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Why isn't your team playing moneyball?

12/27/2016

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With a tip of the hat to Michael Lewis and his bestselling biopics on baseball, collateralized mortgage failures and bias, why isn’t your team playing moneyball?

In today’s artificially intelligent, cloudy, internet of things, rough and tumble business, data is king; yet relatively few organizations architect for it, analyze it and optimize from it.  There are still enterprise marketing teams who don’t have a data architect on staff, yet they’ve got analysts and stacks of reports that don’t translate into revenue.  Customer Relationship Management software has been around for three decades and thousands of organizations collect customer data, yet relatively few can calculate customer lifetime value or propensity to buy.   Programmable controllers that generate log files have been embedded in products and devices for decades, yet few product companies can define the user experience and asset lifecycle from the data generated. 

People tend to be keenly aware of the value of even slight informational advantages, and open to the idea of using data to gain those advantages. So why is so much conventional wisdom false? Not only in sports but across the whole of society. Why have so many industries been ripe for disruption?

The challenge is, the larger your organization is, the longer you've been in business, the harder it may be to play moneyball; organizing and capitalizing on a data model that creates competitive advantage.  Smaller organizations, even individuals, can set themselves apart today.  Setting the stage for disruption of incumbents.

Just like baseball, not all players are of equal value; likewise for prospects and customers.  There are discrete factors exposed in the data by insightful analysis.  Similarly, there is inherent bias that needs to be discarded; often before the data is gathered, analyzed and optimized. 

One of the interesting keys to Lewis’s financial biopics is, the real-life protagonists don’t come from the classic mold. They are outsiders who found the outliers, people with unique backgrounds and insatiable curiosity, who are capable of identifying discrete factors and discerning the value.   

The Oakland A’s did it and a single protagonist managed to identify the subprime mortgage meltdown. There are no shortage of tools to accomplish what you need to optimize outcomes based on data, so why isn’t everyone doing it?  Improve your chances of success, accelerate growth, Ascendiosa can help your team play moneyball.

Author:  Mark Miller is Ascendiosa's Chief Commercial Officer





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Product Strategy Due Dilligence for Private Equity

11/30/2016

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Often times private equity firms can squeeze value out of tarnished and known logos with stagnant growth trajectories.  Efforts are mostly aimed at squeezing  bloated operating expenses.  Sometimes, it doesn’t work out so well, the most recent news on TPG and Silverlake’s woes with Avaya tell a great story. 

This past week, reports in the Wall Street Journal1 and other sources swirled around the sale of Avaya’s contact center business to stave off bankruptcy.  TPG and Silverlake acquired Avaya for $8Bn back in 2007, selling off the contact center business may bring in $4Bn, which could be applied in part to that pesky $6Bn of debt outstanding.  Squeezing operating expenses was not enough or perhaps too much.

Revenue growth is fueled by great corporate and product strategies then propelled forward by sharp marketing and sales strategy and execution.  When private equity firms buy tarnished logos, they replace the corporate heads, revise the strategy, slash expenses and often miss important factors when evaluating the product shortcomings and the market place in their due diligence.  In the case of Avaya the evidence comes from loss of market share prior to private equity acquiring and Moody’s ratings agency reporting in August that Avaya “needs to constantly reinvest in new products and platforms to maintain its position.” 

Today there is a tremendous amount of money in private equity, looking for undervalued companies.  How can they tell if the product portfolio is too far gone?  The keys can be found in:
  • Market share decline by product family greater than 3% and accelerating
  • Average selling price compression or erosion greater than 5%
  • Declining or no customer satisfaction rating as compared to the market leader
  • Past product portfolio forecasts that failed to meet expectations greater than 10%
  • Products constrained by historical routes to market when new entrants are taking buyer preferred alternate routes to market

Add all these up and the tarnish might be too much for a turnaround or arbitrage strategy. 

Companies are failing faster these days as innovation accelerates and routes to market diversify; the number of tarnished logos will expand.  As more money swells the private equity markets, competition for deals will accelerate.  Sharpening the due diligence process and diagnosing the product portfolio capabilities as well as corporate talent, marketing and sales performance accurately can greatly enhance outcomes for private equity firms.  Ascendiosa can help.

 1. Avaya Weighing Bankruptcy Filing

Author:  Mark Miller is Ascendiosa's Chief Commercial Officer

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Seller Beware

12/8/2015

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Caveat emptor!  Julius Caesar and the Romans understood the value of information in commercial relationships when extolling “buyer beware.”  Trust wasn’t a big thing in the empire, we all know how Julius ended up.

Current research indicates that 69% of the B2B buyer’s journey was complete before a sales person was actively involved in the process.1
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Today it is the seller in B2B who needs to be more thoroughly aware of the market, the buyer’s mindset and their own organization’s messaging.  B2C sellers arrived at this realization much earlier,  now crowds rate products, restaurants and services on social media.  Amazon reports that most filtered searches are for products based on 4-stars or higher, not brands or manufacturers.  Consumers trust other consumers.

After speaking at a recent event, a soon-to-be client approached me indicating she had searched the web on her smartphone, looked at our organization and decided to come hear what we had to say.  She had some questions about next steps. During our conversation she lamented a common refrain, “we don’t get any leads from our website.” 

As a sales leader or chief operating officer, one question you want to ask your marketing pros, what's the bounce rate on your website?  Bounces are single visits where the visitor leaves without clicking on the next link.   A high bounce rate indicates your website could be a dis-qualifier. People visiting may determine that your organization does not have the necessary products or services to meet their needs or worse yet, is unskilled. They will come to that conclusion based on the appearance of your website on their smartphone.  Today, over half of all web searches originate from mobile devices. Yet many websites don't render properly on a mobile device.  In April Google, who owns 65% of the search market, changed their search algorithm, downgrading non-mobile ready sites. If buyers can’t find your website or read it, you are disqualified. You’re not getting any leads from your digital footprint, but your competitors are.

Have you contributed to, commented or shared your company's blog?  Buyers will search for your organization and you.  Showing up for the meeting and having the buyer ask you about your organization's current blog could result in an embarrassing moment.  Because let’s face it, if you aren’t current, why should your buyer trust what you have to say?

Does your organization have clearly defined terms and metrics for demand generation, market qualified leads and sales qualified leads?  If not, you are losing valuable leads and revenue potential.  Are you getting reports from marketing on demand generation from your digital strategies?  Who’s reading what?  What’s been re-Tweeted?  Which topics garnered the most impressions?  You need to know which 3 people from your buyer’s organization downloaded your company’s white paper or interacted with your company’s blog post. 

Early in my career a mentor counselled me, all selling is relational, even commodities.  We were selling petroleum products in bulk at the time.  And while price was important, I learned that relationships trumped price time and time again.  At the core of relationships is a level of trust between seller and buyer.  If the buyer can’t find you, can’t read what they find or doesn’t like what they find, trust will not follow.  

With 69% of the B2B buyer’s journey occurring prior to sales engaging...

Cavete vendit.  

1 2016 Annual Report, 9th Annual Research Project, Sales Benchmark Index, pg. 4.


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Who's Afraid of the Cloud?

11/16/2015

 

If your organization is not leveraging capabilities available from the Cloud to their full extent you risk being disrupted. Your customers, employees and competitors are already in the Cloud. 

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What’s in your supply chain?

11/3/2015

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Driving operational efficiencies and facilitating growth are baseline analytics-driven priorities for top performing companies today.[i]   Top performers know the fastest value realization project for big data is in their supply chain.

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