Sunday, June 29, 2008

Is Your Sales Model Ready for the Recession???

(f00114)Is your sales model ready for the recession?

fetch says -- "This Summer will mark one of the biggest economic shifts in US History. For some industries the seismic activity will knock companies off their foundation".

Below please find a list of economic factors that will provide the fuel for the tough economic times." the major factors are:

* The Sluggish economy
* Rising Unemployment
* $4+ gasoline $5+ for the truck fleets providing logistics
* Layoffs in the financial and banking industries
* Home mortgage crisis
* Sky-rocketing food prices

"fetch Solutions" has the knowledge and the technology to assist our friends in the components industry to not only get through these dire economic times, but to transform your company to make added sales and significant revenue of the rest of 2008 and 2009. Please contact fetch Solutions at:

TXCronin
774.238.1282
txcronin@gmail.com

Please call ASAP to discuss what your options will be!

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The slow pace of economy has come. Business facing downturn, the more luxurious an item the harder it will be hit. Has this economy slowdown impacted your sales?

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Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Quest for Dominance

Quest for dominance

(f00113) -- China's fragmented electronic components distribution market is ripe for consolidation. Who's going to lead the charge?

By Henry T. Cochran
Electronics Supply & Manufacturing
(02/01/2007 9:00 AM EST)


fetch-food-for-Thought: The mid-tier component distribution companies can take full advantage of the fragmented Chinese electronic market! What you will need is an Interent Virtual Platform and an "e-Catalog". Fetch can provide you both applications by the end of the summer. The only cost to our Strategic Partners will be a small hook-up fee!



One of the biggest factors at play in China's electronic component distribution market is that it is a major market where the globally dominant players don't have double-digit share.

Eventually, the market will consolidate, with the main players achieving dominance, but cultural habits aren't broken overnight. Certainly, as China's legal system improves and the R-factor--relationships--declines in importance, change will come. But it will take a while to rationalize China's component distribution market.

In an earlier ESM article ("China distribution: wide open," April 2006), I listed five factors that I believe will drive consolidation. They all have relatively short fuses--measured in years, not decades. It's hard to say, however, which of them will be the catalyst for consolidation.

Perhaps the bigger issue is how much longer the large distributors from North America can wait before ramping their investment in the world's largest component market. I believe the lack of investment (or even entry) into China by most of the top 50 North American franchise distributors is one of the worst management blunders in the history of the industry. Unless this changes rapidly, a decade from now the list of the top 50 global franchise distributors will differ markedly from today's roster.


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REACH and the electronic supply chain: Are you ready?

(f00112) REACH and the electronics supply chain: Are you ready?

Stephen Greene, principal, Howland Greene Consultants LLC

Electronics Supply & Manufacturing

05/29/2008 6:14 PM

There are many reasons why the electronics industry should be concerned about the European Union's (EU) chemical law — Registration, Evaluation and Authorization of Chemicals (REACH), and all of these reasons will impact your company's bottom line.

The most important reason is that electronic products are made of chemicals. However, many businesses fail to see that their parts or assemblies are a bill of materials of chemicals that went into processing and manufacturing the parts they use. In addition, many of the chemicals have toxic properties.

You are, no doubt, aware of the impact that the EU's Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) directive has had on the electronics industry. The restriction of six substances (and as of June 30, seven) required a major redesign of most electronic products covered because of the restriction on the use of lead, cadmium, hexavalent chromium, mercury, PBB and PBDE. Add DecaBDE (brominated fire retardant) effective July 1, 2008 because the European Commission's exemption of DecaBDE was nullified by the European Court of Justice. (See related article: European Court of Justice annuls Deca-BDE RoHS exemption)

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EE Times Europe Poll

(f00111) Do you prefer to buy electronic components from:

An international distribution group
4%
Local general distributor
19%
Specialist distributor
23%
Direct from the manufacturer
31%
Open (grey) market supplier
12%
None of the above
12%

Monday, June 23, 2008

Distributors Help Fuel Eco-Friendly Designs

Distributors Help Fuel Eco-Friendly Designs (f00109)

Electronic Business June 2008

By Diane Trommer

Soaring energy costs and growing concern over the environmental impact of electronic devices have put electronics manufacturers in the hot seat as consumers demand high-tech devices that are not only better, faster and cheaper, but also greener. As the burden of fulfilling this demand cascades through the supply chain, it ultimately stops at the design engineer. In support of OEM customers’ efforts to capitalize on the opportunity to turn sustainability into a competitive advantage, authorized distributors are turning up the heat on their environmentally conscious solutions.

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Please read fetch Solutions Blog #(f00111) Immediatly below which describes the solution to this article. fetch Solutions provides all the tools to automate your Virtual sales platform.

Please contact
Timothy X. Cronin Jr
fetch Solutions
18 Linden Sq
Wellesley, Ma 02482
774.238.1282
txcronin@gmail.com

fetch "e-Catalog" provides Supply-Chain PArtners with..

Monday, June 23, 2008
fetch Solutions "e-Catalog" provides Supply-Chain Partners:
The fetch Solutions "e-Catalog" provides your Customers and Supply-Chain Partners (C&SCP*) with the following Tools (f00110)

All current product and technical information resides in a user friendly Internet self-service center. C&SCP will find the correct part number with help from the "e-Catalog".Data is entered and retrieved in consistent format due to customer interface.

C&SCP can find information without having to call customer service. It is available as a self-serve 24/7 anytime day or night.

C&SCP can identify components for special needs or applications. These needs include energy efficiency and a choice of RoHS parts are identified.

C&SCP can place orders efficiently on a self-serve. The catalog interface force complete and accurate part numbers, can use either credit cards or purchase orders to order the products.

Pricing is based off standard/list prices with quantity discounts. The distributor/manufacturer determine the pricing algorithm.

* C&SCP include existing and new customers, franchised distributors,contract manufacturers, traditional customers, traditional customer service and sales agents, and your manufacturers representatives.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

fetch Solutions "e-Catalog" Platform

fetch Solutions "e-Catalog" Virtual Sales Platform (f00106)

fetch Solutions provides component manufacturers and their "Sales-Chain Partners" with a full-function, inexpensive, turnkey "e-Catalog" B2B platform that will serve the increasing number of component customers and prospects who prefer to conduct business using the Internet.

As you are aware, the Catalog Distributors (Digikey, Mouser, etc) have already achieved the Industry benchmark of 40% of components sold will be transacted using the Internet. Please allow fetch Solutions to build your own Virtual Sales Platform for your company. Our Benchmarks to acheive the Internet sales are: 10% yr1,20% yr2,30% yr3,40% yr4. Part of our offering will be to provide our customers with e-Marketing and e-Business tools at no additional cost to our partners.

This powerful "e-Catalog" platform will complement your existing web site and will serve as a virtual sales platform guiding engineers and buyers to discover, evaluate and purchase the Mid-Tier products as a self-serve platform.

