Generate Revenues With Thought Leadership
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Transcript of Generate Revenues With Thought Leadership
Tim Parker & Bob Buday
Generate Revenues with Thought Leadership
How and Why Leading Firms are Growing their Businesses with Great Content
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 1
© 2009 The Bloom Group LLC
Copyright holder licenses work this under the Creative Commons License, Attribution 3.0.
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
Disclosures: We have business relationships with several of the companies and people mentioned or profiled
in this eBook.
Feel free to post this on your blog or email it to anyone
you believe might benefit from reading it.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 2
ContentsIntroduction 3
A thought leadership marketing success story 4
Lots of B2B Marketers are Launching Thought Leadership Campaigns 5
Buyers of B2B Services First Want to Be Educated, Then Sold 6
What Attracts Customers to Thought Leadership? 7
Buyers Qualify Suppliers by their Thought Leadership 8
Another thought leadership marketing success story 9
A Few Words about ‘Outbound’ Marketing 10
Bandwidth And Bias 11
Yet another thought leadership marketing success story 12
There’s Lots of Weak Material in the Market 13
When is a Point of View Worth Something…? 14
- Criterion #1: Novelty 15
- Criterion #2: Relevance 16
- Criterion #3: Validity 17
Developing a Compelling Point of View 18
Does it Need to be Loooong? 19
To Summarize… 20
About the authors 21
Other Reading Materials 22
Thanks 23
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 3
Introduction
At the Bloom Group, we have been helping companies shape and take their messages to market for over a decade. We believe that the best way to convince a sophisticated audience of your value is to share your expertise with them. This has long been the case in B2B professional services such as consulting and legal services, and is increasingly the case in other B2B markets and in some areas of B2C as well. In order for a company‟s expertise to resonate in the market it has to be good—and good intellectual capital is not easy to come by.
Over the years we have published many articles about how to develop quality intellectual capital and we recently compiled some of the best into a printed book. However, we wrote this eBook in order to make the foundations of thought leadership marketing more easily accessible. We chose this format because it‟s portable, not too long, readily illustrated, easily links to other sources on the web and is instantly available by download to anyone who wants one.
We hope you find it interesting and useful.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 4
A thought leadership marketing success story
In 2007, Unisys Corp., a $5 billion IT services company, wanted to differentiate
itself from its many competitors in outsourced technical support services, a
brutally competitive market. Unisys wanted capture and market the extensive
expertise it had gained from years of providing tech support for numerous
organizations. In addition, it wanted to research “best practices” in companies
that were providing their own tech support. To do this, Unisys launched a study
on tech support, which included a survey of 240 North American companies
and in-depth case studies on 12 others (including Unisys clients).
One key finding was that companies with the most effective tech support
prioritize requests according to how close the user is to revenue generation, not
who calls first, or who has seniority—typical prioritization criteria in the
industry. Another was that instead of tracking the quality of tech support with
Service Level Agreements as most companies do, leaders were instead
measuring end-user satisfaction.
Unisys published the full set of findings in a report and used them to underpin a
global marketing campaign called Unlearn Outsourcing. They placed Unisys-
bylined articles based on the point of view in MIT Sloan Management Review,
CIO magazine, Computerworld and Industry Week. In late 2008 the campaign
won an IT Services Marketing Association “Marketing Excellence Award” for
lead generation. Most importantly, although Unisys wasn‟t saying exactly how
much business their thought leadership marketing campaign had generated, it
did say it was a “heck of a lot more than it had spent.”.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 5
63%
56%51% 51%
Per
cen
tag
e o
f Res
po
nden
ts
Lots of B2B Marketers are Launching Thought Leadership Campaigns
In a 2007 survey, the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU)
found that thought leadership was viewed as one of many
important B2B marketing techniques. In their 2008
survey of 140 marketers, thought leadership leapt ahead,
ranking second only to building new business as a key
B2B marketing objective.
Many companies are now trying to educate their target
customers on the broader problems their products and
services address—not just marketing and selling their
offerings. This is what thought leadership marketing is all
about.
