Up and Running Blog

February 2009

Examples are around if you look for them. Even with all the economic indicators looking bad, businesses that do something people need done still work.

Brent Bower of The New York Times had a nice piece along those lines over the weekend. He called it Business Opportunities Abound, Even in Bad Times. He features three specific small businesses that are growing right now. One focuses on medical discounts for low-income people, one on data security, and one is looking to invest in new business in a down market.

And it isn’t just needs driving business, either. There’s also some obvious growth in cool technology. Things that change the game. Specifically, another piece of news this weekend is a new $35 million investment in Twitter. That’s along with a series of commentaries and analyses on how Twitter can, someday, eventually, make money.

What Twitter has, in the meantime, is a huge growth in buzz and users. And it’s free. So it makes no money now, but its investors figure it will make money eventually.

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Is the tech recession over?

by Tim Berry on February 13, 2009

Joel Spolsky, founder of Fog Creek Software, posted Is the Tech Recession Over? yesterday on his Joel on Software blog. He wrote:

OK, it’s just one data point. All I know is sales of FogBugz and Copilot. But what I’m seeing is this: October-December 2008 were terrible—sales were 20% lower than usual—but starting January 5th, we saw a significant bounce back to the same level of sales as we had before this recession started, and it’s continued to this day.

As my favorite programmer-sage Mike Trigoboff would say: “from your lips to God’s ears.”

In his post Joel links over to comments on his companion site Business of Software, which are also very interesting. And somewhat hopeful too. Several software people added comments on their own sales, and most of those comments are encouraging.

Joel’s blog is always a good read, and good to follow if you’re living and working or even thinking of living and working in the software industry. He’s not just a software entrepreneur, he’s also a blogger, an industry leader, and a good writer.

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Nielsen, as in the company that does TV ratings and such, has removed the “reply to all” feature from their email client.  Read more about it here in this article. Their theory is that removing the “reply to all” feature will force people to really think about who should be copied on the message. IF you want to continue the thread with all involved, you need to actually add their emails back into the message.

Ok. I get it. People run around “replying to all” like crazy and especially if you manage several people this can clutter up your inbox. People use the “reply to all” feature to do some major CYA and often times it’s more about that than it is about actually keeping people in the loop. If people could understand when to do a “reply to all” and learn basic email etiquette I think we would be able to solve a great deal of the email overload problems. But to artificially impose rules which force a one size fits all solution seems shortsighted and not well thought out. Maybe Nielsen should just hire smarter people who can understand email etiquette? ;)

Sabrina Parsons
CEO, Palo Alto Software

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Achieving Marketing Success

by Guest Author on February 12, 2009

Today, on our marketing resources website Mplans.com, we published the first in a series of marketing strategy articles written by authorized Duct Tape Marketing coaches.

In her first article Cidnee Stephen of Strategies for Success writes about Achieving Success. “What does it take for you to get your business to the next level, to grow it to where you have reached your definition of success?” she asks.

To read the entire article click here for the jump over to Mplans.com.

dtmcbadge_paddedCidnee Stephen is the owner of Strategies for Success – a marketing company that focuses on the needs of budget-minded small businesses and professional services.

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No, it’s not crazy; or at least, I should say, I’ve done it. I spent many hours during business travel using my t-Mobile PDA phone as an ebook reader, compatible with the Microsoft Reader format. It worked for me then (several years ago), and might still be convenient now. And that’s even despite the fact that I also own a Kindle.

That comes up because a Canadian company is introducing a digital book application that makes e-book readers out of smart phones. And the iPhone (hooray) is first.

As several providers rush into the e-book reader market, a Canadian company is preparing to take advantage of a huge population of stealth e-book readers — smartphones — and launch its Shortcovers service, which lets consumers read books on their handsets.

The digital book platform has been tested for Apple’s iPhone, according to people who have seen the service. Shortcovers is a division of Indigo Books & Music, which operates a Canadian nationwide chain of bookstores.

I like to post about ebooks and related new things on this blog because I think this is a market that has a lot of future to it. Or maybe it’s just me, that I like this technology.

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Learning to Live with Google

by Tim Berry on February 11, 2009

I think it’s important to understand the world of Internet search as defined by Google. In The Elephant in the Room on his blog, Coding Horror, Jeff Atwood lays it out clearly.

Yes, I like Google. Yes, Google works great and has been my homepage for about eight years now. Google nailed search, and they deserve the leadership position they’ve earned. But where’s the healthy competition? Where’s the incentive for Google to improve? All I see is a large and growing monoculture that acts as the start page for the Internet.

I’m a little surprised all the people who were so up in arms about the Microsoft “monopoly” ten years ago aren’t out in the streets today lighting torches and sharpening their pitchforks to go after Google. Does the fact that Google’s products are mostly free and ad-supported somehow exempt it from the same scrutiny? Isn’t anyone else concerned that Google, even with the best of “don’t be evil” intentions, has become more master than servant?

