me going, calling this scammy or phishy, but no one has really got an exact report. The company is legitimate, but their website (govidc.org.cn) is full of information in chinglish (or just deceptively vague, but inflammatory) articles about protecting your brand and domains, so this must be their primary business.

Our Shanghai sister company already owns our brand-domain.cn, so the email was doubly confusing, but even more likely to be junk.

Now that I've shared this email with you, I'm going to go delete it. Or maybe I should send a reply first: "These days we are dealing with it." LOL!

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

What the heck is a 'docx' file??

Geek update: Got an email this morning with an attachment titled 'letter.docx'.

DOCX??? What the heck is that?

Ahh, its the latest file format from Microsoft's Office 2007. It's all XML and everything, supposedly. (Well this geek doesn't really understand XML as a tool for everyday text files. Isn't XML supposed to expand compatibility, too? But I'm leaving that off my radar.)

The fix? You can get a add-on to earlier Office versions here:

Microsoft Office Compatibility Pack for Word, Excel, and PowerPoint 2007 File Formats

Or use an online conversion service like Zamzar.

Reminds me of when Office 97 came out and there was much trouble with compatibility. Back then we were sending email quotes in Word format, which made it an everyday issue.

Thursday, September 06, 2007

Globalspec does better product announcements

While yesterday I said there was plenty of room for improvement with our B2B websites, I should say the same applies to the Vertical Directories. Most have been stagnant in format for YEARS.

The one thing verticals shouldn't do is try to generate revenue with AdWords. Hopefully that is obvious--you want more traffic for your customers. Usually that means selling banner ads to those in your directory. But banner blindness is running rampant these days.

GlobalSpec has come up with a smart approach to promotion within their directory, using their previous product announcement billboards. These billboard/banners must have been buried in the site in the past. (It appears that these are paid positions on top of GlobalSpec's normal subscription.)

Now GlobalSpec has moved the billboards to the right of the search/category results. Kinda like AdWords. But there are two distinct differences:
  • The billboard link includes a small picture. The pictures draw the eyes in an otherwise text-covered page.
  • The billboard area in labeled "product announcements". Somehow that is more digestible 'news' to click on than typical ads. You know you just getting a bit of hopefully new information before you click, too.
I really, really like this approach. Its targeted, its digestable, and it attracts the eyes.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Doing it better: B2B ecommmerce

While everyone wants to make the latest social networking trend apply to B2B websites, there still is a ton of improvement in the basics, first. I found this report from MarketingSherpa regarding glue/sealant distributor Ellsworth a breath of fresh air, because thats all it is:

Borrow the Best Tactics From Consumer Ecommerce to Revamp Your B-to-B Site:

  1. Provide full product information and supporting documents
  2. Calculate actual shipping costs for orders
  3. Show photographs of every product
  4. Provide experts to answer questions
  5. Create unique landing pages for top brand name searches
  6. Use negative keywords to filter out consumers
While these may not apply to capital equipment companies like mine, I am doing three of the six on my new website right now.

I especially like the concept of the "Glue Doctor", which they are backing up with live chat, application forms, and other FAQ material. This is a great way to lead the unsure prospect into contacting their company or at least keep them on the site.

(Hmmm, wonder if the Glue Doctor would do videos next?)