Analyst Relations 101 Building Influence with the Influencers
Webinar: December 13, 2012
Introductions
Elizabeth Shea CEO, SpeakerBox
[email protected] @eliz2shea
Bob Ragsdale VP of Marketing, MicroPact [email protected]
@bobragsdale
Analyst Relations…
Analyst Relations is a corporate communications
and marketing activity in which corporations
communicate with ICT industry analysts (also
known as research analysts) who work for
independent research and consulting firms.
--- Wikipedia
Understanding the Analysts
§ What analysts are… – Third party validators for your product or service – Independent researchers with deep insight – Analytical, thoughtful, thorough people – Responsible for understanding a market and providing
feedback to buyers of technology products – People!
§ What analysts are not… – On your payroll – Paid to say nice things about you – Pay-to-play resources
“Analysts are info junkies. They spend most of their lives, when they are not on the phone, online. They have Google Alerts set up on the companies they track.” “When getting to know an analyst keep in mind that all analysts are experts, and they know it. They are extremely confident on their home turf…their area of expertise. That is why they respond so well to questions.”
--Richard Stiennon Author of “Up and to the Right” Former Gartner Vice President
In the minds of an analyst…
“You only do this job if you're passionate about solving
unanswered questions, and the thrill of helping others. If
you want to be rich, go into finance, law, engineering, or
entrepreneurship. (Seriously).���”
--Jeremiah Owyang Altimeter Group
April 19, 2012 Google+ discussion
Why Bother?
§ Analysts talk directly to your enterprise buyers.
§ Most analysts have a rock solid understanding of your market and its players.
§ Analysts can provide invaluable perspective on your go-to-market strategy, positioning, etc.
§ Analysts take pride in understanding who matters in the space they cover. Make sure they know about you….
§ Can be one of the more cost-efficient line items in your budget, if done correctly.
Find and Identify…
§ Top Tier (Gartner, IDC, Forrester): – Search their web site, may be overlap with categories.
– Call an account rep to be more clear: they are your friend!
§ 2nd and 3rd tier firms (1000+!): – Search online for your category, see who actively covers your
space. – Read articles about your competitors, which analysts are quoted?
Find and Identify…
§ Social media channels: – Who has the most “influence” when searching on your terms? – Who are your competitors following and engaging?
§ Other resources: – IT Database (ideal for 2nd and 3rd tier firms) – Barbara French’s Directory – Institute of Industry Analyst Relations
“There are probably going to be new analysts covering your space every quarter. As new research is published keep track of the analysts who author it.”
--Richard Stiennon, Author of “Up and to the Right”
For vendors, the problem is clear – how to
minimize their expenditure on the analyst
community while ensuring the best coverage of
their company with
the correct prospect/customer base.
--Quocirca, The Use and Abuse of Analysts Report
Some Challenges…
§ Paid relationships:
– Realize you will have access to a LOT of data. Rarely can you digest as much data as you are required to buy.
– The stakeholders at your company will benefit greatly from the information you consume. It’s a challenge to curate the data and share with those who need it the most. But develop a plan so you can.
§ Engagement: Square Peg/Round Hole:
– You won’t always fit neatly into a category they cover. It means you may need to engage multiple analysts at the same firm so you aren’t discounted in one area and covered in another that’s not the right fit.
Bob’s Top Ten Tips
Be cognizant of how many analysts/analyst firms you can effectively engage. Oftentimes, less is more.
1 Work with partners who have
relationships with the same analysts and cross promote, support one another.
2
Bob’s Top Ten Tips
Advertise against the analyst’s name on Google. For example, when customers/partners look him or her up, a MicroPact ad appears. Same is true when he or she searches for himself or herself! Which they will do.
3
Bob’s Top Ten Tips
Cover the analysts that cover you, particularly at their events or symposiums
– Blog – Tweet – Share
4
Bob’s Top Ten Tips
Make the most of your analyst-related events
5
Bob’s Top Ten Tips
Leverage the relationship with your account rep. He or she can be your best ally, coach and cheerleader! If you neglect this relationship, you aren’t maximizing the opportunity.
6
Bob’s Top Ten Tips
That being said, begin one-on-one with each analyst. Having multiple analysts on the phone when your category isn’t clearly defined can backfire.
7 8
You may fit into more than one space, and you may need to engage with analysts from both areas to cross-pollinate.
Bob’s Top Ten Tips
9 Make sure every internal expert you have in the company is on hand to address the questions you may not be able to answer. It’s not unusual to choose a different team for each briefing.
Bob’s Top Ten Tips
10 Be a relentless marketer: find every opportunity to market to them and build a relationship every day:
§ Include their quotes on your website.
§ Send them a holiday card, drop them a line.
§ Learn about their personal life, family.
§ Send them your press releases.
§ Treat them like people.
The “Briefing” § Analysts will take an informational, unpaid briefing to learn about you.
§ Analysts love information. Demonstrate data, not marketing fluff.
§ Include in your presentation:
– Company vision, who you are, what problem you solve.
– Company stats: size, location, executives, # of employees
– Product details, including your product road map
– Customer list, references
§ Don’t include:
– Quotes from other analyst firms
– Market charts: they know the market already!
More Love for “Up and To The Right”
§ Invite your analyst to dinner the night before a conference or analyst day. Find out about their interests, their outside passions.
§ Send your presentation ahead of time. Don’t attempt to do a live online presentation. Let them digest early.
§ Don’t neglect traditional PR activities. Many analysts are still “old school” and want to read about you in periodicals. They are vast consumers of information. Be sure you’re out there.
§ Think about what the analysts are seeing when they Google your keywords. Are you there?
More Love for “Up and To The Right”
§ Build a Wikipedia page for your company and product. There is an art to it, it can’t be self-promoting, but make it happen.
§ Don’t leverage how other analyst firms regard your product, especially with Gartner. “If IDC coins a new term for a product category, Gartner will coin their own and define it differently.” according to Stiennon. Understand and respect that.
§ If conducting a paid briefing with an analyst, consider including a presentation/conversation from an influential customer. Address the problem they had, how they chose your company, and how the problem was solved.
§ We love this one: advertise in your analyst’s airport. They travel, a LOT. At least twice a week possibly. Can be expensive, but can reap a nice ROI!
THANK YOU!
Bob Ragsdale VP of Marketing, MicroPact, [email protected]
Elizabeth Shea
CEO, SpeakerBox, [email protected] For webinar attendees only:
RAFFLE! We will randomly pick three people to receive a complimentary copy of Richard Stiennon’s Book, Up and to the Right.” You must be present to win!
Top Related