Please contact fetch Solutions to discuss further the SaaS e-Catalog offering that has been servicing electrical manufacturers for over 10 years. We would be delighted to hear from you via e-mail and to send to you a list of e-Catalogs that are supporting the electrical component manufacturers.

Thank You,

Timothy X. Cronin Jr
fetch Solutions
774.238.1282
txcronin@gmail.com

Mid-Tier Electronic Manufacturers e-Business Litmus Test

Mid-Tier Electronics Manufacturer's
e-Business Litmus Test (f00105)

As the Internet becomes more of an alternative sales channel, future operations cannot be profitable unless you offer your market a Self-Serve Internet e-Business Option.

Large Internet-based "Catalog Distributors" such as Digikey and Mouser Electronics and Top-Tier Distributors such as Arrow and Avnet are Out-Competing the Mid-Tier companies. Both of these companies provide franchised products from the Top-Tier Component Manufacturers. The Mid-Tier manufacturers are not part of their product offering.

Today the Top-Tier are Out-Competing you for new accounts using Technology Tools. fetch will assist you in realizing your dream, which is to compete successfully against the big guys, as well as to regain the customers that want their B2B to be using the Internet.

Setting-up a Virtual Sales Platform on the Internet has to be a Top-Three Priority for your company in 2008 or early 2009. The Mid-Tier Manufacturers are not being sold by the Catalog guys and the Book-Ends. You will need to partner with fetch Solutions' Collaborative "e-Catalog" platform for access to the suite of Technology Tools that fetch provides for your competitive advantage. We are very confident that we will provide our partners with web tools that will leave the Top-Tier guys in the dust.

Other than a small hook-up fee, the fetch Solution Software-as-a Service (SaaS) cost will be based as a "pay-as-you-go" program. The Tools that will be part of your e-Business site will include the "e-Catalog", the hosting, the customer specific secure data base to capture all Internet transactions, a monthly POS Report, and an e-Marketing program to entice globally new customers, as well as to service your existing customers.

fetch Solutions is looking forward to discussing in more detail how our SaaS application offering can provide your company with significantly more sales and profits using the Internet for a very modest fee.

Let us build for you your Virtual Sales Platform today!

Please read the fetch Solutions Blog (f00106) for more information about fetch Solutions. fetch Solutions "e-Catalog"

Thank You!
Timothy X. Cronin Jr.
fetch Solutions
774-238-1282
txcronin@gmail.com

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Midsize Companies Must Modernize Their IT Infrastructures

Gartner: Midsize Companies Must Modernize Their IT Infrastructures
(f00104)

By Scott Campbell, ChannelWeb

9:55 AM EDT Mon. May. 05, 2008 Midsize companies need to change their IT philosophy and modernize their technology infrastructure, even if that change requires a significant change in corporate thinking, according to a Gartner analyst.
"What you want to do now is different than the way you built IT. All kinds of things that have happened in the last 20 years have started to change the way we do business and [the old] IT doesn't fit anymore. New things happen: outsourcing, global competition have changed the way we interact with customers. Is it bad? No. Is it wrong? No," said Dale Vecchio, research vice president at Gartner, at Everything Channel's Midsize Enterprise Summit in Orlando, Fla.

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The Winds Of Change Are Blowing

Gartner To Midsize CIOs: The Winds Of Change Are Blowing
(f00103)

By Andrew R Hickey, ChannelWeb

4:44 PM EDT Tue. Jun. 17, 2008
Gartner research vice president Robert Anderson made his message loud and clear Tuesday, when addressing a packed house of CIOs at Everything Channel's and Vision Events' Midsize Enterprise Summit Europe in Barcelona: "There are profound and dramatic shifts that are occurring today that effect us all in IT."

And Anderson wasn't kidding. In his hour-long keynote presentation kicking off the event, he touched on a host of shifts in IT that not only impact CIOs of midsized companies, but all of IT. And he cautioned that failing to adapt could leave them all behind.

In a short but unsettling video, Anderson outlined a host of forces that are hitting IT, and CIOs might not even know it yet. For example, he pointed out that if the collective users of MySpace banded together to form their own country, it would be the eighth largest country in the world. He also noted that the influx of mobile devices has grown exponentially and that the number of text messages sent per day trumps the number of people on earth.

What's that all mean to the midsize enterprise CIO? "Businesses are on a collision course with their future," he said. "Are you ready for the winds of change?"

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New UPS Services Making it Easier to Go Global, Go Green

Current Press Releases


New UPS Services Making it Easier to Go Global, Go Green
(f00102)



Solutions Include First "Paperless" International Shipping Option; Help Streamline Customs and Returns

ATLANTA, June 18, 2008 - As U.S. businesses face challenges associated with a sluggish domestic economy, many are looking to markets overseas. Two technology-enabled services from UPS (NYSE:UPS) are making it easier than ever for businesses large and small to expand beyond U.S. shores - and helping them go green while they're at it.

Introduced in January, the industry-first solutions - UPS Paperlesssm Invoice and international UPS Returns® - now are available within the UPS Shipping Tool, an application program interface (API) that enables customers to integrate them into their own web sites and enterprise applications. They're already helping thousands of UPS customers manage shipments to 98 countries and territories around the world via UPS shipping systems like UPS WorldShip®, UPS CampusShip™ and UPS Internet Shipping.

"It's more important than ever for small- and medium-sized companies to look at global markets and to leverage technology to act 'big,' even as they retain the flexibility of a smaller company," said Jordan Colletta, UPS vice president of customer technology marketing. "With the spotlight on operational costs, these UPS services allow businesses of all sizes to overcome some of the complications of operating internationally in a cost-effective manner."

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

How to Start an e-Business

How to Start an e-Business
(f00100)

Is starting a new Internet business a bad idea? Not if you start smart and learn from others' mistakes. We'll tell you how.

Editor’s note: This article was excerpted from our e-Business start-up guide, available from SmallBizBooks.com.

This is it--your chance to strike it very rich because suddenly, the internet has changed all the rules. For a half-century, the big players in business, from IBM to Exxon, dominated the game, leaving little room for newcomers to move to the top of the heap. Then in 1994 a little startup named Netscape introduced a web browser, and the race for cash was on. Amazon, eBay, Yahoo!, 1-800-Flowers, drugstore.com, Priceline.com, WebMd.com--today, they are million-, and in some cases billion-dollar businesses, but where were they ten years ago? Out of nowhere these companies, and hundreds more, have emerged to challenge the gods of commerce. They're succeeding because the new rules favor small companies that are flexible, smart, tough and ultra-quick to react to changing market conditions.

