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Archive for Marketing

Jun
19

An authoritative ORG for ISA dot!

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I learned something that I ought to have known at the SLM in Summerlin this June!

In passing I feel I ought to say that I was very encouraged by this meeting as a whole. It was a positive and forward looking and I think edifying (meaning up-building) meeting and I hope more people will post their own thoughts on what happened.

I gave a short report to the Pubs Dept meeting on the launch earlier this year of the new on-line ISA Directory of Automation which came on stream a few months ago. The URL is isadirectoryofautomation.com/

One of the delegates asked if he could enquire why a new URL, rather than a “subdomain” of the ISA URL – www.isa.org was used. I said he could ask, but I had no answer or defence, principally because it never occurred to me that this was an important point (and I could hardly be called a neophyte in this web game!)

Nobody could give an answer other than it was perhaps an easy one to remember. (The same may be true for the URL for Automation Week (.isaautomationweek.org/) and other sites set up by the ISA with URLs other than the main www.isa.org).Perhaps this was thought as a good idea in helping to establish their identity. However it was pointed out that this was perhaps a false theory in the modern on-line word.

Using these disparate or different URLS instead of strengthening the ISA “brand” by establishing one strong authoritative presences, instead dissipates the possible presence into many different channels.

Does this matter? Well, yes it does.

Have you ever tried to “google” the word “Automation?” If you have where do you find the ISA’s website? Try it now if you like! In my experience it is on page three or four or maybe even further down. In fact it ought to be in the first three entries on page one. Now try “Automation Directory” and see if you can find it. We tried it at the meeting and failed to find it after seven pages! (By the way I think that if you’ve searched for this before some search engines are intelligent enough to second guess you and move up what they think you might want further up the hierarchy! – I stand to be corrected in this but I find if I use one computer to do a search and then another I tend to get different results!

Why is this?

The search engine is looking for usage, or how popular a page or site is. So isa.org has a certain number of visitors, so will the Directory of Automation, so will the Automation Week site. But the search engine has little to go on to associate these with each other has it? Remember the adage “garbage in garbage out?” Or have you ever experienced a problem with having printing done by a professional printing firm where simple mistakes are made because you assumed that they understood exactly what you wanted without spelling it out clearly. No search engine, however intelligent, cannot identify www.isadirectoryofautomation.com, or www.isaautomationweek.org with www.isa.org. The URL isa.org does have an existing authority with the search engines but when we start another URL this is from scratch rather than building on what we already have. Each new URL has to establish its own authority from nothing. Reinventing the wheel as it were.

All searches lead to isa.org

So what to do?

It is actually a quite simple procedure, I’m told, to change this to say “automationdirectory.isa.org” or “automationweek.isa.org”. If this is done then every visit to both of these sites will acrue and be recognised as a visit to the isa.org domain and so its perceived popularity will rise and its “authority” will grow as this total increases. And so on, the addition of each section as say england.isa.org (or isa.org/england), or district say district12.isa.org etc will add the usage of these sites to the total. Say 10000 people visit isa.org and 2500 people visit www.automationweek.com and 5000 people visit the Directory they would be regarded as separate entities by the search engines and thus would be back in the exterior darkness of the back pages of Google, Yahoo and the rest of these engines.

ISA has a global presence with potentially 14 District web presences, all the sections, divisions and departments as well as some of the individual standards’ and education sites. All these can and I would suggest should be contributing to this popularity. Hopefully as a result of that simple question at the pubs meeting we will see the authority of ISA rise in the eyes of these engines and start to take its rightful place on page one.


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Many ISA Sections still use personal or work email accounts for sending communications to their members. There are lots of reasons why this is a bad idea, none the least of which is that there are excellent solutions available for free.



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I was invited to attend and speak at the District 13 Leadership Council on 1-May and came away impressed.  Despite reduced financial support, Mike Bovenkamp and the rest of the District 13 Sections put together first class event.  They are all to be commended, particularly the Montreal Section who sponsored the event.

The Unknown ComicDuring some of the discussion a gentleman relayed a story about ISA’s image.  He is currently a professor at a junior college, but previous to that was in the automation field.  He said that he used ISA standards for six years (a whole other topic/issue) under the mistaken impression that ISA was some quasi-governmental organization in the USA.  He had no idea what ISA was or even that it was a membership organization until a vendor set him straight.  Upon learning this, he immediately became a member and is today a valuable contributor and leader.

