Author Archives: Tom Walker

Moneyball and WLAN

If you’ve seen the movie or read the book, you know that Oakland’s GM Billy Beane changed the game of baseball by recruiting players based on a different set of metrics than the good ol’ boys club had done for decades.  By putting laser focus on the on-base percentage and slugging percentage (total bases divided by at bats), the 2002 Oakland Athletics were able to field a team that finished first in the American League West despite having only 41M in their strapped budget. They did this by finding “value” players that were often overlooked by the bigger teams because they didn’t fit the traditional profile of a good player.

If you are a VAR and liken your business to a baseball team, you have a lot of marquis players on your roster. Many VAR’s like to focus on the home run specializations: WAN, LAN, Data Center, Storage, Security and VoIP because they can generate the really big deals. Many of these same VAR’s don’t want to sell WLAN because these deals don’t produce substantial dollars. For this reason, I believe Wireless LAN to be the technology equivalent of a sabermetric hidden gem because it has a high on-base percentage. The flood  of customers refreshing their WLAN, the insatiable thirst for wireless bandwidth, and the explosive BYOD movement are all creating unprecedented demand. This means your chances of getting on base are extremely high. Once you’re on base, there’s a hundred other things you can sell that customer once you’ve earned their trust. The deals aren’t as big, but if you’re playing moneyball, you understand that getting on base wins more games in the long run.

Good Selling

Tom

https://twitter.com/convergencesoup

The Power of Testimonials

When you provide a proposal to a customer, or ask a decision maker to have that first meeting, do you leverage the power of testimonials? Everyone will tell a customer they can execute and fulfill all their hopes and dreams, but how does the customer know if you’ve got the goods? The best sales professionals have a plethora of testimonials on Linked In (if you don’t, you’d better catch up) — why not leverage those testimonials outside of Linked In to demonstrate your credibility? There’s no reason you can’t include a testimonial in a proposal or an email – why not make the most of these kind words. Take it a step further and include a “view my profile” button your customer can click on to see a real person’s profile on Linked In.  By doing a simple <print-screen> and a little cut and paste in microsoft paint (accessories), you can include a testimonial that looks like the below:

Note, it’s a good idea to give your testimonials a “heads up”, but my guess is they won’t mind since they’ve already provided the testimonial. One of the biggest components of converting a prospect to a customer is convincing them you can execute – these testimonials serve to that end.

Good Selling

Tom

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Sales Magnet

Here’s a trick, compliments of yours truly, to capture critical contacts with whom you can further your sales efforts.  Create a group on Linkedin out of thin air. I just created a group called “CIO Executive Assistants Network.” Before doing so, I went on to cooltext.com and slapped together the following logo in two minutes:

Next, I joined every Executive Admin/Assistant Group on Linkedin – some of which automatically accept me. The next step is to go onto these groups on Linkedin and promote my new group – targeted specifcally to EA’s that support CIO’s. This is a more specific niche than any other groups currently existing on Linkedin. Within hours, members have started to trickle in. I bet within a month I’ll have over 100 members.

Here’s the cool thing: Every time a member joins the group, it gets broadcasted to everyone in their network. Over time this creates a snowball like effect. I’ve executed this game plan successfully in the past with the NorVaya Linkedin BP Network (many who read this blog are a member).

Mind you, this isn’t a “trick”. In order to pull this off (and not betray the trust of these members) you’re going to have to use this group altruistically. This doesn’t mean you can’t also advance your cause by controlling the conversation and establishing yourself as a trusted figure.

So what’s the endgame? Access. As we all know, access to decision makers is half the battle. Using the above strategy, you can get very creative — sky’s the limit!

If you like ideas like this, follow me on twitter: https://twitter.com/convergencesoup

Good Selling!

Tom

A “smart pill” for your business?

