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How Tech Brands Avoid Being BoringRecent posts have discussed adding personality and communicating visually. Those ideas are applicable here, but let's dig deeper into how your brand can stand out or overcome a boring image. When I first worked in a Silicon Valley PR agency, most people wanted to work on consumer accounts with companies that had cool products. Hey, who wouldn't want to be in on promoting the latest, most attractive products you can buy? But I was assigned to B2B accounts to help promote chip- and board-level test equipment. Next, I got some semiconductor companies added to my portfolio. Others at the agency thought those were awful and boring. What they didn't realize is that IC design and manufacturing was driving the technology revolution. It was and remains the raw material for what's next. It wasn't and isn't boring.
Zzzzzzzzzz....
Focusing too much on the feeds and speeds of your technology
will do this to your audience, even if they're engineers. A bigger story When AMD introduced its first RISC microprocessor, it allowed a whole new generation of printers to run much faster than anything that had come before. Explaining reduced instruction set computing to the mainstream news media was not the story. Major publications, including USA Today, The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, wrote about AMD's breakthrough because it meant computer peripherals were about to start running much, much faster. Oh, and no other chip company had that technology ready to use at the time. That was the business angle. AMD's clear competitive advantage over Intel and Motorola was more interesting than the new device. Information about how technology works (rather than what it does for people) bores many people. Engineers who run technology companies are in love with their inventions and are sometimes blind to the stories about their products' implications. That's where the broader story is often found and where good pitches to broader news channels can originate. What can your technology do for people? Those in the technology news media want to know what designers can do with a new device, not just the specs. Get interesting Getting competent PR pros on the job early also makes a difference. (See: Creating Effective Tech PR Strategies.) Effective PR people are curious and creative and will develop a range of ideas to help erase the boring factor. If your PR team isn't regularly coming up with more good ideas than you can use, it's time to get better help. Most companies, in fact, have very interesting stories. They're just often not immediately obvious. Someone needs to be curious enough to dig them out. Sometimes marketing folks only want to push product, which in many cases can be boring. Going beyond product promotion is a great strategy for not being boring. The human element Often the people creating, making, marketing, selling, and using your products are where the interesting stories are waiting to be discovered. Do you tell stories about your customers' successes with your products or services? Are you doing it visually? That's not boring. Related posts: |
More Blogs from Savvy Tech Marketing
Humans enjoy and learn from great stories; apply the concept to
your marketing messages, and you'll do right by your audience.
Spending levels in a marketing campaign's early stages must be adequate to fuel preparation and the launch activities.
Injecting some personality can become a winning method for making a tech brand more visible, understood, and valued by its market.
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