What are your top B2B marketing objectives over the
next 3 to 5 years?
Source: EIU, B2B Marketing Survey, 2007
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 6
43%41%
35% 35%
30%
Per
cen
tag
e o
f Res
po
nden
ts
Buyers of B2B Services First Want to Be Educated, ThenSold
What will be the best way for providers of B2B services to
market to you in the next 3 to 5 years?
Source: EIU, B2B Marketing Survey, 2007
Customer expectations seem to be driving the trend. The EIU
study shows that customers believe the best way for providers of
B2B services to market to them in the next 3 to 5 years will be
heavily dominated by thought leadership techniques such as
original research, marketing events, and white papers.
Why this is so is not entirely clear, but a likely explanation is that
the internet has made information so accessible that expectations
have risen. Whereas 20 years or so ago it was unreasonable to
expect a firm to part with its expertise before you started paying
them, there is now a huge amount of information available for
free. So first, a certain amount of free is expected; second, a firm
has to show enough of its expertise to differentiate itself from its
competition, or a prospective customer will move on as quickly
as it takes her to scroll down a page of Google search results.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 7
What Attracts Customers to Thought Leadership?To understand why thought leadership is important to buyers of complex services, let‟s
step into the shoes of someone buying a B2B professional service, such as strategy
consulting, for a moment.
If I am buying strategy consulting services I am taking a risk. For a start, the problem is
difficult, or I wouldn‟t need expensive help. But whether I am the supply chain director, the
CFO, or any other senior executive, I am looking for help in my area of responsibility—
colleagues might think that I should fix it myself without spending company money on
outsiders.
Second, I am making myself vulnerable. I am having to admit I don‟t have all the answers,
I may have to tell the vendor the truth about how we got here, and I am going to have to
hand them some control.
Third, if it goes wrong, I will probably get the blame. Since professional services
engagements usually address matters of significant importance, they can sometimes go
spectacularly wrong.
Finally, all the contenders say flattering things about themselves, their capabilities and their
commitment to client success. If I am going to rely on vendors‟ own evaluations of
themselves, my decision-making will be little better than guesswork.
Thought leadership reduces the buyer‟s risk of choosing the wrong adviser. Where the
problem is complex and there is no set way to solve it, a firm‟s thought leadership is a slice
of its expertise (in article, speech, video or other form) that helps it demonstrate its
mastery and experience in the field.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 8
74%
41% 39%
30%
Per
cen
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e o
f R
esp
on
den
ts
Buyers Qualify Suppliers by their Thought LeadershipIn order to qualify potential suppliers, most people prefer one-on-one
contact with firm representatives. Of course, at some point prior to a
contract being signed that will happen, but in the meantime, prospects will
use your web site, white papers and case studies to draw preliminary
conclusions and narrow down to a short list.
That‟s the first reason quality content is crucial. Case studies (examples of
successful engagements) serve as a proxy for a personal recommendation
from a prior, happy client. So do client testimonials. White papers or articles
(and their content equivalents such as webinars and videos) serve as a proxy
for a personal assurance that you are an expert in your field. If all your site
does is assert that you are experts, it won't help you. Take this example,
slightly edited to protect the guilty:
“Expertise. Integrity. Results. It’s these qualities, and more, that have led
companies to put their trust in us. Led by a dedicated team of senior professionals, all
with extensive experience and deep industry credentials, we continue to deliver highly
creative solutions and a level of professional service that exceed client expectations.”
Do you believe it? Neither do we; not without some evidence. And if there‟s
evidence, there‟s no need to be self-promotional—the collateral will speak
for itself. Just asserting a list of capabilities or virtues is worthless; people
instinctively discount what others say about themselves. So instead of
wordsmithing eulogies, this firm would be better off writing material that its
customers would find informative and useful.
Which of the following sources are most likely to
influence your opinion regarding the reputation of a
professional services firm?