This got me thinking.  Perhaps we are squandering a marketing opportunity with our standards.  Although we eventually hooked this particular member, it was purely by a chance encounter with another member.  I wonder how many more of him there have been over the years and around the world.  Hundreds?  Thousands?  Tens of thousands?

To wit, I thought I would have a look at a randomly selected standard.  After a few failures (again, another horse to be beaten to death on another day) I was able to view SP-93, “Standard Method for the Evaluation of External Leakage of Manual and Automated On-Off Valves.”  I thought I would look at it from a marketing perspective and see what happened.

The first and most obvious thing to hit me was the old name.  No doubt it’s on the “to do” list but here you have it.  Brand confusion.  The first sentence of the Preface reads, “This document has been prepared as part of the service of ISA, the international society for measurement and control, toward a goal of uniformity in the field of instrumentation.”  Notwithstanding the second misappropriation of the Society’s name, this sentence is as close as it gets anywhere in this document to marketing ISA.

ISA93 Standard

Suggestions

Obviously, it’s inappropriate to fill a standard with marketing propaganda.  However, the cover page and preface are perfectly reasonable places to do some marketing:

  • The ISA logo and tag line should be more prominent than the threat of civil and criminal penalties.  It goes without saying that it should also be accurate.
  • The preface should contain a full page advertisement for ISA, including our mission, web address, and call to membership.
  • Every page footer should contain “International Society of Automation” and “isa.org”

Using our standards as a marketing tool costs us absolutely nothing and could bring substantial benefits.

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NewspapersI was recently asked for my thoughts regarding the reasons for InTech’s (advertising) struggles and how we might improve the advertising market share of the magazine.

I would say that what went wrong with InTech is Web 2.0.  The Internet is revolutionizing the way information is delivered and how people organize themselves; the two core value propositions of ISA.  Few to realize this, including organizations as large and successful as the Boston Globe and Conde Nast.   Here are my thoughts on the past, which are not meant as criticism but analysis on how external trends are affecting InTech:

  • The fundamental challenge for InTech is the plummeting value of information. The product quite simply isn’t worth what it used to be. Many people immediately think of Google, but there are actually a few reasons:
    • Search engines (Google, Bing, etc.) are the obvious reason information is becoming devalued; it is much, much easier to find.
    • Vendors are providing more and more value-added information to their customers. They are realizing the benefits of giving away information and solutions in order to increase sales of their products. Rockwell has been doing this for years, but Emerson is really becoming a content generating force. They get it.
    • Web 2.0 is turning traditional content consumers into producers. While automation professionals are probably slower to adopt than others, this is what I call the “silent killer.”  The root cause here is the cost of bandwidth and storage approaching zero. This trend will continue as more and more specialists in the automation profession will become their own publishers. Greg McMillan, for example, could be a very successful professional blogger and speaker right now if he had the inclination.
  • It is no great surprise to say that the print medium is becoming less and less popular.  ISA is dangerously behind the times with regard to all things digital, but I am seeing glimmers of hope from leadership that this is changing (as recently as emails I received this afternoon).
  • Advertising in all forms (magazine, web, television) is changing. The traditional, interruptive model is becoming less effective every single day. People are getting better at ignoring those sorts of advertising and effective advertising in the future will be permission-based, inbound marketing. The problem with that approach is that it requires an organizational shift that will be extremely difficult to pull off.
  • Due to the exploding availability of information, people are shifting from fewer, longer articles to more, shorter articles. I have ready many statements from leadership about the “world class” content of InTech, and I am not saying that it is or is not.  My point is that it doesn’t matter whether or not the content is world class if nobody is reading it.   The articles are too long and too poorly marketed right now, in my view.   I know this is heretical to say, and many engineers will take violent exception to this statement.
  • Another effect of Web 2.0 is the immediacy of information. The process and delivery mechanism for InTech is too bogged down to respond to quickly developing situations.   By the time an editorial calendar is adopted, articles are submitted, reviewed, accepted, edited, printed and read, people frequently don’t care anymore or ISA has missed an opportunity to be part of a conversation.
  • ISA has killed the golden goose by overwhelming its members with low value, un-targeted, interruptive marketing.   As a result, they have unsubscribed from our emails and generally tuned out ISA.   That will make everything we do from now on that much harder.
Web 2.0

Don't confuse Web 2.0 with social media - they are related but not the same thing.

