Loved. Martina Lauchengco

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Loved - Martina Lauchengco страница 13

Loved - Martina Lauchengco

Скачать книгу

      Another benefit of stories is they are easier for others to tell. Today's hyper-competitive environment means you can't expect to sell a product that doesn't have other people talking about it.

      Evangelism only works if it feels authentic. The range of work to make this happen includes providing direct sales teams with the right messages and tools to make them sound like genuine advocates, not just salespeople trying to sell.

      Evangelism also means finding the most meaningful influencers that move your market—key customers, analysts, pundits, press, bloggers, social influencers, online forums—and inspiring them with stories and evidence so they advocate for your product. In the broad digital landscape you see this in reviews, press articles, analyst reports, communities, or any social or developer communication platform, and includes all in-person events and evangelism too.

      The next four chapters explore each fundamental in more depth with stories that show you what they look like when applied and techniques to help you do them well.

      1 1 Walter Mossberg, “Personal technology: Word for Windows 95 Helps Sloppy Writers Polish Their Prose,” Wall Street Journal, October 5, 1995.

      When Julie Herendeen was VP of Global Marketing at Dropbox, her team thought they knew their customers. With users in the tens of millions and all the data that came with them, they felt confident customers were divided broadly into two categories—consumers who acted like microbusinesses and larger companies that had more enterprise-style needs—and marketed accordingly.

      She decided it was important for her entire team—not just the product marketers—to get out of the building, pack their bags, and visit customers at their home offices or office parks. Similar to the jobs-to-be-done framework, she had her team focus on what customers were trying to accomplish and what was motivating the why behind their choices.

      Julie immediately got calls from her team saying, “This is amazing. I'm learning so much” and “I couldn't see any of this in the data.” When they got back and crunched through their learnings, they realized some of their assumptions missed the mark on why customers valued Dropbox.

      Yes, they were smallish businesses, but they needed to easily collaborate on big jobs—like sharing daily video shoots with a client on a commercial production—and Dropbox gave them the way to do it.

      The experience of Julie's team is precisely why connecting customer and market insights is Fundamental 1 of product marketing. While it is often funneled through product marketing to other marketing functions, in Julie's case, her entire marketing team benefited from their in-depth experience understanding customers.

      Most underestimate how nuanced and layered both customers and markets are today, and just how much time and work it takes to truly understand them.

      Markets and the customers swirling in them are never a monolith. Yet they often get generalized into broad categories—like small businesses. Modern go-to-market requires understanding nuances around not just what customers are trying to do, but their entire journey toward product consideration—like which products they already use and compare a product to.

      At a minimum, here are some baseline product marketing practices to stay connected with customer and market realities:

       Have direct customer interaction—ideally weekly.

       Develop a standard set of open-ended questions to ask customers or prospects.

       Reflect insights into product and go-to-market team discussions.

       Write the most important insights down so they can be easily shared and used.

      This is clarified through customer discovery work. Think of it as the market side of product market fit. It must be probed right from the start just as product is being explored. Market fit work is not the sole purview of product marketing. Everyone in a product team (product managers, designers, researchers in some organizations) and the go-to-market engine (marketing and sales) can do the work and shape what is learned.

      But not all customer insights are equal in unlocking markets. Product marketing is responsible for deciding which key learnings help go-to-market and product teams do their jobs better. Will an insight help a team make a decision or tradeoff on what to say or do next? If the answer is yes, it's additive. If the answer is no, archive it. Strong product marketers help teams stay focused on what matters most.

      Product marketing should try to answer market-sensing questions and understand their implications across the entire buyer's journey, including both rational and emotional motivations:

       What are they trying to do?

       Do they recognize and prioritize this problem?

       What is motivating them to solve the problem?

       What compels them to take action?

       What in this product delivers the most value?

       Who is most likely to value and buy this product?

       What starts the journey toward acquiring the product?

       How might a product get discovered and become more desired over the entire journey?

       How might we reduce friction in acquiring the product?

       What do people need to see or hear to become customers?

       How can we delight customers so much that they want to talk about the product with others?

      Although the answers inform every aspect of product go-to-market, rarely are they clear or complete at the start. As with products, learning the market side of product fit is a dynamic process. Start with a reasonable hypothesis and use everything in market—websites, emails, sales conversations—to iterate toward answers. Adapt based on what is learned.

      Chapter

Скачать книгу