Source: EIU, Engaging Professional
Services Firms, 2008
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 9
Another thought leadership marketing success storyWhen Massachusetts Attorney Russell Matson set up his own practice specializing in
drunk driving defense, he tried most things to drum up work, including direct mail,
yellow pages and print advertising. But he also set up a website; before long he noticed
that placing content on his site translated into business more quickly and more reliably
than any other medium.
Today Russell‟s site brings 200-300 visitors a day and 85% of his cases. He now has
more than enough work for himself and a full-time associate and will shortly expand his
team.
His website has over two hundred and forty pages of content, including the latest legal
developments, Russell‟s opinions—sometime quoted from newspaper articles—and of
course, examples of his successful cases.
Russell says; “I keep the content relevant and up to date to provide the best help I can
to someone facing an OUI charge who might find it when they most need reassurance
at 3 o‟clock in the morning. I have no qualms about telling people everything I know—
other lawyers have told me that they use my site to help prepare their own cases. It
positions me as the leading authority on the topic and „giving away‟ my expertise online
has done nothing but bring me more business.”
While most thought leadership marketing has historically been B2B, there are also many
B2C markets where people value expertise and thought leadership marketing is
effective.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 10
A Few Words about ‘Outbound’ Marketing„Outbound‟ marketing techniques are those that only work if they succeed in
interrupting you and getting your attention. They include TV and radio
advertising, telemarketing, direct mail, email blasts, and print advertising.
We are getting good at screening that stuff out.
• We‟ve learned to can direct mail; over the period 1992-2002, credit card direct
mail volumes went up 5 times while response rates dropped from nearly 3% to
around 0.5%, from where they have never recovered (Synovate).
• We‟ve learned to ignore banner ads on the internet; click through rates of 7%
when banner ads first appeared in 1996 had declined to 0.5% by 2003 and they
haven‟t recovered either (Doubleclick).
• The purchase rate from spam (which is hard to track because spammers aren't
very forthcoming with their addresses, let alone their response rates) was less
than 1 in 12 million in a recent study (see box).
• We‟re using tools to screen out these interruptions; caller ID on the phone,
DVRs on the TV, anti-spam software and No Call Lists, to name a few.
Outbound or interruption marketing has never been very effective for
sophisticated buyers, and it‟s becoming ever less so. Marketing that does work is
„permission‟ or „inbound‟ marketing. This includes conferences, which people elect
to attend. With so many people now becoming acquainted with vendors via the
web, it includes the content on your website.
It takes a lot of spam to
make a sale
A 2008 study carried out by computer
scientists at the University of California
hijacked part of the Storm network that
exploits home computers to relay
junk email. The team took control of
76,000 computers and conducted their
own fake spam campaign, which
encouraged readers to visit a fake
pharmacy site and make a purchase.
After 26 days, and almost 350 million
email messages, they got 28 sales—a
conversion rate of well under 0.00001%.
Given the cost of sending the
messages, the team tentatively
concluded that this is a business in
which it’s hard to make a profit.
☺
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 11
To use a wireless analogy, educated people value content with a high ratio of „bandwidth to bias‟. High-
bandwidth, low-bias marketing materials include articles, books, and conference presentations. They allow a
lot of information to be conveyed in an educational way. A Harvard Business Review (HBR) article written by a
professional firm is an example of this kind of content; lots of information with no (direct) attempt to sell a
product or service. In their Guidelines for Authors, the editors at HBR are clear that they are looking for articles
to be objective; “Is the author trying to sell the reader something? To use the insights in the article, would the
reader need to consult the author?”. They don‟t explicitly say so, but we can presume they would regard a
„Yes‟ here as a negative.
Low-bandwidth, high-bias content includes advertisements and telemarketing pitches. These media don‟t
allow a firm to show the depth of its expertise on an issue and they appear as blatantly promotional—
prospects know that they are being sold something. As we have seen, people are good at shutting out these
kinds of messages.