Chew on these numbers: E-business research firm IDC expects the total worldwide value of goods and services purchased by businesses through e-commerce solutions will increase to $4.3 trillion by 2005 from $282 billion in 2000. By 2007, total online retail spending will reach $105.2 billion, up from the $51.7 billion consumers were expected to spend by the end of 2003. And in the 2002 Christmas shopping season, consumers spent $7.92 billion online, a 23 percent increase over the 2001 holiday season, according to e-commerce research firm BizRate.com.


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Procurement -- Customer-Supplier Relationships

Procurement -- Customer-Supplier Relationships(f00099)

Published: June 16, 2008 in Knowledge@Wharton

The Importance of Procurement in a Global Environment

Until recently, procurement was a necessary, but seldom celebrated, component of multinational corporations. But times have changed: These days, procurement organizations within companies are playing pivotal roles in the success of global firms in ways that old-fashioned purchasing managers could never have imagined. In this special report, Wharton faculty and procurement experts at The Boston Consulting Group discuss why the procurement function has risen to such prominence in a highly competitive global environment, and how, as supplies of critical commodities tighten and prices rise, companies can strategize to mitigate these and other risks.

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Innovate or Perish, leaders warned

Innovate or perish, leaders warned (f00098)

13 October 2007 03:00 PM


Companies that confuse e-commerce with e-business may miss out on the massive wealth creation of the so-called "new economy" has been the message from speakers at an inaugural Wiredup 99 e-commerce conference in Adelaide.

The key messages to the 300 conference attendees were "eat your lunch before someone else gets it" and make sure you embrace the "digital economy" from a whole-company point of view.

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NO Recession on the Internet

No Recession on the Internet(f00097)

Published April 10th, 2008 in Off Topic

With all the news concerning the economic recession in the US, consider yourself lucky if you have a strong skill set specialized in internet promotion and marketing. Companies looking to make headway into the internet scene continue to be on a hiring frenzy doling out lucrative salaries.


This is also a perfect time for companies to hire talent that may have been let go by a company that didn’t have all their ducks in line and couldn’t face the downturn of events. For example, Bear Stearns had to let a lot of employees go not because they lacked talent or potential, but rather the company made some gambles and lost their shirt as a business unit. It is easy for a strong internet based firm to realize the new influx of potential employees into the talent pool and select the best out of this supply of talent.

If you ever fear a recession, retool yourself to follow the internet because business on the net continues to boom while the brick and mortar shops are feeling the squeeze. The net will continue to grow for another decade or two, so no worries of any recession in the internet sector.

Monday, June 16, 2008

B2B Marketing during a recession is the way to go

June 14, 2008
7 Strategies for B2B Marketing during a Recession:
The Definitive Guide (f00096)

Should B2B marketers change their strategies during a recession? Does a recession always mean marketers have to work even harder to find ways to do more with less? Can a recession create opportunity for smart marketers to grow and thrive? These are some of the topics I recently explored on a panel at the SMX Advanced conference in Seattle.
Are we in a recession?

First off, let me explain I do not think we're in a recession in the US — yet. A recession requires two quarters of negative growth in GDP, and Q4 last year saw 0.6% growth while preliminary numbers for Q1 this year were 0.9% growth (Bureau of Economic Statistics).

So we may not yet be in a recession, but times are growing increasingly difficult for consumers. The subprime mess is real, exorbitant energy and food costs are cutting into discretionary spending, and the weakening dollar is importing inflation to our economy. According to How I Spent My Stimulus, the $152 billion stimulus package is going primarily to reduce consumer debt or to pay for higher gas and food costs, i.e. it is not going to stimulate incremental spending.

What this means is that we are in the worst possible non-recession. Prior downturns avoided becoming a (global) recession because of the resilient American consumer. This time, it looks like we won't have that saving grace — meaning things may still get worse before they get better.
What does this mean for B2B marketing and advertising?

Fewer consumers means less demand; less demand means that efforts to stimulate demand (i.e. marketing) are less effective overall. Put simply, when people buy less, advertisers spend less. According to research firm Veronis Suhler Stevenson, US advertising dropped 9% in the 2001 recession while Internet advertising fell a whopping 27%. I should point out that this slowdown applies to business-to-business marketers as well because of second- and higher-order effects, i.e. as consumer spending drops, the businesses that sell to those consumers reduce their spending as well.

However, these overall numbers hide two important facts:

* Branding and other forms of push marketing drop in a slowdown, while direct marketing tends to rise. When budgets are cut, the channels with the least ability to measure marketing ROI are cut especially hard as companies shift spending to more measurable channels. Investment bank Cowen and Company looked at the last six recessions since 1950 and found that spending on direct marketing actually grew during six recessions.
* This time is different for online marketing. In the 2001 recession, online marketing was still unproven and got caught in the downward collapse of the Internet in general. Today, the trend to shift advertising dollars to measurable online channels is proven and won't disappear anytime soon. So online marketing won't crater like last time, but it also isn't immune from a slowdown. In fact, eMarketer recently reduced its 2008 estimate for US online advertising to $25.8 billion. That is a 7% reduction from their prior estimate — showing the impact of the downturn — but it's important to note that it is still 23% higher than 2007's total. In other words, the recession may slow down the growth of online marketing, but it's still growing at a significant pace.

What this means is that a recession will accelerate the decline of interruption-based mass advertising that simply shouts your message to customer. In its place we will see increased growth in measurable and relationship-based strategies such as search marketing, email marketing, lead nurturing, and online communities.

A downturn can also create opportunity for the companies that are more efficient at turning marketing investments into revenue, since there will be less competition overall. In a study of U.S. recessions, McGraw-Hill Research found that business-to-business firms that maintained or increased advertising expenditures during the 1981-1982 recession averaged significantly higher sales growth than those that eliminated or decreased advertising. In fact, by 1985 companies that were aggressive recession advertisers grew their revenue over 2.5X faster than those that reduced their advertising.
Seven strategies for B2B marketing during a slowdown

Given these macro economic trends, how should you allocate your marketing budget — and time? Here is my definitive guide to B2B marketing during a downturn:

1. Use lead management to maximize the value of each lead. In a recession, risk-adverse buyers take even longer than normal to research potential purchases. When you first identify a new prospect (regardless of whether they downloaded a whitepaper, stopped by your booth at a tradeshow, or signed up for a free trial) they are more likely than not still in the awareness or research stage and are not yet ready to engage with one of your sales reps. What this means is you need lead scoring to identify which leads are highly engaged, and lead nurturing to develop relationships with qualified prospects who are not yet ready to engage with sales. Without these capabilities, as many as 95% of qualified prospects who are not yet sales-ready never end up turning into a sales opportunity. These prospects are valuable corporate assets that you worked hard to acquire — so in a down economy you need to do everything possible to maximize value from them. Implementing even a simple automated lead nurturing program can yield a 4-fold improvement in the conversion of qualified prospects into sales opportunities over time. That's a dramatic improvement marketing return on investment! Net-net: Companies that can do a better job of managing leads and developing early-stage prospects into sales ready leads will be in the best position to thrive in a downturn.

