Skip the Mega-launch, Opt for a New Approach to Generating Buzz for Your New Product or Service - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #148
Thinking about how to make the biggest splash with your next mega-launch? Think again. Emerging companies are getting smarter about how they “launch” and opting for a slower community building process that takes place over the course of months. Turns out it is not only less expensive but it proves to be more valuable over the long term.
The process involves getting out months ahead of your product availability and building relationships with key influencers, contributing relevant valuable content to your market and attracting a loyal following with a blog or community. We did something like this at BreakingPoint, although it happened in a far more condensed time frame, and it has indeed been very valuable for reaching our hyper-niche market.
There’s been lots of controversy on the topic of launching at Tech Crunch 50 vs. DEMO lately. Robert Scoble triggered a firestorm of commentary when he posted a blog series about how “companies launching at DEMO suck”. (Why is it that blog posts that include the word “suck” always generate so much buzz?) This triggered Paul May of BuzzStream to blog about the economics of launching a startup at TechCrunch 50 or Demo. According to Paul:
“The cost and time required for the traditional, big-bang, big conference launch adds up quickly…and yeah, I know, TechCrunch 50 is free, but the entry fee is just where your costs begin. Let’s look at an example. My co-founder, Jeremy Bencken, was invited to present at DEMO to launch Tenant Market a couple of years ago. In addition to the entry fee, he calculated the following costs for even a bare-bones approach:
- Devote 80 hours to prep time. At $100 an hour, that’s $8K.
- Speaking coach - $5K
- Travel - three nights for three people - $6K
- PR rep - $10k to $20K (lots of variation depending on the quality of the PR professional and the required retainer)
- Booth, collateral, SWAG, etc. - $3K to $5K”
Wow, that’s a hefty price tag for a startup—bootstrapped or funded. Years ago when I launched a startup at Demo, it was well worth that investment. Why? Those were the early Internet Boom days when startups had to shell out $30,000 to $50,000 per month in retainers to PR agencies. We netted 17 pieces of very high profile coverage from our Demo participation in major trade publications and even The Washington Post. It was such a success that I actually considered going this year with BreakingPoint.
Today, however, most of those publications are no longer around—at least in print. Buyers get their information in different ways and focusing your efforts on laser targeted database marketing combined with a strong push for building a community using social media are the keys to success for startups. If you have a B2C play, those events may make sense for you. But for us, I had to pass.
So, back to the topic at hand: launching your company online. There’s absolutely no reason to wait until you have a product to launch to get started. Why not start engaging with your customers now? Reach out and conduct a little market research. Build tight relationships and a nice following for your blog. Funnel your money into building a detailed, role-based database of your target market. Hire an intern to discover the top thought leaders and start building tight relationships by interacting with them in social media circles. Start generating a slew of inbound links so that you will rank at the top of the search engines when you introduce your product or service. The possibilities are endless.
One Response to “Skip the Mega-launch, Opt for a New Approach to Generating Buzz for Your New Product or Service - B2B Marketing and Sales Tip #148”
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September 11th, 2008 at 11:32 am
Nice post, Pam and thanks for the mention. I think you’re right that the slower approach is more valuable over the long-term. Given the changing media environment and the reduced cost for starting a business, it’s certainly feels to us like the more prudent approach.
The end of your post gave me some good ideas for getting started…I’ve got some work to do.