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Dec 8th
Recently, I took a listen to a virtual conference on where marketing is headed. The Future of Marketing event featured 60 marketing experts who each were given only one minute to speak about the most important trend they see in marketing. With TV fragmenting, Hulu, social media channels galore, where is it all heading?
Here are just a few of the predictions that came out of the event:
– Weaving together a variety media into a cohesive campaign. Ford Explorer 2011 did this for its launch, which took place in eight cities and on Facebook. Scott Monty of Ford Motor, who writes The Social Media Marketing Blog, called it “using paid, earned and owned together.” He reports: “By integrating our ad buy into our own content and into Facebook and using broadcast and PR, weaving it all together, we actually ended up with a one-day hit that got us greater exposure than a Super Bowl ad.”
– More testing. Anne Holland of WhichTestWon stressed the need for testing: “Research shows if you run A/B tests on an ecommerce site that hasn’t been tested before, you’ll increase sales by 20 to 25 percent.”
– Social search. Lee Odden of TopRank Marketing is focused on how customers are searching sites such as Facebook or Twitter, not just on Google. “If companies can make it part of the social experience,” he says, “I think it’ll serve as a true channel for social media [return on investment].”
– Offering engaging content unrelated to your company. Michael Stelzner of Social Media Examiner says this strategy can win customers’ trust. “Review other people’s books and products. Interview the experts. Finally, recognize people who help you.”
Ann Handley of MarketingProfs was on a similar wavelength: “Good content shares or solves. It doesn’t shill. In other words, it doesn’t hawk your wares or push out sales messages. It creates value by positioning you as a remarkable and valuable source of vendor-agnostic information.”
– Targeting influencers. Laurel Touby of MediaBistro offered this tip: There’s a tool to find the most influential customers in your database — known as “supernodes” — called Flowtown. “You might want to try Flowtown for your next email campaign and hone in on those influencer customers.”
– More blogger outreach. Chris Abraham of Abraham Harrison says “reaching out to bloggers and getting earned media mentions is much easier than you think. Find everybody you can remotely think of who is a viable candidate in their writing and their readership and reach out to all of them.”
– More targeted tactics. Guy Kawasaki, founder of alltop.com and author of the new book Enchantment says to think about how to promote new products: “Web site versus Facebook fan page. I vote for Facebook fan page these days.”
What’s the future of your company’s marketing? Leave a comment and tell us what you plan to change in 2011 in how your company reaches customers.
View full post on Entrepreneur.com – Daily Dose
Nov 14th
It’s that time of year when we begin looking ahead to the coming year. In fact, with 2010 drawing to a close (can you believe it?), it’s that time when business owners begin looking ahead to the coming decade. If you want to know what the next 10 years have in store, take a closer look at a new report from Intuit.
Intuit 2020 Report: 20 Trends That Will Shape the Next Decade builds on more than five years of research led by the Institute for the Future and Emergent Research. It is the first in a series of reports looking at key trends affecting consumers and businesses in the coming years. Subsequent reports will drill down into specific trends and industries, but the current report presents a broad overview.
What’s the takeaway? “The coming decade will be complex, volatile and uncertain, but it will also provide many new opportunities for small businesses and their customers in the United States and abroad,” the report notes. Here are some points I found especially interesting and that have big implications for the future of innovation:
Small businesses will get ever more specialized. Customers will increasingly seek customized products and services. The rise of innovations such as cloud computing, a flexible workforce and lower-cost manufacturing options will make it easier for small businesses to seek out product and service niches.
Startup will get easier and cheaper. In response to growing niche market opportunities, lower equipment costs and better technology, it will be easier than ever to launch a business without a big investment. This means more innovation, as new ideas can be tested without much risk – and startup companies will proliferate.
Big and small firms will join forces. Collaborative partnerships with big companies will increase, as small companies bring to the table innovative practices, market agility and intimate customer knowledge. What will big firms offer small businesses? Marketing and distribution power so that they can take their innovations to broader markets.
One prediction I’m not so sure I agree with: “The Web and mobile technologies will become the great equalizer of big and small, with customers no longer knowing – or even caring – about the size of the firm that provides their goods and services.” In a niche economy where personalization is sought after, will being a small company actually be an advantage? I think consumers may, in many cases, prefer to do business with small firms provided their needs are being met.
And here’s one innovation I particularly hope to see – and I think most busy business owners wish for as well: “The hardware and software we use on a daily basis will get smarter, helping people make everyday decisions and streamline complex tasks,” the report contends. That’s especially good news given that data will become even more critical to competitiveness. Information overload isn’t going away – so smart machines to help us deal with it will be very welcome.
Be sure to check out the full report. You can also find related materials at the Intuit website.
Editor’s Note: This article was previously published at OPENForum.com under the title: “What Does the Future Hold for Small Business?” It is republished here with permission.
What Is the Future Outlook for Small Business?
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View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Nov 9th

Image: Alan Mak/Wikimedia Commons
Move over, Shanghai. China’s economic future lies in its center–the 20 biggest cities in inland China, to be exact. The Economist, in a new report, has dubbed this trend CHAMPS (named after some of the leading cities in its inland Top 20 list: Chongqing, Hefei, Anshan, Maanshan, Pingdingshan and Shenyang). These cities, located in rural areas, will lead Chinese urbanization and economic growth in coming years.