2. Focus on your house list. In a recession, you may have less money to spend on acquiring new customers. The solution is simple: spend more time marketing to (and building relationships with) the people you already know. Some activities that can help you get the most out of your existing relationships include lead nurturing campaigns, creating new content to offer to existing prospects, and cleaning and augmenting your marketing lead database with progressive profiling.

3. Build and optimize landing pages. When times are tough, it's more important than ever to maximize the return on your advertising. Whether you are using Google AdWords, banners, sponsorships, or email campaigns, a dedicated landing page is the single most effective way to turn a click into a prospect. MarketingSherpa's Landing Page Handbook shows that relevant landing page can easily double conversions versus sending clicks to the home page, and testing your pages can increase conversions by another 48% or more. Together, these tactics alone can result in 2.5X more leads for every dollar you spend, something that's sure to look good in tough times. However, MarketingSherpa also reports that most companies are under-using this important technique: just 44% of clicks for B2B companies are directed to the home page, not a special landing page, and of B2B companies that use landing pages, 62% have six or fewer total pages. A recession is perhaps the best time to focus on some of these basics.

4. Content for later in the buying cycle. When buying slows down, you need to focus more than ever on making sure you are finding the prospects who are actually ready to buy — or even better, make sure they are finding you. One great way to do this is to focus your offers on content that will appeal to someone who's actually looking for a solution (as opposed to thought leadership and best practices content, which can appeal to prospects who may one day have a need but are not currently looking). Examples of this kind of content can include "Top 5 Questions to Ask a Potential Vendor" whitepapers; buyers guides and checklists; analyst evaluations; and so on.

5. Appeal to the nervous buyer. A recession can mean more risk-adverse buyers, which may lead to a tendency to go with "safe" solutions. This is fine for large established companies, but it means younger companies need to do more than ever to reassure and build trust. Tactically, this means including customer references, reviews, expert opinions, awards, and other validation as part of your marketing. Strategically, a recession means fewer risk takers and visionaries, so take a lesson from Geoffrey Moore's Crossing the Chasm and use methods that appeal to mainstream pragmatists: industry-specific marketing tactics and solutions; vertical customer references; relevant partnerships and alliances; and whole product marketing.

6. Align sales and marketing. Today's prospects start their buying process by interacting with marketing and online channels long before they ever speak with a sales representative. This means companies must integrate marketing and sales efforts to create a single revenue pipeline. The old days of functional silos and poor communication between the two departments must end. A tougher selling environment, driven by a recession, means this is more true than ever.

7. Don't be a cost center. Most executives today think that Sales delivers revenue and Marketing is a cost center. Marketers are partly to blame for part of this mindset, since when we use metrics such as "cost per lead" we frame the discussion in terms of costs, not in terms of impact on revenue. More subtly, using language like "marketing spending" and "marketing budget" instead of "marketing investment" perpetuates these beliefs. In a recession, marketing needs more than ever to change these perceptions. This means that marketing investments must be justified with a rigorous business case and should be amortized over the entire "useful life" of the investment. And it means marketing must increase marketing accountability by demonstrating the impact of each marketing activity on pipeline and revenue. Of course, this is easier said than done, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't try. Even small steps, like reports that show the total opportunity value for each lead source or campaign, can make a big impact.
Conclusion

Even if we aren't in a recession, we are in for some tough economic times — and an economic slowdown means a tendency to scale back marketing spending. However, research shows that a downturn creates opportunity to accelerate growth faster than your competitors. This means it may be the best time to step up your marketing — at least in quality if not quantity. The marketers that focus on getting the most out of every dollar spent and on demonstrating marketing's impact on revenue and pipeline will be well positioned to come out of the slump looking like a star.
THE JOURNAL REPORT: SMALL BUSINESS

Q&A: How Web-Hosted Software Evolved for Small Business
By ROGER CHENG

When it comes to on-demand software, also known as software as a service, few people know more about the subject than Mike Braun. He helped developed the strategy for small businesses a decade ago when he worked at International Business Machines Corp. He's now chief executive officer of Intacct Corp., which provides financial, supply-chain management and other business software through online delivery. We spoke to him about the evolution of Web-hosted software and its adoption by small businesses.

How did the idea of software as a service come about?
At IBM, we had been doing [information technology] outsourcing for large companies for a number of years very successfully. In talking to our small-business customers, we had this revelation that if the value of outsourcing was high for a large company, it should be even higher for a small company. Small companies lacked IT expertise, staff, money, all the things you need to run your own IT operation. Given that it was 1998, we couldn't implement it the same way [as large businesses]. That's what's led to the [software as a service] idea.

SEE ARTICLE

Sunday, June 15, 2008

RoHS cost: $32 billion and counting
It's not easy (or cheap) being Green. Just ask buyers at electronics companies who had to switch parts—and, sometimes suppliers—to comply with the European Union directive.
By James Carbone -- Purchasing, 6/12/2008
When the European Union (EU) announced it would ban the use of lead and five other substances from electronics equipment, many industry executives said the law would cost the electronics industry billions of dollars.

It turns out they were right.

In fact, the Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) directive cost the global electronics industry more than $32 billion for initial compliance and about $3 billion annually to maintain compliance, according to a study done for the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) by researcher Technology Forecasters Inc. (TFI).

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Thursday, June 12, 2008

Business to business (B2B) Marketing & SEO
Posted on June 11, 2008 at 4:42 pm .
Filed under: Search Engine Marketing, Search Engine Optimization — Zafar Ahmed

In the fields of e-commerce, B2B is the process of buying, selling and exchanging of products, services or information between business organizations through an electronic platform. All business transactions between the two businesses take place by means of electronic systems – e-procurement, e-ordering, e-payment, EDI (electronic data interchange), etc. The emerging B2B models revolutionize the way business is conducted and all the internet, technology and computer related changes therefore means that the marketing strategy for B2B companies become more efficient but even more competitive.

Some businesses may experience difficulty in finding the best marketing strategy that gives them the result that they want. There could be many reasons for this and many would think that if a marketing strategy or marketing plan fails, improvisation is needed. This is the truth, but how do you improvise? And more importantly, where do you start?

What you already know: Start by improvising the B2B marketing objective. It is an essential part of the B2B marketing strategy because the plans will be drawn based on the objective.

What you should know: After setting the objective, you sometimes get so tied up with the situation at hand and therefore decisions are made hastily based on the short-term results. Instead of thinking ‘This is good, let’s do it!’ try to think like ‘This is good but in 3 years time where can it bring us?’ Be critical and analytical, make a constructive criticism then decide, constantly reflecting upon the objective. This is how brilliant decisions are made.

