Product Storyteller with Stewart Noyce

Stewart Noyce
Product Storyteller with Stewart Noyce

Sharing best practices in product marketing

  1. 02/17/2020

    Don Peppers - Part 1

    In 1993, Don Peppers and his co-author Martha Rogers, released the book One-to-0ne Future, and caught the imagination of a generation of Internet-based marketers, who could now build brand relationships one customer at a time. Encouraged by testimonials from Tom Peters and other leading strategists, Don and Martha would go on to co-author 13 books on the subject of one-to-one marketing, and launch, the Peppers and Rogers Group consulting firm, which still today, drives customer-centric thinking into brands around the world. What I want to share with you in parts 1 and 2 of this interview with Don Peppers is the prophetic nature of the first book that Don wrote in collaboration with Martha Rogers. In One-to-one Future, Don and Martha essentially created the direct marketing future we live in today. Of the ten predictions they made, all came true except for one.  They fully expected that businesses would emerge to make money protecting consumers’ privacy rather than threatening it.  It still gnaws at him that this doesn’t exist today, as he sees trust to be critical to an authentic company - customer relationship. As we recorded this interview, it became clear that we would need to split it into two parts.  In this initial segment you get the chance to meet Don, learn what drives him, and begin to understand the power of his authentic approach to sales, marketing and life. With respect to privacy, we decided to go deeper into possible paths that marketers and governments can take now to bring us back to a more trusting relationship.  This important conversation comes in part II.

  2. 12/30/2019

    Erica Blair

    My very special guest for this episode is Erica Blair, brand messaging expert and world traveler. Earlier this year, Erica helped me refresh my personal brand.  Through our time together I came to see her process as one of many paths one must take on the way to the durable edge of capitalism.  That’s why I asked her for this interview. There are two very important points to take away from what you are about to hear. First, Erica calls for each of us to express why our products matter.   We usually say what we offer and how it works, but we need to paint a very clear picture of why the thing that we have created matters in the world.  Our clients and customers are bombarded by messages all day.  They simply don’t have the time to translate the technical details of what we offer into a solution to their problem. They need an anchor, which is our brand. Second, we should be thinking big. What is our audacious vision?  Erica sees a vision of decentralization, of reconfiguring the way that we distribute value in community.  Though you might know this vision as blockchain or crypto, Erica reminds us that there is more to this movement than technology.  There is enormous opportunity to add value and create wealth here, but we need to express this opportunity in terms of why. So, what makes positioning and vision a path to the durable edge of capitalism?  As economic value builds from value then we can imagine ourselves better off as a community when everyone in the community is engaged.  That means we all add value to meet unmet needs, and have our own needs met. Erica is constantly, persistently working with clients to get them into a hyperniche, where they are special, and valued.  This is their positioning, where they add the most value, which can be seen where their solutions relieve the pain of the customers they target. Everyone wins.  Her clients make more money and work efficiently.  The client’s customers with unmet needs are now satisfied.   Such win-win outcomes are the foundation of civil society, and are especially important when companies are introducing disruptive innovations.  The big audacious vision that changes the world needs to make sure that no one is left behind. That is why Erica’s brand messaging practice matters, and why I am pleased to call her my friend.

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Sharing best practices in product marketing

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