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Entries Tagged as 'vendor'

Thinking Outside the Box

Every once in a while, a vendor comes along with not only innovative products but innovative ideas on how to help their channel partners be successful. Communicado wins my praise for “getting it” when it comes to innovative programs for resellers! Last week, they announced a new program, Quick Start Dealer Program to enable VARs to quickly and efficiently remotely manage their customers’ converged networks.

“Oh sure”, you think. “If we take on another product we’re once again faced with ramp up time and money out of our pocket for training and demo equipment.” Yea for Communicado, who claims that the comprehensive program “provides resellers with the necessary tools to drive significant new streams of revenue without lengthy ramp time or large capital expense”.

At the UC Summit in Scottsdale last month, Kerry Shih, founder of Communicado, talked to the resellers twice - once on the secrets that every entrepreneur needs to know and then later on how to get started in unified communications by taking small steps instead of trying to run the whole marathon at once. The message that I get from Kerry is that he thinks outside the box - and that type of thinking shows in Communicado’s products and programs. How refreshing! And certainly worth watching if you’re a reseller!

UC and the Consultant Community - What Vendors Should Know

Having once played extensively on the vendor side of the field, I have empathy for the vendors’ perspective on where consultants fit in their go-to-market equation.  After all, we’re not as easily categorized as the end-user or reseller audiences.  And quantifying our impact on vendor revenues has never proved straightforward.  But we’re here, we’re very much a part of the UC equation, and we’re not going anywhere.  So I offer a few starter anecdotes and tips on how we add value to the enterprise market and how vendors can benefit from our involvement.1.  As an independent UC consultant, our clients expect us to always be on top of the latest “whiz-bang” application or concept. While vendor-marketing buzz may succeed in prompting attention from these end-users, it actually serves as a double edge sword for the consultant community. Often we find that even if we’re not familiar with the whiz-bang’s name de jour, a second look tells us it’s simply a newer version of a familiar application. Yes, manufacturers are incorporating enhanced functionality and features in their rebranding efforts, but in most cases the products are very similar to their predecessors where it counts most to us - in terms of technical requirements and integration issues.  A Marketing ‘de-coding’ tool would save us a lot of time.

2.  Demand for an independent consultant within an enterprise often starts with the CFO.  Many manufacturers and their distributors focus almost exclusively on “soft cost” business cases and (surprisingly), more often than not, these campaigns are effective.  The reasons for success are varied, yet a soft-cost business case often hits a roadblock when a consultant is engaged.  Why is that?  Are consultants not interested in soft costs?  Of course we are, but we are hired to address what the business stakeholders require most - The Bottom Line.  In today’s toughening economic climate, capturing illusive IT dollars requires a solid business case that considers hard and soft dollar returns.  The proof, though, is in the pudding; we follow-through after implementation to prove that the forecasted returns have been achieved, an important step which is often omitted.  Your probability of additional  sales would be greatly improved if you conducted or participated in such post-sales evaluation processes?

3.  Integration is a key driver to achieving returns, yet an area where businesses - and sometimes vendors - lack the necessary skills to evaluate related issues.  We surely don’t write integration code, but we have the expertise and responsibility to ask the hard questions that may otherwise be overlooked.  Can this slow down a sales process?  Yes, but enterprises can only leverage new ways to communicate when installations are successful.  An independent resource and client advocate who assembles the necessary pieces of the UC puzzle increases the likelihood of success for all involved.   Keep us educated on the integration side of house.

Remember, these are not knocks on anyone.  On the contrary, actually, strong working relationships with the consultant community allow us to effectively represent vendor capabilities.   Consultants should not be perceived as a threat, but as an educated avenue that can improve a vendor’s probability of success.  If an enterprise is willing to expend resources on a consultant, this reflects the enterprise’s seriousness to evaluate and invest in improving or optimizing their technology.  At the end of the day, an independent consultant and the vendor are after the same result - a satisfied and referenceable customer who can confidently say they achieved their business objectives.  Let’s keep talking.

The Vendor Value Proposition Challenge

The other day, I heard from yet another convergence reseller about the woefully weak recruiting methods of so many convergence vendors.  Haven’t vendors figured out yet that resellers are bombarded by vendors wanting to recruit them as “partners”?  According to resellers that I talk with, there are very few vendors who have raised themselves above the noise and babble of everyone looking for partners.

One of the comments that I hear most often is that most vendors are unable to articulate a meaningful or clear value proposition for their product.  A reseller wants to know that his customers will buy what the reseller is offering – and they’ll only buy if they have a reason to do so; hence the importance of the vendor’s value proposition.  According to one very successful reseller, vendors don’t appear to have thought through why someone would need their product.

The other comment that I hear just as often is that vendors don’t articulate WHY a reseller should want to partner with them – what competitive advantage will the reseller gain?  I’m baffled that vendors don’t approach reseller recruiting as if it were a sales process.  What are the reseller’s primary needs and how does the vendor’s product and partnership address those needs?  How will the vendor’s product(s) help the reseller to grow their business, become more profitable, differentiate themselves from their competitors, etc.?  It’s amazing how almost every vendor’s recruiting presentation looks like every other vendor’s…. here’s who we are, here’s our product, here are some big name customers who have bought our product, and here’s our partner program….. blah, blah, blah.  What about “Here’s how our product will help your business grow”?  Or “Here’s why your customers will want to buy our product from you”?

So here’s something to think about…. if, as a vendor, you

  • aren’t articulating a solid end-user-focused value proposition,
  • you don’t have a solid reseller-focused value proposition,
  • and you expect your partners to do their own marketing….

don’t be surprised when the reseller shows you out the door as they answer yet another call from one of your competitors.