If you learned there was a pill that could improve your cognition, memory, intelligence, motivation,  and concentration — would you take it? In the movie Limitless, the character of Eddie Morra (played by Bradley Cooper) is confronted with precisely this dilemma when he runs into an old friend on the streets of New York. The friend claims to be working for a drug company about to bring such a pill to market. Eddie, a struggling author freshly dumped by his girlfriend and late on his rent, decides to take the magic pill called NZT-48 in a “what do I have to lose” moment.

As you may have guessed, the pill has profound effects on Eddie. He’s able to access virtually 100% of his brain allowing him to effortlessly write the first 90 pages of his book within hours to the amazement and awe of his editor. As he continues to take the drug, Eddie turns his life around overnight. With his newfound genius, Eddie can access and analyze diverse knowledge and data within his brain to write brilliant prose, speak foreign languages, play complex Chopin pieces, build a fortune by day-trading stocks and even woo beautiful women.

While this “clear pill” is a product of Hollywood fiction, it may interest you to know there is in fact an evolving genre of drugs and nutraceuticals referred to as nootropics or smart drugs. These drugs are thought to work by (a) altering the brain’s supply of neurochemicals; (b) improving the brain’s oxygen supply; and (c) stimulating nerve growth. According to NZT-48’s fictional (yet hilariously realistic) website, the “clear pill” elevates receptivity and synaptic sharing between the hippocampus, the amygdala and the striatum.

While the current or future efficacy of such a smart pill is debatable, I’d like to pose a different question. What if a “smart pill” existed for your business? What if your business was like Eddie Mora with many of the same problems: struggling to go to market with a new product, being dumped by customers, and struggling with cash flow?

It seems to me, there’s a lot of consilience between a brain and a business. Using the components that NZT-48 targets, we have the following divisions of the brain.

The hippocampus is responsible for forming, sorting and storing memories. Not only does it file and store memories, it connects related memories together to give them meaning. If we imagine your business is a brain, the hippocampus represents the information that is vital to your business.

The amygdala, located deep within the medial temporal lobes, is the engine that manages social interaction enabling integration and cooperation with others.. Interestingly, the size of the amygdala directly correlates to size and complexity of a person’s social networks.  Continuing the assumption that your business is a brain, the amygdala represents your interaction with associates, clients and vendors.

The striatum, the largest part of the basal ganglia, is largely responsible for automatic movements we make without thinking. In the context of a business, the striatum represents business processes.

If we set out to reverse engineer a smart pill for your business, we would have to unlock the maximum potential of all of your capital and assets (human and otherwise) by more effectively sharing information and resources.  In order to do this, your smart pill would have to do the following:

• Increase access to internal and external information
• Speed the delivery of this information so better decisions can be made in real time
• Allow fewer people to do more work by removing internal friction.
• Integrate business processes with lightening fast communication..

Of course, this magical pill doesn’t exist –yet another invention of Hollywood fiction. Or is it? As if I myself have just ingested the controversial transparent apothecary, I’m suddenly able to access obscure information deep inside my brain. In fact, it occurs to me that there is indeed a business-grade smart pill and it’s called Unified Communications.

If UC is a smart pill for enterprises and not all smart pills are created equal, then Avaya Unified Communications is the equivalent of NZT-48. Avaya’s Aura architecture speeds information delivery by allowing users to instantly lock into the quickest mode of communication for every situation via presence based, multi-mode communications. As a result, vital information travels through the business like electrical charges traveling at the speed of light through Eddie’s brain. With all of the right information accessed at the right time, line of business managers are able to make quick decisions in real time while mortal competition flounders with human latency and inefficiency.

Referring to the three divisions of the brain which NZT-48 targets, UC facilitates the rapid flow of vital information through social networks to enable better, faster decisions. But what about the striatum of your company: business processes? This is where Avaya Aura separates itself from garden variety nootropics.

