Landscape

B2B marketers understand that they are operating in a different environment for a variety of reasons. These include a tighter economy, more rigor around business decision-making and the growing importance of social media in all B2B industries.

Two recent charts with survey data from Marketing Sherpa show a changing landscape of B2B transactions. The first shows the change in average deal size from 2010 to 2011. More than half of the deals closed by B2B companies are under $ 10,000, with the largest number of them (32%) between $ 1,001 and $ 10,000. This indicates that many of the larger deals, sometimes thought of as the hallmark of B2B sales, are not happening in the same numbers as before. It is easy to speculate that this is partially the result of the economy, and companies are just not spending the way they have in the past.
B2B-sales-deal-size

The second chart shows that the length of the buying cycle is shorter. This is defined from first lead inquiry to purchase. While the most common cycle is 1-3 months in both 2010 and 2011, the number increased in 2011. The number of responses of less than a month also increased. There were fewer in the ranges of 4-6 months and 7-12 months in 2011, and only cycles of more than a year held steady. This follows the first chart pretty naturally. If sales are down then the time to complete those sales is shorter.
B2B-sales-cycle

B2B Social Media Marketing Takeaways:
1. If you sell an expensive, complex product, it is more important than ever to embrace social media. With fewer sales in 2011, does 2012 look any different? This means that every customer and prospect is more important to your sales conversion. You need to work harder to discover new leads and work harder to retain customers. Social media can assist with both discovery and retention.

2. Consider expanding service offerings or other smaller sales to support larger customers. If buyers are not upgrading products or systems, they will require more support in the near term. Look for ways that social media influenced content (ebooks, custom videos) can support those relationships in the absence of enhanced paid support models.

3. One of things that we have learned about the buying cycle in the social media era is that prospects contact a sales rep after 60% of the cycle is complete. This means that a company no longer contacts you for general information, but they seek it out themselves from the web, including social media platforms. This makes a social media presence an important part of reaching prospects. Your B2B company needs to demonstrate expertise by sharing valuable information to be included in the consideration phase of the buying cycle. This is no longer a linear process and there are many stops along the way.

How have your B2B buying cycles changed and are you able to use social media to address these changes?


Source: Social Media B2B


A flood of data, devices, social media and media channels, paired with their own worries have many CMOs swamped — 78% expect more complexity over the next five years, but only 48% are prepared to deal with more complexity.




Source: Advertising Age – Latest News

Facebook released v3.4.3 of its Facebook for iPhone native mobile app yesterday. Though the release notes only list “Various bug fixes” and “Improved security”, we’ve discovered the update permits users to view the navigation menu in landscape mode. As many of the app’s features could already run in landscape mode, this allows for a more unified experience.

Despite few tangible improvements in versions 3.4.2 or 3.4.3, Facebook for iPhone is still the most advanced of Facebook’s native mobile apps, boasting some features lacking in the latest version of Facebook for Android. Event checkins, a Places map, and Find Friends were all added in the 3.4 and 3.4.1 updates. The app also recently began pulling the news feed from m.facebook.com, streamlining development for Facebook’s mobile team.

This month also saw the leak of screenshots and documentation of a new Facebook mobile photos app for iOS, which could be integrated into Facebook for iPhone or released as a standalone app. That app might allow for multi-shot sharing, filters, video support, and an activity feed.

The Facebook for iPhone continued steady growth through June, gaining 2.79 million daily active users to reach 45.2 million DAU, and gaining 4.3 million monthly active users reach a massive 80.7 million MAU. These stats, from our application growth tracking service AppData, make Facebook for iPhone the largest Facebook app by DAU, and the second largest by MAU to Zynga’s CityVille.

With Facebook for iPhone 3.4.1, users can now turn their phone horizontally to switch the navigation menu to landscape mode. This might make it easier for those using the app while laying on their side, or who use the app’s features in landscape mode and don’t want to switch to portrait mode when navigating between features. And, by bringing landscape navigation to the iPhone app, Facebook also sets itself up to offer a more unified interface experience with its forthcoming iPad app (many people prefer using their tablets in landscape mode).