Indeed, since 2007, they have already been outpacing their coastal rivals in terms of growth. For example, “Zhengzhou, the capital of Henan province, will in 2020 have a bigger economy than Sweden, Hong Kong or Israel,” writes the Economist. “China’s megacities will attract a relatively high proportion of upper-income earners and their sizes will offer economies of scale and scope that will drive productivity growth in the service sectors.”
Here’s more from The Economist Intelligence Unit’s CHAMPS report, which we received a preview of:
–Just as the emergence of China’s coastal cities was one of the world’s greatest opportunities
in the past three decades, the rise of inland Chinese cities brings with it a fresh source of rapid
growth. With the CHAMPS, businesses have a chance to gain a foothold in cities where the
population will increase by nearly one-third and incomes will grow by over threefold in the short
space of a decade.
–The rise of the CHAMPS reflects China’s transition to a consumption-driven economy, with growth moving away from the export-led eastern seaboard.
–Over the next decade to 2020, the population of the top 20 emerging cities will grow by 27% to 85m, making central China a global hotspot for business opportunity. By contrast, the population of China’s richest 20 cities will only grow by 19% to 100m. The richest cities will still be important but they are already crowded markets.
–In 2009 average incomes in China’s richest 20 cities were 42% higher than in the top 20
emerging cities. By 2020 that gap will have fallen to 15%. Thus the best growth opportunities for products targeted at high-income earners will in most cases be in the inland cities.
–Market uptake of numerous types of consumer goods is still rapidly increasing in the CHAMPS, even though such consumer markets in wealthier cities are approaching saturation. Mobile phones, air conditioners and personal computers are expected to perform exceptionally well in the CHAMPS.
View full post on Business Pundit
Oct 30th
Few books are providing a rallying cry for the environmental and social shifts impacting goods and services. The Mesh: Why The Future of Business Is Sharing is one of those books. Its cry is worth a listen.
I listened to its author, Lisa Gansky (@instigating on Twitter), at the first BizTech Day conference in New York, as I skimmed the free copy given to everyone in the audience. A founder of multiple Internet companies and a cofounder of Dos Margaritas, a conservation-focused social venture, Gansky is well regarded by business luminaries such as Seth Godin. After reading The Mesh, I can see why. I spend a lot of time reading articles online and listening to presenters talk about new ways of doing business today. I still felt that after reading The Mesh I read a book that offered original thought-provoking utility.
Using technology to build value through eliminating waste
Gansky reveals how the standard business model has become aligned with the sharing aspects of community and the managed consumption of sustainability, letting entrepreneurs scale with lower costs. She focuses on startups — some familiar and some unknowns, yet all transformed through the use of advanced Web networks, mobile technologies, and sharable goods. Readers will learn about businesses such as lending exchange Zopa, peer-to-peer lender Prosper and custom winemaker Crushpad.
“Mesh business begins with a technological advantage. The billions spent in developing the Internet, mobile infrastructure and certain large platforms… have lowered the financial and time barriers for starting new businesses… From product development to marketing, Mesh businesses can and do deploy assets they don’t own but can easily access.”
Social media plays a significant role in The Mesh. But social media is mentioned not as a newfangled trend, but as an integral network that is the backbone of delivering value.
Gansky reveals the benefits and shares her findings through anecdotes and case studies, all offered in fresh ways. At the heart of the author’s thoughts, however, lies the anxiety that has many consumers rethinking their lives, and that have subsequently created more information and social savvy businesses.
“What if we’ve sold ourselves a very large but fundamentally wrong story? When stuff became cheap, and then credit became cheap, we filled our lives with stuff — not the things we really cared about…. When I traveled to Chile, Argentina, and several places in Europe … this conversation became more ubiquitous and substantially louder.”
I loved the analytics perspective that The Mesh offers in its explanations. It’s not overt, but certainly implied. Gansky nails a great description of Zipcar as being an “information company” and shows how it manages to use data constructively to serve customers better and develop a competitive advantage.
The Mesh shows how small businesses can profit from being meshy, too
The later chapters are useful for entrepreneurs who want to develop a Mesh business but are not sure where to start or look. There are five aspects of Mesh:
Simple “ah-ha” suggestions abound. As an example, Gansky suggests that “Hotels can easily integrate car and bike sharing into their suite of services.” I also liked Gansky’s suggestions for how old, familiar firms can access Mesh aspects, such as the idea for a new kind of tire service for Goodyear.
Product design itself is reimagined, as a Mesh-worthy design is:
Gansky explains how this new design approach is the result of Mesh aspects merging:
“For years now, the common folklore in the West has been that the cheapest way to replace many appliances is to throw the old one away and buy a new one. Planned obsolescence has ruled the day…. In Mesh businesses, products are shared. The flow of information about the products, including feedback from customers, is constant. As a result, favored products are built to last and keep functioning, adapt to different users, and be capable of repair and upgrading.”