If there was an easy way to integrate the flow of information not only through social networks, but also with business processes.. well, then we just might have the holy grail of smart drugs. If we had the ability to “plug in” communication actions to business processes, we could further take human latency out of the business by not letting people “get in the way” of what needs to be done based on real time changes in the business. It seems that this would require a sort of synapse that would transmit a signal resulting from information (events), directly to a business process flow which could choose the best mode of communication given the information at hand.

I know you won’t be surprised to learn that Avaya, through intense R&D, offers exactly this type of synapse, or rather an SDK (software developer kit) to rapidly integrate business applications with communication. This SDK is called ACE and it stands for Agile Communications Environment. It is the secret ingredient the boys in the kitchen baked into this NZT-48 and it can take your business to a level no other UC platform can.
By ingesting this technology, might not your business make better, faster decisions? Would it not unlock the full potential of all of your people, assets and information? Would you not be able to bring better products and services to market faster than your competition? Respond to changes in the market faster? Avert supply chain issues by instantly taking corrective action? In business as in life, what else is there?

“I don’t have delusions of grandeur. I have a recipe for grandeur.” – Eddie Morra

Unlike NZT-48, Avaya Aura UC can be purchased through an Avaya Business Partner near you. What you do with it is limitless.

-Tom Walker

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Follow me on twitter: http://twitter.com/convergencesoup

Know Thy Offense..

A lot of VAR leaders I speak with admit that they don’t  have the caliber of sales force that they want.  Or even more common, 20% of their reps are generating 80% of their revenue. Let’s face it when it comes to selling virtualized architectures, communication enabled business processes, business continuity solutions, multi-media collaboration, and all of the other intricate solutions you offer — how many sales people can consistently navigate these complex scenarios?

Most partners are telling me sales professionals are becoming more scarce who can find a net/new opportunity, discover customer needs, develop a solution strategy, gain consensus and close the deal.  What I’d like to suggest is that perhaps the problem isn’t your sales people– perhaps you have unrealistic expectations of what your sales people should be doing to grow your business.

In 1971, Jack Lengyel accepted a job as head coach of the Marshall University’s decimated football team. The previous year, 75 players and coaches died in a tragic plane crash leaving the school with essentially no football program whatsoever. Coach Lengyel, against sharp criticism, recruited a rag-tag group of young players with little experience and managed to cobble together a team.

After a few practices, it became readily apparent to Coach Lengyel that he wouldn’t be able to employ his beloved Power-I offense he had used with great success when he coached at Wooster. Despite all of the success he had in the past with this offense, he took a realistic assessment of what his offense was capable of. He realized, his players just didn’t have the athleticism or experience to run the Power-I.

Lengyel realized if he was going to field a viable team,  he had to simplify his playbook — dramatically.  That’s when he decided to adopt  ”The Veer” offense.  The Veer allowed his under-sized players to employ double teams and angles to block defenders. You see, the Veer is a triple option offense that allows the Quarterback to make a last minute read on the defense to select one of three actions. The simplicity is derived from the fact that everyone on the offense does the same thing on every play allowing them to focus on precision and execution.

If you’ve seen the movie, you know that the Thundering Heard won their first home game of the season against Xavier. Given the inexperience of their team, this was nothing short of a miracle.  My points in all of this are the following:

1. Partners that have a structured sales process always outperform competitors who do not.

2. You need to assess the skills of your sales people to develop a realistic sales process.

3. Once you have done this, where there are gaps — you need to provide expert resources as an overlay to your players.

4. Sales reps that consistently deliver precision move the ball forward with predictable results – this only comes from repetition.

So my challenge to you, the VAR, is to take an honest assessment of your sales team.  Do you have a consistent sales process and does it fit the abilities of your sales team?

Tom

Follow me on twitter: www.twitter.com/convergencesoup

VARketing Hacks

I know many of you are looking creative ideas to ignite your marketing efforts without breaking the bank. I’d like to introduce you to a website called Fiverr. This is essentially an online marketplace for individuals who will do virtually anything for $5. Now I know what you’re thinking, you get what you pay for. Well, my response to that is you’d be surprised. Since these individuals focus on very specific tasks, they generate huge economies of scale, allowing the smallest of marketing budgets to do some really creative things.
 