For the time being, though, one downside we’ve found is that users can’t access the Account menu or add bookmarks in landscape mode.

Overall, Facebook has said that it is focused on both native apps and its mobile web site, and it is working on an HTML5 version that could offer many of the multimedia features available for native apps.

The booming popularity of all of its mobile services, though, means it has its hands full adding new features for its demanding users. Users on the comments thread of the announcement are requesting the ability to tag friends in status updates as users can on Facebook for Android, and the option to Like comments.

Expect Facebook to continue upping its mobile focus as it faces a broad range of mobile competitors.


Source: Inside Facebook


For luxury brands, the recession led them to embrace digital and social media, an area that brands had only tepidly begun to experiment with before the recession. Agencies, as a result, have seen their digital businesses explode.




Source: Advertising Age – Latest News

Social gaming will be a mature billion-dollar industry in 2011, with more on offer for game players and more at stake for developers. What will social gaming’s continued growth mean for the future of relationships between platforms and developers? How do emerging market trends in 2011 affect media companies considering whether to build, buy, or license? Inside Social Apps InFocus 2011 tackled these questions along with others that included the distribution landscape for games, the potential for continued consolidation among developers, and the importance of brands.

Kristian Segerstrale, CEO & Co-Founder, Playfish (now part of EA), Peter Relan, Executive Chairman, CrowdStar, Vish Makhijani, SVP Business Operations, Zynga, and Rick Thompson, Co-founder, Playdom (now part of Disney) joined Inside Network’s Justin Smith to discuss social gaming’s key challenges this year. View the full panel below.

ISA 2011: The Future of Social Gaming, Key Questions for 2011 & The Emerging Media Landscape from Inside Network on Vimeo. To download an mp3 version of this talk, please email us at info (at) insidesocialapps (dot) com.

Other videos currently available:

  • ISA 2011: Fireside Chat with Google’s Eric Chu on Android’s 2011 Social Roadmap
  • ISA 2011: The M&A Landscape for Small and Mid-Sized Developers
  • ISA 2011: Monetization & Customer Acquisition on the Facebook Platform in 2011
  • ISA 2011: Fireside Chat with Bret Taylor on the 2011 Facebook Platform Roadmap

Photos of the event are viewable on our Facebook Page.


Susan Su Read more: Inside Social Games

Social gaming will be a mature billion-dollar industry in 2011, with more on offer for game players and more at stake for developers. What will social gaming’s continued growth mean for the future of relationships between platforms and developers? How do emerging market trends in 2011 affect media companies considering whether to build, buy, or license? Inside Social Apps InFocus 2011 tackled these questions along with others that included the distribution landscape for games, the potential for continued consolidation among developers, and the importance of brands.

Kristian Segerstrale, CEO & Co-Founder, Playfish (now part of EA), Peter Relan, Executive Chairman, CrowdStar, Vish Makhijani, SVP Business Operations, Zynga, and Rick Thompson, Co-founder, Playdom (now part of Disney) joined Inside Network’s Justin Smith to discuss social gaming’s key challenges this year. View the full panel below.

ISA 2011: The Future of Social Gaming, Key Questions for 2011 & The Emerging Media Landscape from Inside Network on Vimeo. To download an mp3 version of this talk, please email us at info (at) insidesocialapps (dot) com.

Other videos currently available:

  • ISA 2011: Fireside Chat with Google’s Eric Chu on Android’s 2011 Social Roadmap
  • ISA 2011: The M&A Landscape for Small and Mid-Sized Developers
  • ISA 2011: Monetization & Customer Acquisition on the Facebook Platform in 2011
  • ISA 2011: Fireside Chat with Bret Taylor on the 2011 Facebook Platform Roadmap

Photos of the event are viewable on our Facebook Page.


Susan Su Read more: Inside Facebook

Page 1 of 212