If the plans do run parallel with the objective, next is to look at the technical side of the B2B marketing strategy.

What you already know: Determine the target audience and the reasons why clients should deal with you. Determine the strength and weaknesses of your business and the business of your competitors. Market the benefits of your product/service to your clients and show them how their problems can be solved. This is the ‘How do you look for clients?’ aspect.

What you should know: The technical properties that also need to be looked into is the ‘How do clients look for you?’ aspect. Result oriented marketing strategies of this aspect is by the means of SEO – Search Engine Optimization. Due to the fact that buyers actively look for suppliers, manufacturers, wholesalers, distributors and sellers in general online, it is almost mandatory for businesses to appear online or otherwise get left behind.

Being present online is only a minor first step. The next big step is to acquire professional SEO services that will improve traffic. There is a difference between dealing with customers and dealing with business clients. Improving traffic is done mainly for business-to-customers (B2C) but B2B requires not only traffic but targeted placements of links to your website on quality online directories – directories themselves that are capable of generating the significant amount of traffic required.

Other quick tips on B2B marketing strategies:

1.Banner advertising could be effective but it depends on the web site’s traffic and also the ability to capture viewer’s attention. Not recommended for companies with low marketing budgets.

2-E-mail marketing is effective but do not spam. Instead, use targeted one-on-one emails to prospective customers.

3-Viral marketing is marketing by word of mouth. Able to reach multiple folds of customers, effectiveness depends on the quality of your product/service.

4-Internet branding management is as important as managing your marketing strategy!

Friday, June 6, 2008

Next stop for electronics sourcing could be Vietnam

Vietnam has low-cost labor, but it won't become a serious option for electronics manufacturing until it resolves its critical infrastructure problems।

By James Carbone -- Purchasing, 5/8/2008

“And it's one, two, three, what are we fighting for? Don't ask me, I don't give a damn। My next stop is Vietnam.” —Country Joe McDonald and the Fish, 1965

For many members of the Woodstock Generation in the 1960s, the last place many wanted to be was Vietnam.
But more than 35 years after the end of the war, some U.S. electronics companies have set up operations there and are building printed circuit boards, printers and other equipment. Other companies have announced plans to set up factories in Vietnam to build computers and components.
As with China, India and Eastern Europe, Vietnam is attracting the interest of U.S. based and other global electronics companies because it offers cheap labor. The average wage of an assembly work in China is about $1 per hour. In Vietnam it is 65-67¢.

ARTICLE

SOWGRO: B2B Internet Marketing

Ideas You Can Sow To Help Grow Healthier Pipelines

B2B Sales Optimization or B2B Marketing Automation? It’s all a matter of perspective.
Posted by tmiechiels on Jan 12 2008 Marketing Automation
One of the most common complaints and challenges among B2B companies is that marketing ‘leads’ all too often find their way into an abyss somewhere after marketing hands the lead off to sales. You’ve probably heard the crazy (but sadly true) stats, that something like 78% of B2B leads are mishandled and not followed up properly and on a timely basis. Sadder still, some ridiculous number like 90% of those leads end up buying from a competitor within 6 months. No CFO, or CEO would likely be happy if that were the case at their company. The people that should really be irked at this issue are the sales people themselves who are compensated based on their ability to close sales.
There are many ways to attack this problem, one of the most popular these days is introducing a marketing automation or automated lead nurturing system. Many companies have popped up with solutions in this space, some better than others, all promising the same thing; to capture, score, grade, route, and automatically follow up with, new (and old) leads. I absolutely love this stuff. What I love most about it is how it gets the sales people (both front lines, and management) suddenly proactive, and engaged in lead workflow and management processes. These solutions arm sales reps with power, tools, and insight in many cases they never knew was out there. It’s like giving them a loyal, razor sharp, and tenacious (but gentle), 24-7 executive sales assistant. I have yet to demo these sorts of systems for a sales team and not have them get absolutely excited about what it would do for their ability to minimize dropped leads, and maximize their close rates. In my experience my clients sign on for these systems more for their ability to optimize and automate the selling process, than for the marketing automation features and capabilities (although those are great too).
If you haven’t checked out these sorts of systems in awhile, you should. They are infiltrating there way into even the smallest of companies and at an astonishing rate. It’s not a six figure proposition anymore. It’s a ridiculous ROI scenario as these systems make every additional sales rep, and marketing dollar, that much more effective. Is it a sales optimization system, or a marketing automation system? At the end of the day it doesn’t much matter, just do it.
If I Build It Will They Come?

Posted by tmiechiels on Sep 06 2007 General

After sitting on the sidelines for way too long, I took the leap and setup a WordPress Blog। So far so good. While there are many great B2B Marketing blogs out there, I thought I’d start one dedicated solely to internet marketing. There is so much happening with technology, marketing automation, social/viral, etc. I figure this blog can be dedicated to helping people become aware of tools and methods they can use to market more effectively online. I hope that this blog will reach and attract other b2b marketers, both client side and agency side, and by everyone sharing ideas and content it will become a viable resource.
B2B Marketers Embrace Custom Content
Custom content is an increasingly critical aspect of the B2B marketer’s portfolio, according to a new study by Junta42 and B2B Magazine. In order to strengthen their positioning and generate more leads, marketers are investing more actively than ever before in white papers, case studies, email newsletters, blogs and custom events.
The study surveyed 150 marketing decision makers earlier this spring. It asked them, among other things, to share the percentage of their marketing budgets that currently go toward custom content/publishing, and to identify whether that was an increase or decrease from previous years.
According to the research, B2B marketers will spend 29.4% of their total marketing budget for 2008 on custom content. For 42% of them, this was an increase from 2007. Only 12% of them decreased the amount they will spend on custom content generation (while the rest will stay even).

What does it mean? That marketers are now relying on custom content to cut through the market noise, build credibility and position themselves as thought leaders.
What does it mean for you?
Well, you might be in one of the companies out in front of this trend. In this case, your company is investing in content development that is both provocative and relevant to your targeted customers. If you’re behind the curve in this regard, it means that you’re missing out on sales opportunities (and better conversion rates). You are missing a clear opportunity to differentiate in a crowded market.
Interestingly, custom content and other forms of thought leadership tend to represent a relatively cost effective means of achieving market differentiation. Smaller firms can level the playing field with their larger rivals. Market leaders can deepen their strengths as a brand of choice.
Today’s customers are not just seeking products and services. They are seeking guidance and authority. If they are going to make a high stakes investment, they want confidence that their solution provider can deliver measurable business value and has a strong sense of what is coming next. Custom content is a growing aspect of the market mix because it fills this deeply felt need.