So those are my thoughts on what went “wrong” and the forces that are influencing publishing in general. Here’s what I think we need to do:

  • First and foremost, abandon the traditional paradigms which include viewing InTech as a source of revenue. It needs to be transitioned to a (hopefully) break-even content generation engine that serves a higher calling (e.g. inbound marketing, member engagement, community building).  Again, I understand this is heresy and will be very controversial.
  • The deal with Automation.com should be undone as soon as possible.  This was dilution of the InTech brand and in a Web 2.0 world, the opt-in email list is the most valuable asset any publisher has.   Sharing this with Automation.com greatly diminishes its value.
  • InTech should formulate a strategy for migrating its focus from print to blog. Many people will misunderstand what I’m saying here.  I am not saying abandon print – done properly this can actually become a very high margin product. I am not saying we do this overnight – it needs to be a transition that takes place over a two to four year period.   The end result must be a more nimble, online blog that publishes shorter, timelier content from a wider variety of members.   The InTech magazine will then become, as Seth Godin calls it, a “souvenir” that people will want to buy because it contains enhanced and embellished versions of the online content.   It should be available as an online, downloadable e-book as well as an on-demand (that is, not subscription) purchase.
  • InTech needs to abandon traditional concepts of advertising and look at online affiliate advertising, sponsored content, and selling products.  And the term “product” needs to be defined as well. Currently, this would encompass books, standards, and training but it remains to be seen whether this remains the case.   As an example, a blog article on cybersecurity needs to (automatically) include include links to “Click here to download ISA99,” or “Buy ‘Industrial Network Security’ now,” or “Attend a security webinar.”
  • The concept of an editorial calendar is antiquated and needs to be reconsidered. While it was once a necessary tool, it seems to me that it is now an encumbrance.   As I’ve said, InTech needs to be a more nimble, crowd-sourced publication platform that can address the most pressing and current issues that are of interest to our members.
  • We need to educate our members on how to be better content producers.   This does not mean what it used to mean.  The skills required to author a five thousand word text article for a print magazine are much different from the skills required to write a shorter (thousand word), more concise, compelling multimedia article (or video).
  • If we reclaim sovereignty over the InTech newsletter, it needs to be revived as an instrument to deliver value to our members – not to sell more stuff.  This is CRITICAL.
  • ISA staff and leaders need to be trained to adopt a “content” mindset, which means thinking about turning every bit of work product (like this email, for example) into content and distributing it through multiple channels.  I describe this approach in more detail on my blog.

You’ll notice I have not made a single mention of social media. The reason is that social media is a means to deliver remarkable content to people and then talk about it. Without the content, social media will simply be an empty, uninteresting echo chamber. However, the level of coordination and scope/degree of change required for this transformation make it a tall task to say the least.

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This post was originally published on my personal blog, Domesticating IT, and is re-posted here for completeness.

In a recent discussion with ISA leaders regarding how to lessen the number of emails it sends members, the topic of Facebook fan pages came up. The context of this discussion was focused on how ISA could be at least as effective at marketing its publications while reducing the number of emails it sends. I was asked to explain specifically how a fan page compares with email marketing, and I came up with seven advantages:

1) “Opting In” vs. “Not Opting Out”
People must take an affirmative action to “become a fan,” which says a lot more than “I choose not to opt out.” From a marketer’s perspective, these become your top shelf, number one, gold plated prospects. And you treat them that way.

2) Marketing Upside
When someone becomes a fan, all of their friends see it. This has tremendous marketing “up side.” When someone doesn’t opt out of emails, nobody knows and there is zero additional up side.

3) Build a Community
Fans can interact with one another on the fan page, providing book reviews, answering questions, talking about their favorites, etc. This is the very essence of Web 2.0.

4) Analytics
Facebook provides detailed statistics with regard to interactions that occur on fan pages. This makes is very easy to quantify the value of the page over time. Typical email marketing solutions provide counts of the number of times a message is read or a link is clicked. However, Facebook has additional metrics that can measure interactivity and “buzz.”

5) Reach
Fan pages are open to everyone on Facebook (that’s 325 million users) – not just your email database.

6) Demographics
The fastest growing age demographic on Facebook is 35 to 45 year olds. This is a critical demographic for many organizations.

7) Cost
Fan pages are FREE. Enough said.

Let me know if I missed something.

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