Calling the current state of search engine competition a horse race is an insult to horse races. No, what we have here is a one horse race where all the other horses were shipped off to glue factories years ago. Forget “search conference”, you should be throwing a “Google conference”, because there’s no difference.

By the way, if you’re involved in actual software development, Jeff’s Coding Horror is a great read. Well written, knowledgeable, and, often, fun.

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Please, if you own a business, take this simple (only 8 questions) survey on the impact the credit crunch is having on your business. It’s asking you whether you’ve applied for a loan, was it approved, would you have applied if it weren’t for the economic crash, and so on.  I’d like to know, and of course I’ll share the results. Please click here to take the survey.

Thanks,

Tim Berry
President and Founder
Palo Alto Software

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There is no bigger source of future revenue and profit than the Ideal Clients you have now—at least the ones you really like to do business with, who don’t beat you up on pricing and who pay on time.

We want you to write a personal note to every person you deal with at every one of your Ideal Customers, thanking them for their business and asking for a personal meeting. At that meeting, present a customized overview of how you are going to focus on the one thing that’s most important to them. You should offer very specific new ways you are going to do this.
At the same meetings, launch your Referral program.

Say, “We ask ourselves every day, what can we do today to get XYZ Company (the one you are meeting with) to recommend us? Would the improvements we have presented to you today convince you to recommend us to other companies who need this approach?”

When they say “Yes!” (they will), say “In that case, we are delighted to offer a Referral Price to you: at the end of our fiscal year, we will rebate 2% of the value of all revenue directly attributable to your referrals and introductions.” If you have a better idea, go ahead, offer it.

Here’s the real secret to a powerful Referral Program

Your Referral sources will feel reluctant to actively recommend you, even though they like the work you do and they’ve promised to help. Why? Because who wants to risk making a recommend that may turn out to be a disaster! And furthermore, who can remember to look for opportunities to recommend you.

Most of us ask for a recommendation and then wonder, usually about six months later, “Whatever happened to that recommendation so-and-so was going to give us?”

This Referral plan will not run itself. You will need to tell your referral sources exactly what will happen when you contact one of their recommended colleagues or friends, so they trust you with that precious information.

Assign someone to getting case studies and written recommendations from your referral sources, following up every month to remind people about the program (a combination of phone calls, e-newsletter, and personal meetings).

Ask for introductions to colleagues at trade events or fund-raisers. Ask to be invited to club meetings. Ask to be invited to join organizations you need to be sponsored for. If you get a referral, make sure you let your referral source know you contacted the referral and what happened.

This looks like work, and it is. But it’s also about 75% less work, and a lot less money, than cold calling, or selling to prospects without a recommendation. And it works.

Our favourite referral event for a home improvement company is the open house the homeowners host to show friends and neighbours their new space. Another is a technology consulting firm which assigned an account executive to manage their partnerships with big software vendors like Microsoft, and tripled their leads.

ducttapemarketingbadgeElizabeth Walker (thinking and words) and Ken Burgin (creative genius) are the Marketing Masters. They are both Duct Tape Marketing Authorized Coaches. Liz leads seminars in business strategy and communications at the Schulich Executive Education Centre, York University. We are thrilled to be working with small businesses and entrepreneurs everyday, and derive considerable joy helping them build busy businesses.
web: http://www.marketing,masters.ca
blog: http://thebuzzwithkenandliz.blogspot.com/

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Meanwhile, as they say, back at the ranch, let’s find out together how badly the credit crunch is affecting small business in the United States.

If you own a business please click here to take the survey. I originally posted this survey yesterday on the Huffington Post. It’s short and easy.

Thanks!

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Amazon announced a new Kindle today. I have a Kindle, I use it and like it and recommend it. The new one doesn’t have enough sizzle to tempt me to dump the one I have and buy new. But if you haven’t bought one, this new one is better and slightly cheaper than the one I have. It has more memory, more battery power, and an improved physical design. Amazon will start shipping it later this month.

I was hoping for a Kindle at half the price, about $200. For that price I think it would be a must-buy for anybody who reads books. At $369, it’s kind of expensive, a nice luxury. I want to buy one for a voracious-reader daughter, and at $200 the difference between the Kindle price and regular price would pay for itself quickly. At more than $350, it’s not so obvious.

I think the Kindle is important because it validates books. Reading and writing books. Both are important to mankind. Both have suffered changing times, the flood of video, smaller-attention-span media, television, and so on. But I hope books remain important to the foundation of education and knowledge and humanity.

Cheesy? Sorry.

So the Kindle validates books in the future. Without paper. Less resource intensive. For that matter, so does the Sony ebook reader, and the ebook reader software on Palm Pilots and Pocket PCs and laptops and netbooks.

Which reminds me, here’s a very nice analysis of the future of eBooks, and the future of the businesses around the ebooks:

The once and future e-book: on reading in the digital age – Ars Technica

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