Archive for the 'Awareness' Category

Why Finance is the Key to any Launch

Friday, April 25th, 2008 by Mike Croxton

I was speaking with a product manager last week who was describing the challenges of managing a cross organizational team while getting ready for the launch of a major enhancement to an existing product line.  When she described the team I asked her why finance was absent.  She indicated that product management would engage finance and accounting at the end of the process, three weeks prior to the go live date.  In my mind this was a mistake - albeit a common one - and I told her why.

What is finance focused on?  Pricing, billing, investment, legal and revenue recognition to name a few.  Without all of these issues identifed, agreed to and in place, a new product or service cannot launch.  In almost every case finance is part of the team that approves any new product initiatives.  The company looks at them as the conscience of the organization.  They are not only actively engaged at the outset but they need to be part of the team that helps manage the full product lifecycle including launch.

In addition, finance can be a product manager’s best friend in terms of tracking investment pre-launch and revenue post-launch.  They don’t just contribute to the cft, they actually are the lynch pin in delivering product readiness and ultimately measuring success or failure.  Not only that, you really don’t want to upset the area of the organization that signs paychecks and approves expenses.

It is interesting however that in many cases a lot of pms are intimidated more by finance than their customers.  Work with the CFO.  Find a member of the finance and accounting team that you’re comfortable with.  You would be suprised as to how you can lower the risk of launch delay or failure if you have the money men and women actively engaged.

Why you should pay attention to SEO

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008 by David Daniels

binoculars.jpgAccording to recent research from Forrester and Enquiro’s 2007 B2B Survey, business buyers use search engines most frequently at the beginning of the buying process, during the awareness and research phases. Buyers actually use search engines less frequently when they are ready to negotiate and purchase a high-consideration product or service.

Excerpt from B2B Marketers Should Embrace “Tire Kickers” in SearchEngineLand.

Creative way to build buzz

Monday, March 17th, 2008 by David Daniels

I have to hand to Joshua Strebel at Obuweb.  He’s a regular at South by Southwest (sxsw) in Austin and this year had a brilliant idea to get attention.  At the last minute he came up with an idea and had it rolled out in 2.5 hours.  You can see it here.

You want to see the timeline from concept to delivery

Since there is a very large amount of adult beverage consumption at sxsw, you can see why Joshua designed this business card for the occasion.

Even Jay Adelson at Digg got in on the action.

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LinkedIn Webinar Rocked!

Thursday, December 13th, 2007 by David Daniels

For those of you who couldn’t make the LinkedIn Power Users Webinar that we had today really missed out. I have to admit that I thought I was pretty good with the LinkedIn stuff - my profile, invites, etc. I easily learned a dozen new things that have already made significant improvements.

Check it out for yourself. Go to LinkedIn Search and search for “product launch”. Who comes up first? ;-)  That was just from the changes I made during the webinar.

I am absolutely convinced that the changes I made (and a few more still to be made) are making a huge difference in how others find me and Launch Clinic. We’re planning to deliver the LinkedIn webinar again at the first of the year. This time don’t miss out!

Thanks again to Chip Lambert at Network2Networth for his time and expertise.

View David Daniels's profile on LinkedIn

Nice list of free press release submission sites at Naked PR

Tuesday, September 18th, 2007 by David Daniels

The folks over at NakedPR.com have a nice list of free press release submission sites.  We’re trying a few out and will pass along what we learn.