Gansky then relates the significance to environmental concerns:
“As transparency about real costs — specifically the cost of generating and managing waste — increases, environmentally responsible companies are more likely to be high performers financially…. Mesh businesses are poised to thrive, because they are based on using resources more efficiently.”
Included in the book is a directory that gives wonderful Mesh-related resources on subjects such as home improvement, books and real estate. This will give you an industry-based starting point for incorporating Mesh characteristics into your business or life.
Learn how you can improve your business, your community and our planet
With The Mesh, Gansky collects excellent examples and truly enlightens with her knowledge, rebooting your sensibilities like a splash of water from a morning shower. The Mesh offers small businesses a means to develop a profitable model based on sharable goods, as well as ideas for augmenting current offerings at a reasonable costs. I am delighted that Gansky developed a book that truly combines business acumen, ecological concerns and Internet sensibilities into a startling, unique, must-read package.
Review of The Mesh: Why The Future of Business Is Sharing
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View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Oct 14th
The future is here as far as small business goes. A rapidly changing economic and technological landscape has almost completely changed the idea of what it means to be in business including the trappings of a storefront location or office, a large bank loan and hiring and buying merchandise. (As we’ll see even the small business Website isn’t what it was a few years ago.) But the core values of running a small business, or any business, have remained the same: create value, operate efficiently, be profitable. Here are the ways small business has changed. It’s the wave of the future:
The rise of the home-based business. Of course, the home-based business is nothing new, but with new communications technology including the Internet, lower overhead costs and potential increase in productivity, the home business has probably never been so viable an option. But, as in the case of more traditional businesses, it all comes down to persistence in planning, finance and management. Klariti
The death of the one-way Website. Many may not be surprised to hear that the clunky old non-interctive Website is a thing of the past. Unfornately, observes David Siteman Garland, in this recent presentation, a lot of those people forgot to tell the majority of small business owners who still use these things. If you’re using anything even remotely like what David’s describing in this video as your small business Web presence, it’s high time for an overhaul. The Rise To THe Top
The death of the Web? What, you say? How can this be? Well, the Internet may remain an important part of the future of small business for a good long time yet, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that the Web as we know it will survive. Chief tech know-it-all Chris Anderson and writer Michael Wolff have the latest on Internet user behavior and, perhaps more importantly, what it all means. When it comes to marketing, less search more apps. Wired.com
The rise of online video. Stop tinkering with that Website and pick up a Flip camera. Drawing from the article above, veteran marketer Chris Hamilton insists that, if you’re not already in the minority in failing to use video in your online marketing campaign, you soon will be. Check out the data, read more and watch Chris’s video tutorials to learn how you can get started. Sales Tip A Day
The rise of the social Net. Even if the Web as we know it with search and page rank is in decline the Internet and a new dominant form of social media is definitely on the rise. Forget everything you’ve heard about a coherent strategy. Don’t wait around the edge of this deep pool. Come on in. The water’s fine. There’s only one thing you’ve got top understand about social media, says Roger Overall, and that is that more presence equals more opportunity. Wedding Marketing Blog
The rise of emerging markets. Advisors are recommending investment in emerging markets where middle class copnsumerism is on the rise, but could this represent an opportunity not only for investment but for new markets as well. Small businesses are uniquely poised in an era of global copmmunication to market their products anywhere in the world. Don’t forget potentials in emerging markets when evaluating your marketing options. ConsumerAffairs.com
Gettig ready for a whole new lifestyle. A new flexible and sometimes home-based work environment will create plenty of positives like more quality time with family, less commuting and probably more productivity due to the lack of that commute. But evolving this new approach also requires a radical change in lifestyle for the new small business person. Frank Bradley shares some thoughts about what it all means. Bloggertone
Using social media for recruitment. A change has even crept into the way we may find our first hires when the time comes to bring in help for our small business venture. It may also affect the way we find partners, suppliers and contractors and anything else we may need as our business grows and matures. Social media has another very different fuinction apart from marketing our products and services and building our brands. As John Kamara explains, it will also impact the way we hire and search for resources too. Bloggertone
The more things change the more they stay the same. Ultimately, as we said at the beginning of this roundup, some core aspects of running a small business never change despite new technology and new capabilities. When absorbing all the things that are different about starting and running a business today, don’t forget the things that remain as fundamentally true today as they always have been. CFO Wise
Small Business News: The Business of the Future!
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View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Oct 11th
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With more recruiters actively looking for candidates via social sites, job seekers will need to be socially savvy to stay on top… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Oct 4th
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We spoke with some social-savvy movers and shakers in the event planning world, and asked them what’s working for them now and… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Oct 4th
| Commercial brands understand that they… content that the smarter businesses will publish on their websites then disseminate via social media platforms. |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Oct 1st
| Mobile internet display ads can soon overtake PC internet display ads. More and more consumers are purchasing smartphones not just to text or call, but… |
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View full post on Home Wealth Project Riot!
Sep 23rd
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Oktoberfest Munich – Lumix LX5 – Social Future Media September 23, 2010 Oktoberfest 2010 impressions. Shot with the new Panasonic Lumix LX5. |
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