Below are my top suggestions on how VARs can leverage Fiverr in their marketing efforts.
 
1. Get thousands of twitter followers and/or Facebook “likes”
 
Nothing makes the spidey senses tingle like a twitter or facebook presence with no followers. Fiverr provides a quick way to build a facade of street cred. Mind you, the followers and friends you get will be of zero value to your business since they’re just a random assortment of followers – mostly people who paid the same fiverr specialist $5 to get them 1000+ followers. What this does is allow you to pass the initial sniff test when your real customers and prospects are deciding if you’re really on the social media grid. The bad news is (for you slackers), somebody at your organization is going to have to put weekly effort into keeping your real followers engaged and interested. Fail to do the real work, and you may lose them forever.
 
2. Graphic Design
 
Need a logo or graphic for a new marketing campaign? Fiverr has hundreds of good graphic design people that can literally take your concept and create a logo or graphic (or several) for just $5. I had someone design my convergence soup can logo and was able to pick from three different concepts. Also, there’s many designers who have really cool flash intro’s that can be customized with your brand or message.
 
3. Increase your Google Ranking via Youtube
 
There’s hundreds of people recording very creative, humorous videos (many of which are tasteful) and these people are willing to include your brand in these videos, or more imporantly include a link to your website. The trick is to have someone do a video that is consistent with your theme, goal or solution. As an example, someone juggling a cell phone, tablet and laptop while riding a bike could point people to your website. More important than the immediate traffic, this increases your ranking when people are searching for companies like yours. Other ideas include magic tricks, stunts, spoofs, etc..
 
4. Contacts for Prospecting and Marketing
 
I was surprised to find several people selling all varieties of contact lists. Another one that I thought was interesting was lists of online forums for specific industries. For $5, wouldn’t you like to find out which are the most popular online forums for CIO’s and IT Managers? Or how about a list of all the Linkedin Members who are Open Network status?
 
5. Tedious Marketing Tasks
 
Let’s face it, a lot of marketing activities aren’t glamorous. You can find people on Fiverr (highly rated) that will perform one or two hours of work for $5! Think about time consuming tasks like online research or data entry. There’s a lot of smart, talented people in countries where the dollar is still strong just waiting for you to throw them an Abe Lincoln.
 
So now that you know what $5 can get you, just imagine what $50 or $100 spent on Fiverr could do. Of course, all of these ideas require discretion and good judgement, but I do believe they offer some creative new directions to stretch your marketing dollars in 2012.
 
Cheers,
Tom 
 
Follow Tom Walker on twitter: www.twitter.com/convergencesoup

Benjamin Franklin, Virtualization, UC, and the Fate of the United States

Before I wrote this post, I asked my mom to draw the above picture.  I described the message I was trying to convey, what I envisioned, and 24 hours later,  I was ecstatic to see how amazingly well she captured the essence of what I was trying to explain.

There’s only one problem: I forgot to tell her whether the ship was coming or going.  I intended for the ship to be going away but if you look at the picture above, you really can’t tell. The smoke clouds seem to be trailing the ship;  however, we appear to be looking at the bow. Maybe the ship is coming along with the wind? Or maybe my mom found a picture of a real steamer that was in fact pointed in the stern and simply captured that feature?

Smash cut to 1787 at the Constitutional Convention. Benjamin Franklin, upon gazing at the back of George Washington’s chair marveled at a carving of a half sun.  ”I have often looked at that picture behind the President without being able to tell whether it is a rising or a setting sun, “ Franklin proclaimed. “Now at length, I have the happiness to know that it is indeed a rising, not a setting sun.”