89।5% of Marketers Surveyed Say They Will Spend as Much or More in the Last Half of 2008 Than They Did in the First Half

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--James W. Obermayer, executive director of the Sales Lead Management Association (SLMA) today announced the results of the Mid-year 2008 Marketing Study Presented by BtoB Magazine and the SLMA. The full report is available from the SLMA and the top line statistics are available from the BtoB Lead Generation Guide 2008.
“One of the startling findings,” Obermayer comments, “is that marketers in B2B said that 45.2% will spend more in the last half of the year and 44.3% will spend about the same as the first half. We see very little pull-back from those that are spending marketing dollars. Only 10.2% said they will spend less.”
The study, surveyed 20,400 marketers and SLMA members. “47.25% of those who responded to the survey,” remarked Susan Campanale, VP of Marketing and Membership of the SLMA, “said that their biggest obstacle to spending more money on marketing is that they don’t have reports to show the ROI for what they spend.” In other findings (49.8%) showed that a marketer’s biggest priority in the last half is increasing lead generation activities.
Additional findings in the report include the percentage of new business that comes from inquiries, the percentage of the marketing budget spent on lead generating activities, and the percentage of salespeople who close the loop and report on the disposition of inquiries.
Online buying with distributors continues to grow

By Jim Carbone -- Purchasing, 6/5/2008 12:37:00 PM
Sales transactions via the Web are still a small portion of the electronics distribution industry's sales but they are growing, according to a Purchasing survey.
Catalog distributors report some of the strongest sales via the Web. Digi-Key says 62% of its sales are online sales, which is up from 54% in 2006. Mouser reports 35% of its sales are from the Web, up from 31% in 2006. Allied derived 20% of its sales on line, up from 19% from the previous year. Seventeen percent of Newark’s revenue was from Web sales.
Others that reported online buying in the double digits include Air Electro, All American, Beyond, Cumberland, Fedco, Flame, Garrett, Jaco, JRH, Kensington, Master, Nedco, Powell, Schuster, Simple, Symmetry and Waldom। Of the Top 75, 44 distributors offer online buying. This is down from 2006 when 55 distributors offered e-procurement. Twenty-one of the top distributors reported double-digit sales via the Web, which is up from 14 in 2006.

ARTICLE

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Follow the Money With Marketing Dashboards


Marketing dashboards are essential for businesses to effectively gauge and improve their return on marketing investment. Dashboards not only put pertinent data at the fingertips of product managers, the systems also allow them to know the impact of key revenue drivers and to drive integrated decision-making and ownership.


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Forty-five percent of marketing executives view return on marketing investment (ROMI) as a top driver compelling their organizations to track and measure marketing performance Verio brings something extra to Linux: reliability. Click to learn about free test., according to a recent Aberdeen Group survey of 728 companies. This begs the question: Can the implementation of a marketing dashboard help alleviate the pressure related to improving ROMI?

ROMI is commonly defined as the optimization of marketing spend through the creation of a model that uses valid and objective performance metrics. Increased marketing effectiveness, customer profitability and market share for the same amount of marketing spend are some of the results of improved ROMI.

Marketing dashboards can indeed help companies yield better results per dollar spent, according to MarketingNPV, a specialty consulting firm focused on measuring and improving the financial return from marketing investments.

"Marketing dashboards are the tangible manifestation of the underlying business process for measuring ROMI," says Pat LaPointe, the group's managing partner. "A good dashboard clearly establishes links between the relevant variables while continuing to sharpen hypotheses about what is known, anecdotally believed and unknown. That's how progress in measurement is made."


Correlating Dashboards

Sixty-seven percent of Best-in-Class companies, compared with 49 percent of Laggards, use ROMI as a metric for measuring the success of their marketing dashboard initiatives, according to Aberdeen survey results. At the same time, 53 percent of Best-in-Class companies, compared with only 4 percent of Laggards, report that their ROMI has improved by more than 5 percent over the past year. Nearly one-third (33 percent) of survey respondents report that their ROMI has improved by more than 10 percent. Also, 42 percent of Best-in-Class companies currently have defined performance metrics to determine ROMI compared with 17 percent of Laggards.

Taken together, these research findings suggest a strong correlation between implementation of a marketing dashboard and improvement in ROMI. The correlation is understandable, given that a marketing dashboard can provide insights into the relative performance of different marketing programs, channels and other levers over time and on an ongoing basis. It can also provide insights into the interconnectedness and "interaction effects" of these different programs, channels, and levers, as well as predict future outcomes based on different marketing tactics and different amounts of marketing spend.

Case in Point

Consider the experience of Discover Financial Services. With more than US$2.5 billion in revenues and 51 million cardholders, Discover ranks as the third largest credit card company in the United States. It also has one of the largest marketing budgets of any consumer brand, spending approximately $700 million per year on advertising E-Mail Marketing Software - Free Trial. Click Here. and promotion.

In recent years, Discover has dramatically expanded the number of channels it uses for customer acquisition as well as the number of features and benefits in its product portfolio. To remain competitive and optimize returns, the company has also become increasingly sophisticated in terms of pricing strategy. This high level of business complexity, combined with an unwavering focus on business growth and performance optimization, has forced the company to become smarter and more disciplined about how it allocates assets across the business.

Discover refines its integrated marketing model on an ongoing basis by comparing the relative productivity HP LaserJet M3035 MFP Series - Save up to $500. Starting at $1,599. of different media, channels and tactics for customer acquisition and retention, according to Margo Georgiadis, Discover's chief marketing officer.

"In the old world, when we did almost all of our acquisition by direct mail, it was okay to be more siloed," she noted. "But now that we're using multiple channels to acquire customers, as well as to stimulate portfolio usage, all areas have to be tightly integrated from a business planning and analysis point of view."

With different departments using similar media, the company needs to keep from over-investing and also from making conflicting investments. In addition, it needs to understand the interaction effects of mass marketing programs. "If you don't lay that out in a disciplined way, you can lose control of what exactly is driving your results and where the next level of performance opportunity is," says Georgiadis, noting that a channel that performs well initially can degrade over time, particularly within certain segments.

Hence, the need for a marketing dashboard that can be used to track and measure the relative productivity of a channel over time. At the highest level, Discover's marketing dashboard captures virtually all of the data that the executive team requires to drive the business. This means tracking not only top-line revenue growth but also the key drivers beneath it to make sure that everything is in alignment for management planning purposes. Each area of the business also has its own separate scorecard. This allows the line executives that run the various business units (including customer acquisition, portfolio management and pricing) to understand how they're contributing financially to the whole of the business.

Driving the Business Further

The marketing dashboard puts pertinent data at the fingertips of the product managers as well so that they can understand the financial impact of their potential decision-making today and in the future. Using the dashboard, they can make changes to key assumptions, look at the business over different time periods, and test different scenarios and pricing decisions. In short, it allows them to know the impact of key revenue drivers and to drive integrated decision-making and ownership.

