May 14 2008

ChannelWeb (CRN & VARBusiness) Names Derivetech.com as one of “20 Great-Looking Solution Provider Sites”

Published by Karl Ufert under Mitra Creative Achievements, Uncategorized

ChannelWeb Logo 

We received the news that this month (May 2008) the website that we produced in late 2007 for DERIVE TECHNOLOGIES has received another important industry accolade. ChannelWeb, the online portal for CRN and VARBusiness magazines, has named Derivetech.com one of “20 Great-Looking Solution Provider Sites”. See the main story here, and the specific entry for Derivetech.com (#6 out of 20!) here.

We at Mitra Creative are very proud of this achievement. Joe Caponi, Managing Editor, Operations of ChannelWeb says of the interactive platforms chosen for the list of 20 Great Looking Solution Provider Sites that, “demonstrating a refined sense of design can help to brand a solution provider and generate new business opportunities.” We are thrilled that this aestheticism, as well as our work to very specifically co-brand Derive Technologies with Partners such as HP®, Microsoft®, Citrix®, Cisco®, Panasonic®, VMWare® and others, has been instrumental in business development and the creation of a power-brand for Derive.

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Jan 09 2008

Custom Design - That’s Why We’re There

Published by Karl Ufert under Design

When small-to-midsized advertising, media and web and print design and development firms are approached by prospective clients for pricing, one often hears something to the effect of “somebody told me about a package (or service) that costs XYZ-dollars.” This is typically followed by a reference to the offering that the prospective client has found – usually based on some kind of template – and an assumption that you will have similar pricing. The client has seen examples of work or has been referred to you by someone else based on the quality of your work, know that it is professional, beautiful and special. Then they see, for example, a free template, and somehow make a connection between what you will charge for your work and the cost of these prepackaged solutions.

Smaller firms often have small-to-midsized businesses, or even individuals, as clients instead of larger brands. This means that money, which is of course an object in any business scenario, is an even more important factor than many in the decision to utilize your skills. For fear of losing business opportunities, many inexperienced designers, developers, etc., or startup firms that rely heavily on earned revenue from engagements to prove performance for a financing plan, or even survive, will try to compete with “canned” solutions to win the business. This almost always turns into a double-edged sword. You may receive your short-term revenue for the job if you compromise, but if the value of your talent, your reputation (even if you are only briefly in the industry but possess strong skills) and the amount of time that it takes to perform custom design and development are not considered when delivering on a project, it is time, energy and emotion spent to fulfill which makes good strategy impossible.

For the most part, clients that come to smaller firms want custom design. Regardless of their possible inexperience when pricing these services, thus, the comparisons to canned/templated solution, you have probably been recommended to them because your work is more personal than that. The truth is that, no matter what they may say to you, most of these clients know this. It is a rare case that someone has budget, even if very limited, for an important marketing or advertising activity, and does not have at least some idea that something provided out-of-a-box is not as high in quality as your work.

The answer: as much as possible, LEAD WITH THE DESIGN. When you engage these prospective clients, demonstrate to them – through examples of your work, your experience, and with examples of return on investment for engaging you where possible – that the value of your work is its custom aspect. Some will respond by saying “how do you calculate the value of that design?” To that you must answer with some statistics about the additional brand values brought about through custom work and through demonstrating the importance of aesthetics. For web projects, functionality is “king”, but ugly websites do not attract visitors or consumers unless the client’s offering is so inherently compelling that people will bypass these aesthetics, or even more intelligent workflow, to get to the product, service, etc. Still, even for the largest brands, if a website is poor in function, if the “cookie-cutter” nature of the site does not promote the right visitor or consumer experience, or if a site is ugly, those who come to it will feel this. Some clients may also say: “I can do something cheaply now and pay for something better later.” The counterargument is that first impressions are as important as savings.

Always remember the inherent value of your design skills and work. It is a true market differentiator for you and your clients.

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Dec 04 2007

Disruptive Technology - The “Why” not the “What”

Published by Karl Ufert under High Tech Marketing

Unique technology solutions are rare. Most technology comes with evolution… emulation combined with progress, in other words not reinventing the wheel, is often the preferred development path. Even when technology is, indeed, new, it is usually produced with some kind of consumer need or want in mind.

Marketers are frequently challenged with finding not the “what” in the branding of disruptive technologies but the “why”? Prior to founding my own company, Mitra Creative, I was once the marketing and sales lead for a startup enterprise which was developing a genuinely business-transformative video software solution. The fundamental concept of this solution was to replace numerous existing video services with a single, economical platform which would not just streamline existing processes but revolutionize them. While certainly an enticing prospect to the market, this made conventional video technology providers, as well as professional consumers who use their solutions to produce media, understandably nervous… but a ”good nervous”. However, the risk of market anxiety represented a huge sales challenge. Branding is about identification–even if new, something has to have at least a sort of conventional application to be sold and proliferated.

Our initial bypass of conventional selling practices for the special but disruptive video software solution to was to reach to alternative markets. Still, we could not do this with a “copy-and-replace” strategy, as these markets were decidedly different than traditional ones. That meant demonstrating real business value to entirely new audiences. We were very successful in articulating that value through identifying other critical business issues that this new technology would address. For example, as video has become more prevalent in communications, the technology could be used to better support the socialization of media content in any industry, even in those which may not have been considered before.

Finding special niches helps technology companies to address audiences as opposed to reciting to consumers and others what they make and/or deliver. It is therefore critical that the “why” is applied when marketing disruptive technologies. Leading with “what” may cause the most valuable of new technologies to be ignored. When the why is discovered, rareness, specialness, newness and much more can be applied to the consumer need and extended.

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Nov 05 2007

Mitra Creative Wins Gold - 2007 MarCom Awards!

Published by Karl Ufert under Mitra Creative Achievements

We just learned that our company, Mitra Creative, received a Gold Award in this year’s MarCom Creative Awards for:

  • “DERIVE TECHNOLOGIES ONLINE: A MAKEOVER”
  • Category: Web Site Overall
  • Award: Gold

This is the first competition that we’ve been a part of and our first award. We are very excited about this achievement and the potential to deliver more winning solutions for current and future clients!

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Oct 17 2007

Mitra Creative Blog - Inaugural Entry

Published by Karl Ufert under Marketing - General

Welcome to the Mitra Creative Blog. Check back for valuable information about:

  • Marketing and Branding Strategy
  • Web and Multimedia
  • Vertical Industry Trends: Especially in the High Tech, Media/Entertainment/Publishing and Education fields
  • Social Networking and Web 2.0
  • Business Demand Generation
  • Digital Video
  • Asia/U.S. Marketing

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