As the carving was open to interpretation and experience, so too may be the picture above. If you are a VAR with a virtualization practice, are you leaving Unified Communications behind? If you are a UC VAR, has your ship finally come in — a way to implement UC, Call Center, Messaging and Collaboration on a single server?

One thing is for sure, almost every enterprise is making a concerted effort to virtualize as much as they can in their data center. Are you in synch with this trend? If you are not talking about UC in the context of virtualization (and vice-versa), you may be, well.. missing the boat (which reminds me of a previous post).  When you look at this drawing in 12 months, what will you see?

-Tom

A New Spin on Teleworker ROI

Looking for a new way to justify the value of teleworking solutions that you sell (Avaya One-X, VPN Phones, Juniper VPN Gateways, Sipera UC Sec,  Aruba VBN, Call Accounting, etc)? This recent post on Lifehacker explains how each mile not traveled to work puts $795 per year back in an employee’s pocket. By helping your clients develop a secure, managed and measured teleworking program, you allow them to give their best employees a nice pay boost so they can keep them from fleeing to greener pasteurs. Will employees agree with this math? Probably not.. but you need to have a way to put a number on the value of teleworking to an employee and this is a good start.

Of course, there’s plenty of studies that have debunked the myth that at home workers are less productive — in fact most studies show increased productivity. Often, time not spent commuting is spent working on your behalf. Given the option, most employees do whats in the best interest of their employer.

Happy Selling,

Tom

What can Rommel teach us?

Rommel observing the Atlantic Wall near Ouistreham, Normandy, France, late May 1944

 
What can the Desert Fox teach us about competing as a VAR today? Plenty. Early in 1944, Field Marshall Rommel was asked to inspect the entire French coastline to assess its effectiveness in thwarting the inevitable invasion by allied forces. Contrary to propaganda, Rommel reported the coastal fortifications to be grossly inadequate.
 
As a result of Rommel’s assessment and instructions, the Germans spent the next several months adding pillboxes, guns, mines, obstacles, and anything else he thought could stop the allies from breaching the Atlantic Wall. Rommel felt certain that the ONLY way to thwart an invasion was to stop the Allies on the beach. If this was not accomplished, defeat could only be postponed, but not avoided.  Thankfully, Rommel’s efforts were too little, too late.
 
My question to you, the VAR, is where are your beaches and how strong is your wall? If you are selling Unified Communications but not strong in networking or security – can you afford to let your competitors on the data network beach? As they gain ground on your customer, can you really defend the voice infrastructure or are you living on borrowed time as Germany was?
 
If you are a networking partner who has no voice practice, can you really afford to let your competition transform your client’s business processes through collaboration and unified communications? Once they are on that beach, can you continue to defend your sacred network?
 
This is the reality we live in. The network and voice platform are becoming increasingly symbiotic.  The VARs that are growing the fastest have strong UC and Networking practices which proves the point. If you can’t excel in both markets, how long can you maintain account control?
 
Listen to Erwin. Stop your enemies at the beach.

What’s up, HaaS?

No, not Hoss Cartwright from the hit series, Bonanza. (wow, I’m dating myself.. but then again I did that all through High School) No, I’m talking about Hardware as a Service. More and more, my partners are finding prospects and customers that don’t want to own it, don’t want to lease it.. they just want to rent it and make a monthly payment.

I’ve recently started working with partners to put together these types of financing vehicles and surprisingly, they’re not rocket science. Here’s how it works: A finance company owns the gear and collects money from the end user on a monthly basis. They pay you, the VAR, the markup on a monthly basis so you enjoy the ever so sweet recurring revenue so you can make your Lexus payment. Can the finance company handle financing for services and management over and above the hardware and wrap it into one simple payment? Absofreakinlutely.

While leasing takes a lot of the pain out of purchasing , I believe HaaS can take away some of the negatives of leasing. More and more, customers just want results in their business and are looking at creative ways to do more with less.

Need Catalyst to introduce you to a finance partner who can help you go to market with HaaS? I reckon you best call me..

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