Bandwidth And Bias
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 12
Yet another thought leadership marketing success storyAs one of the largest professional services firms in the world, Deloitte has a wealth of in-house knowledge and expertise
in its core areas of audit, tax, consulting and financial advisory services. In 2003, its primary media for taking its
expertise to market were traditional—including conferences, white papers and published articles. Pat Harkin, a Marketing
Director at Deloitte, was concerned that these were too slow, and decided to trial a webinar series called Dbriefs in the
company‟s core area of tax.
The webinars were well received from the start, attracting a few hundred people for each hour-long show. Today, there
are nearly 20 series, comprising a total of around 80 shows a quarter and attracting between a few hundred and several
thousand people each time.
Pat‟s philosophy regarding Dbriefs from the beginning has been to provide content
that helps customers stay on top of their profession. The material is provided by
subject matter experts within Deloitte, often supplemented by client guest speakers.
The program is flexible to accommodate late breaking news, and is organized in series
so that customers can easily find their way back to the next show for their subject
area—also helping Deloitte build on the experience for each distinct audience.
Direct ROI is hard to measure for the program because there are many touch points
between a large services firm and its large client organizations, but in a recent survey
of Dbriefs viewers:
• 70% rated Deloitte‟s tax expertise extremely highly and 48% said their rating
had improved because of Dbriefs
• 55% were more likely to include Deloitte in request for proposals and 51% were
more likely to engage or recommend Deloitte
All this for an average cost per attendee of about $7—orders of magnitude less than
for a conference.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 13
There’s Lots of Weak Material in the MarketThough most professional services firms understand they need to market with strong content,
many struggle to do so. Here are two types of content we often see:
The unfounded assertion: There are thousands of white papers in the consulting field that
make assertions without facts—no research, no data, no analysis—just opinion (and often a 2x2
matrix). There are very few opinions which stand on their own—Warren Buffett‟s on
investment management might be one. Most do not—ours on the same topic, for instance. And
it‟s telling that when Warren opines on his topic, he uses lots of data and examples anyway.
The undisguised product pitch: This is a quote from a vendor „white paper‟: “Download this
exclusive report to learn how XYZ direct-to-tape technology can reduce costs by blah, blah”.
OK, the blah, blah is ours. However, that‟s still not a white paper or an exclusive report; it‟s a
product pitch and its usefulness to the reader is compromised by the fact that it‟s biased.
TechRepublic is a technology site that hosts thousands of white papers on behalf of their
authors—generally IT product and service vendors. About 90% of those white papers are
biased toward a particular product or service, but of the 10 most popular at the time of writing,
9 are entirely educational and objective. A typical example is “Practical Disaster Recovery Planning:
A Step-by-Step Guide”, written by a software and services company, but without any attempt to
pitch their offering.
The most important reason to publish thought leadership is because, where the problem or the
solution are complex and unstructured, people value new insights. But in order to show that you
have deep and novel insights on a problem (or opportunity) and proven solutions, you must
have a point of view.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 14
It‟s easy to have a point of view, but a lot harder to develop one that will impress a sophisticated buyer. Such a
point of view needs to satisfy several quality criteria. The set that we use, and which corresponds to the needs of
leading business publications such as Harvard Business Review, is this:
Novelty Is this idea new? If not, does it offer a new and useful perspective on an existing idea?
Relevance Does it address an issue that matters to its audience?
Validity Are there good examples? Have I seen the same ones used to illustrate other models, theses, or
points of view?
Focus Does it have a single fundamental message? Is it bounded enough to allow specific
recommendations?
Practicality Does it prescribe a solution that seem plausible to implement? Does it deliver demonstrated
benefits?
Rigor Does it have tight consistent logic?
Clarity Does it make a clear argument with words and concepts that are easy to understand?
All of these are most important, but the first three are critical. Let‟s take a closer look at these.
When is a Point of View Worth Something…?
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 15
Criterion #1: NoveltyThe first critical criterion is Novelty, saying something fundamentally new about how
to solve a problem in the world; HBR editors call this the “aha”.