"It's very easy for people to get overly focused on their top-line revenue targets," says Georgiadis. "What are my sales goals? What are my volume goals? How many new accounts did I bring in? But you also want them to understand: What did I do to yield? What did I do to my relative expense productivity? What's going to happen in year one versus years two, three and four? Am I going to change structurally the payback of my investment? Putting a marketing dashboard in the hands of our key business teams forces them to think much more strategically about how to drive the business further and faster."

Discover has vast resources, including a 150-person analytics team. However, Georgiadis dissuades her team from relying too heavily upon them when it comes to marketing performance reporting. "I think, as a business leader, if you look at those permutations yourself, you become much more insightful about your opportunities to improve," she says.

The marketing dashboard makes the data actionable. It also makes the marketing team accountable for not only short-term profit Over 800,000 High Quality Domains Available For Your Business. Click Here. but also long-term profit. "We can track all sales, all balances, the yield, and most of the key expense lines for the entire company," she commented. "We can feed this information into campaign reporting and planning models and run scenarios quarter by quarter. Putting marketing dashboards at people's desktops makes them smarter about how to manage the business over time."

Smarter Marketing Decisions

More than just a technology for bringing data to life, marketing dashboards are a stimulus for disseminating marketing performance information to decision makers and other relevant stakeholders, for instilling an organizational focus on marketing accountability and performance measurement, and for defining marketing benchmarks and goals. Marketing dashboards are also a source for organizational learning and continuous process improvement.

Importantly, the color-coded bar charts, pies, icons and funnels that are dynamically generated by marketing dashboards allow executives to rely far less on intuition and anecdotal evidence and far more on scientific, fact-based evidence when it comes to making marketing decisions that minimize waste and maximize ROMI

'Cloud computing' seen as next wave for technology investors
Merrill Lynch Note
David Hamilton, Financial Post Published: Wednesday, June 04, 2008
Related Topics
Financial Services Sector



Slated as the next paradigm shift in computer technology, "cloud computing" has the potential to shower billions in revenues on companies that embrace it. Companies that don't make the switch, however, may be left out in the rain.
In a recent research note The Cloud Wars: $100+ billion at stake published by Merrill Lynch, the burgeoning technology concept is seen as a $160-billion addressable market opportunity, including $95-billion in business and productivity applications, and another $65-billion in online advertising.
Cloud, unlike traditional computing, is free from the confines of desktop-based software. Bare bones computer terminals run and store programs from a third-party server connected to the Web, eliminating the chance that work is lost if the computer crashes. With applications automatically allocated on the server, clients are only charged for the space and services they use, bypassing the need to buy pricey in-house hardware.
According Merrill Lynch, there are 10 companies -- shown in the table here-- that will have increasing exposure to cloud computing that they identify as "core plays."
"Cloud equivalents exist today for most business and personal productivity apps," says Merrill Lynch analyst Justin Post. He sees the roughly $2-billion software segment switching over to OnDemand programs, noting that cloud applications for e-mail and word processing are now equivalent to traditional software.
The study says that Google and Salesforce.com are in a position to benefit from the concept because they deliver their core services through the Internet. Similar to electric utilities charging for the amount of services rendered, they open up opportunities for economies of scale by cost-effectively sharing IT resources.
"It's an entirely different way to think about supplying software and other computing functions," says Nick Carr, author of The Big Picture that describes how cloud computing will shape the future of the high-tech industry.
"I think for a lot of the traditional companies whether it is software companies like Microsoft, Oracle and SAP, or hardware companies like Dell or EMC, it's going to be a very tough transition to go from the old world to the new world."
Tera Capital president Howard Sutton says that virtualization software is one of the key expansion areas of cloud technology.
"VMware pretty much has all of the market share." Virtualization is the technology that makes "virtual" machines from physical ones. With it, devices such as servers or storage devices function as multiple virtual resources, increasing their efficiency.
Citrix has a virtualization product that it acquired from B. C.-based XenSource in 2007 that is competing against VMware, and Microsoft has begun to rollout virtualization product with official releases slated for the fall.
"For Microsoft, it's important for them to break into virtualization and they're trying to play catch up," Mr. Sutton says.
Cloud, or as it is sometimes called, software as a service (SaaS), is becoming pervasive and computer users are finding cloud applications useful for "non-critical" applications, according to a recent investment note by Goldman Sachs. Already, people are cloud computing when they are using Web 2.0 applications like Facebook and blogs.
Goldman Sachs analyst Sarah Friar says SaaS is becoming cheaper and easier for companies to switch to cloud systems. She anticipates "strong growth for the data migration market over the next several years with Informatica benefiting from the overall growth, as well as its customers switching from an in-house developed solution to productized software." She is also bullish on cloud computing trendsetter Salesforce. com.
For the time being, switching over to cloud computing remains more difficult for larger companies, but there will be more reason to make the move in the years to come.
"Given focus on integration, 'vertical' application providers are offering more integrated product suites," Ms. Friar says.
"[Small and medium-sized businesses] remain more open to SaaS adoption; large enterprises still view it as a riskier proposition."
Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Aberdeen's Insights on Field Rep Productivity
The Aberdeen Group's just released a new report on mobile enhancements to sales force productivity. Their findings further emphasize the urgency of sales force productivity, and the importance of new tools that improve it:
sales productivity is a crucial business pain twice as often as other pressures
in top performing sales organizations, sales force productivity is supported by strong performance management enabling tools that reduce downtime for sales reps, enabling them to conduct more business.
those tools provide new metrics that enable a holistic understanding of how to improve the productivity of an individual, group, or entire sales matrix.
those new measures include evidence of efforts wasted on dead-end leads. In top performing organizations, wasted sales efforts are known and minimized.
Posted by John Cousineau

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

How much does it cost to run an eBusiness operation? What is the true value of an online customer? To find out, Forrester recently surveyed 68 current members of our eBusiness, Channel And Product Management Research Panel to learn about how much they're spending to run online operations, how they're measuring the online channel, and whether they spend more or less to acquire and serve customers online versus in other channels. Results from our survey show that in 2008, overall corporate spending on customer-facing online presence is increasing — from an average spend of $39 million in 2007 to $42 million in 2008 — with the lions' share of that spending going toward the cost of goods, marketing and advertising, and fulfillment costs. Panelists also reported that conventional wisdom about online customers holds true: Acquiring customers online costs less than one-third of the cost of acquiring customers in other channels. Our panelists told us that they spend less to service these customers, as well.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Chip Industry to Grow 4.6%

Economic slowdown in the U.S. has not hurt semiconductor sales so far.

By Jim Carbone -- Purchasing, 6/3/2008 2:28:00 PM

Worldwide semiconductor revenue will reach $286.5 billion in 2008, a 4.6% increase from 2007 revenue of $273.9 billion, according to the latest forecast by researcher Gartner Inc. Gartner has slightly increased its growth rate from February when it forecast a 3.4% increase for 2008.

