Tips

Companies from Mars, customers from Venus

Companies too often hinder their own success by focusing too narrowly on selling products and not on what their customers actually need, says Dev Patnaik, a business strategist. Businesses could be more successful — and see competitive opportunities faster than their rivals — if they looked differently at what they were doing.

Mr. Patnaik, founder and chief executive of Jump Associates, a firm in San Mateo, Calif., that advises companies on growth strategies, and a part-time professor at Stanford, has written a book, Wired to Care: How Companies Prosper When They Create Widespread Empathy, scheduled for release this month.

Saturday Interview – Companies From Mars, Customers From Venus – NYTimes.com. Flickr photo credit: Melork

By |2012-01-05T07:35:59+01:00January 24, 2009|Blog, Small Business|0 Comments

Selling the experience: the quest for a constituent-centric nonprofit

Companies like JetBlue, Starbucks, and Apple don’t sell just a product or service; they sell an experience. So, what does this have to do with nonprofits? I would argue that some nonprofits do a pretty good job of packaging “experience” with what they do. Heifer, Save the Children, and Kiva do a pretty decent job of connecting donors directly to recipients, using online tools for donors to view pictures and stories of the people they are directly supporting. I would also argue in this communications-hyped world, your nonprofits’ actions speak louder than words.

How well is your nonprofit doing at creating a superior constituent experience? According to market research firm Forrester Research, there are three areas to look at …read more at Idealware. Flickr photo credit: Brande Jackson.

By |2012-01-05T07:14:17+01:00January 22, 2009|Blog, Nonprofits|0 Comments

Podcast: improving your cold calling results

StartupNation talks to Mari Anne Vanella about how to improve your cold calling techniques and how to get better results. Her company, The Vanella Group, is an outsourcing telesales firm serving the high-tech industry based in Silicon Valley. She’s compiled and analyzed data from 10s of thousands of cold calls and has come up with “42 Rules of Cold Calling Executives,” which she’s distilled into a simple little book by the same name. …more from Startup Nation. Flickr photo credit: Smithcam

By |2012-01-05T07:35:59+01:00January 21, 2009|Blog, Small Business|0 Comments
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