The Unisys research discovered that the “VIP” approach to providing tech support
services—i.e., senior management gets the best support—was actually wrong, and that
alternate approaches achieve superior results. Unisys didn‟t so much invent a new way
of providing support as discover it; there were already some leading companies doing
it this way. But by correlating good outcomes with particular approaches, they gave
the rest of the market new insight into how to better solve the challenges of tech
support.
In the 1990‟s Fred Reichheld, a Fellow of the strategy consulting firm Bain & Co.,
developed powerful new insights on customer loyalty. He used concrete examples to
demonstrate that the goal of a business must be the creation of sustainable value for
customers, employees and investors. He heads Bain‟s Loyalty Practice; in
2003, Consulting Magazine named him one of the world's top 25 consultants..
Whether it‟s Russell Matson‟s information on drunk driving (experience-based with
some research), Unisys‟ guidelines for effective tech support (moderate amount of
dedicated research), or Fred Reicheld‟s insights on Customer Loyalty (lots of
research), a point of view has to tell its audience something they don‟t already know.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 16
Criterion #2: RelevanceThe second critical criterion is Relevance, addressing an issue that matters to your
audience; HBR editors call this the “so what?”
The success of Deloitte‟s Dbriefs webinar program has been critically dependent on
being relevant to its audiences—the tag line for Dbriefs is “Stay on Top”.
There are two features in particular that help to keep it that way.
Firstly, the webinars are organized in series by executive audience, including, for instance,
tax, HR, finance and industry streams. That helps customers of each topic easily find
their way to the next relevant installment and it helps Deloitte build on the experience
for each distinct audience.
Second, although the webinars in each series are scheduled for an entire quarter ahead of
time, Deloitte retains the flexibility to respond to and incorporate late breaking news. In
tax, for instance, regulatory changes happen often and it‟s important that a webinar can
address whatever questions might be top of mind for its audience at the time it is
broadcast.
In Attorney Russell Matson‟s case, he publishes everything he can that‟s relevant to
someone facing a drunk driving charge. His FAQ section is not just a list of generic
questions. He keeps a close ear to the questions that clients are asking at any point in
time, and updates his FAQs accordingly.
For Deloitte‟s, continued relevance keeps clients engaged and returning over the longer
term. In Russell‟s case, relevance is critical to getting prospective clients engaged in the
first place—he‟s less enthusiastic about them being repeat customers.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 17
Criterion #3: ValidityThe criterion most commonly overlooked when people committing their points of view to paper is
Validity. Professional firms often write them entirely without examples, and product companies
often write them entirely around their own products—neither of which provides credible proof for
the reader.
For a point of view to be credible it has to be underpinned by evidence—examples that show your
prescriptions work. As the editors at HBR ask: “Are there good illustrations? Have I seen the same
company examples used to illustrate a multitude of other models, theses, or points of view?”
It‟s often difficult to cite good examples, quite often because the subjects aren‟t keen to go public.
But a credible point of view must be supported by actual examples that validate the solution being
proposed. Survey and statistical data and quotes from practitioners can often help too.
The Unisys report, Unlearn Outsourcing, was based on a survey of 240 practitioners and in-depth
studies of 12.
KSA, a retail management consulting firm, has just published the executive summary of a
research report on how retailers can improve their competitiveness. It cites many examples of
what successful retailers are doing, including Coach, Trader Joe‟s and PetSmart.
The eBook you are reading cites numerous case examples and survey results to underpin and
inform its assertions. The page you are reading goes to the extraordinary length of citing
examples that used examples…
Substantive points of view require substantiation. Otherwise, in the words of the late Dr. Michael
Hammer (of Business Reengineering fame), they are just academic mush.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 18
Developing a Compelling Point of ViewSometimes a firm does enough research in the course of its normal operations to
support a novel point of view, but in most cases, the logic will not hold up without
additional support. Potential sources—case studies, survey research, literature
search and a company‟s own subject matter experts—can all contribute in different
ways. Survey research reveals what people think, literature search reveals what has
already been said on a topic and experts can propose hypotheses. But by definition,
only original research can reveal and substantiate new insights.
