Survey Software, Web Survey, Online Surveys, and Enterprise Feedback Management solutions from Vovici
   Contact Us       Customer Login       Support    Blog  
 
   

Subscribe to our blog

Your email:

Free EBook!

Survey Software SuccessWe've compiled much of the blog into a free, 73-page ebook, Survey Software Success. The book outlines seven best practices for conducting online surveys. Download your free copy here.

Solutions For:

Online Survey Solutions Voice of the Customer SolutionsMarket Research Solutions Customer Support Solutions Voice of the Employee Solutions Government Solutions

Survey Research & Enterprise Feedback Management

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

"Communitizing" the Commodity Product

 | Submit to Digg digg it | Submit to Reddit reddit | Add to delicious delicious | Submit to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon | Share on Facebook Facebook | Share on Twitter Twitter | Share on LinkedIn LinkedIn 

Minor L asks "How do you recommend developing a community for a B2B commodity product?"

A community centered on a commodity, whether B2B or B2C, in the end can't focus on the commodity, but on what can be done with the commodity.

This approach isn't so different from solution selling.  George Kanuck, our vice president of enterprise sales, likes to give an example where, at a prior employer, he shopped for a box supplier.  All but one of the box manufacturers who presented to his company focused on the box: its durability, its dimensions and - most of all - its cost.  Only one manufacturer actually worked to understand the entirety of the challenges that prompted George's employer to find a new supplier; as a result, this manufacturer proposed a solution that addressed concerns with packaging, shipping and logistics.  Of course, that manufacturer wasn't the low-cost suppler, but they won the business through a superior understanding of how their boxes would be used.

In a similar fashion, your community is not fundamentally about the commodity, but its applications, problems and opportunities.  A Dutch manufacturer of scissors was losing market share to cheaper, lower-quality suppliers selling through Wal-Mart and other discounters.  Now, if you wanted to develop a social-media site about scissors, you probably wouldn't entice too many members to join:  you'd run out of topics after writing about how to compare pairs of scissors during the purchase process and how to sharpen scissors.  Fiskars took a different approach.  They created a community site focused on scrapbooking, where "Fisk-A-Teers" discussed their scrapbooking projects, and of course, how they used Fiskars products.  The result?  A thriving, successful community, that helps Fiskars differentiate its products in a commodity industry.

Comments

Currently, there are no comments. Be the first to post one!
Post Comment
Name
 *
Email
 *
Website (optional)
Comment
 *

Allowed tags: <a> link, <b> bold, <i> italics

Receive email when someone replies.