The analysis must lend rigor to the
point of view by assuring tight,
consistent logic. Assertions must
follow from previous assertions, and
must be grounded in fact and be
defensible.
The logic of the argument
must follow the form of
problem/solution. Logic
“gaps”—assumptions made by
content experts that may not
be held by the target
audience—must be filled.
The point of view should not demand that the audience learn a whole new
vocabulary. No ideas or examples should be unclear. Jargon, clichés, and
undefined acronyms must be eliminated. Bold assertions must quickly be
followed with statistics, anecdotes, or case examples (too much theory makes a
point of view dull). The writing of a point of view should always be the last
step in the development; if the logic is already clear, it will be the easy part.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 19
Does it Need to be Loooong?
A well-founded point of view can‟t be brief. As Chris Koch of ITSMA recently noted in
his blog, if you are explaining a complex issue to a sophisticated audience that expects a
well-structured argument, the story will not be short.
For years, companies have published research reports as white papers. But the recent
profusion of alternate channels to market means that there are many ways in which a
message can be broadcast and not all of them need be as long as a typical white paper. A
well-founded point of view can be a basis from which to extract different aspects of the
message for different channels and audiences. For instance, Unisys published four articles
in four different journals derived from their point of view on IT technical support.
A blog post can never capture the depth and rigor of a well-substantiated point of view,
but it can highlight an angle and link to the full report. A slide presentation can capture a
point of view in an illustrated and abbreviated form, and be placed on slideshare.com
where it can easily be found and downloaded. And then there are videos, podcasts,
eBooks such as this one, and more possibilities besides.
So yes, a point of view, if it is genuinely novel and substantiated, and if it addresses a
complex and unstructured issue, will be long. But the published material derived from it
can take all shapes and sizes.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 20
To Summarize…
The requirements for a successful professional services practice have always been that
you are expert in your field, that you do good client work and that your clients
recommend you to other people that they know.
In an ideal world, that‟s all you would need for a fast-growing practice.
In the real world however, you have competitors, some of whom are actually quite good.
And your clients don‟t always remember to recommend you to their friends. So you have
to market yourself.
The most important things to do are to capture your expertise and your related client
successes, articulate them so as to make a compelling case for action—usually with
additional research—and publish them where prospective customers can easily find
them; at a minimum, online. For anyone in the business of solving complex problems
for their clients, it‟s the best way to make the phone ring!
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 21
About the authors
Tim Parker is a senior management consultant who for more than 15 years
has helped companies improve their operations, IT and strategy. At the
Bloom Group, Tim leads programs to help clients develop their points of
view in areas such as IT-integrated manufacturing, drug development and
supply chain. He also helps develop the Bloom Group‟s own points of view
in areas including such as online marketing.
Bob Buday is President of the Bloom Group where he has helped
companies formulate their messages and take them to market for over a
decade. Prior to The Bloom Group, Bob for 10 years was director of
marketing communications at CSC Index where he played a leading role in
making the consulting concept of “business reengineering” a household
phrase, directing Index‟s extensive publications, PR, and survey research
activities.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 22
Other Reading Materials
For further reading, the following articles are especially relevant:
Competing on Thought Leadership: The Seven Hallmarks of Compelling Intellectual Capital
Case Study Research: The Overlooked But Indispensable Tool in Attaining Thought Leadership
Survey Says: Strong Intellectual Capital Is The Key to Effective Professional Services Marketing
Our book, Thoughts on Thought Leadership, contains a compilation of the
best of our articles and interviews from the past decade on the subject of
thought leadership. The articles are illustrated with case study examples
from thought leadership marketing we have done for clients, and from our
extensive research.
Generating Revenue with Thought Leadership 23
Thanks to the Following:
Attorney Russell Matson for talking with us about his DUI law website.
Pat Harkin of Deloitte for talking with us about the Deloitte Dbriefs webinar series.
The folks at Unisys for letting us help them with their Unlearn Outsourcing research.
Heli-Jet Instruments Service of Pleasanton, TX for letting us use and edit their images of a helicopter
tachometer for the bandwidth v. bias page.