CHIP INDUSTRY GROWTH

Supplier Networks: The Cost Saving Connection

Supplier Networks: The Cost-Saving Connection

Christopher Dwyer

The growing disconnect between enterprises and their supply base has consistently resulted in higher invoice-processing costs, decreased visibility into spend, and more instances of non-compliance. Through the advent of supplier networks, enterprises are able to more quickly connect with their suppliers and ensure a long-lasting bond that can generate lower costs and quick turnaround on sourcing, procurement, and payment activities. Aberdeen research has found that enterprises currently utilizing supplier networks have seen nearly 30% lower processing costs than organizations without a network

SUPPLIER NETWORK ARTICLE







http://www.aberdeen.com/c/report/research_briefs/5180-RB-supplier-networks-savings.pdf

Making Money via B2B Trading

By Freearticleonline.Info
How does one earn money with Business to Business (B2B trading) as trading agents, distributors, manufacturers, or wholesalers? There are a variety of Internet research tools to assist B2B marketers to locate best selling B2B product .


MAKING MONEY ARTICLE

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

SaaS (Software as a Service) cost Savings impress CIO's

SaaS cost savings impress CIOs
By Zach Church, News Writer
03 Jun 2008 | SearchCIO-Midmarket.com




Midmarket companies are taking to the Software as a Service (SaaS) method of delivery more aggressively than their larger and smaller brethren, a symptom of their desire to grow quickly through inexpensive means, a new survey has found.

"SaaS is a means to increase the capabilities of the company at a faster pace and at lower costs, and that is where midsized companies [are]," said Bruce Guptill, managing director at Saugatuck Technology Inc., the Westport, Conn.-based consulting firm that conducted the survey.

"They want to put money into growing," Guptill said. "What can we get out of it now? What can we get out of it this year?"

More SaaS resources
Gartner: Hosted email more economically beneficial

SMB SaaS sales robust, but holdouts remain

Unlike in the midmarket, where SaaS is more likely to be a full-blown deployment, the size and structure of IT at a very large organization allows for more flexibility in the way of testing, Guptill said. Larger IT departments have more room to test a program in just one area or department. Small companies, on the other hand, just aren't focused enough on IT to tread too far into the SaaS waters.

Midmarket IT shops are in a unique position to employ a SaaS program across a business with the hopes of cutting costs and simplifying work operations.

In fact, CIOs and other business and IT executives at midmarket companies "indicate greater familiarity with SaaS than executives at other sizes of firms," according to Saugatuck's May survey results.

Eighty-six percent of those surveyed at companies with fewer than 500 employees said they were "familiar," "very familiar" or "extremely familiar" with SaaS. That's as much as 20% more than IT executives at companies of other sizes.

Thomas Lockwood, CIO at Car Toys Inc. in Seattle, would probably fall under "extremely familiar." He's been running a SaaS business intelligence program from Bellevue, Wash.-based PivotLink Inc. for five years.

"It's not our core business, and they just take care of everything for us and make it really easy," Lockwood said. "To the users, they can't tell the difference so it just takes one more thing off my team's plate that they don't have to deal with." Lockwood runs a 20-member IT department at the 1,200-plus employee mobile entertainment and cell phone retailer.

Car Toys also uses a SaaS version of Oracle Financials, hosted through a third party. Lockwood said he'll look at other SaaS applications when, and if, he decides to make changes in applications used by the company. He said he's happy with the two he's using.

"On the PivotLink side, it's the ease of use," he said. "And on the Oracle side, it's the cost savings."

In addition, 95% of IT executives at companies with 500 employees said they were satisfied with the SaaS programs they are using, up from the already high 84% at companies of all sizes.

"We're not trying to say, for example, that SaaS is a midmarket phenomenon," Guptill said. "But it is in that midmarket where we see the most aggressive SaaS adoption."

And across all company sizes, 40% of survey respondents said they use at least one SaaS application. Saugatuck expects that to move to 70% by 2012 for companies with more than 100 employees.


We're not [saying] that SaaS is a midmarket phenomenon. But it is in that midmarket where we see the most aggressive SaaS adoption.
Bruce Guptill
managing director, Saugatuck Technology Inc.


Of course, vendors hoping to cash in on this trend are selling SaaS applications covering everything from timecard management to full-blown ERP programs, with varying degrees of success.

Guptill said the survey found IT managers primarily taking to customer relationship management and workplace collaboration software SaaS programs.

His guess for the reason behind the success: "That's pretty much where most of the SaaS activity is on the vendor side, isn't it?"

Not faring so well in the SaaS arena right now are ERP, supply chain management, compliance and risk management programs, results Guptill called "puzzling."

"That's an area outside of what you want to do as a company, but you have to get it done," he said. "Why not outsource?"

Guptill said Saugatuck will conduct a new survey to determine why CIOs are spurning SaaS programs in

How To Market in a Recession?

How to Market in a Recession

Posted by John Quelch on February 19, 2008 9:16 AM

The signs of an imminent recession are all around us. The spillover from the subprime mortgage crisis is weakening both consumer confidence and the consumer spending--much of it on credit--that has been buoying the US economy.

Companies should bear eight factors in mind when making their marketing plans for 2008 and 2009:

READ ARTICLES

Procurement -- Challenges Facing Procurement Organizations

Procurement -- Challenges Facing Procurement Organizations
Published: June 02, 2008 in Knowledge@Wharton




The Importance of Procurement in a Global Environment

Until recently, procurement was a necessary, but seldom celebrated, component of multinational corporations. But times have changed: These days, procurement organizations within companies are playing pivotal roles in the success of global firms in ways that old-fashioned purchasing managers could never have imagined. In this special report, Wharton faculty and procurement experts at The Boston Consulting Group discuss why the procurement function has risen to such prominence in a highly competitive global environment, and how, as supplies of critical commodities tighten and prices rise, companies can strategize to mitigate these and other risks.

Part 2: Challenges Facing Procurement Organizations

Procurement has become an integral part of corporate performance and is drawing increased attention from senior management. In this interview, Andreas Gocke, a BCG partner and managing director, spoke with Knowledge@Wharton about the most critical challenges facing procurement organizations over the next five to 10 years, including training and employee development, managing global sourcing offices and ensuring collaboration across corporate departments.

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Keeping it Local

Phil Gee, Nu Horizons
Phil Gee explains to Neil Tyler why global success is driven in no small part by keeping focused on local conditions.

In September last year Phil Gee was appointed as VP Sales Europe at Nu Horizons, a global distributor of advanced technology semiconductor, display, illumination and system solutions.

It’s been a hectic few months for the company and for Gee what with new or extended franchise agreements and further expansion into Europe.

Nu Horizons was a late entrant into the European market. In August 2006 it acquired the Coventry based distributor DT Electronics and then it proceeded to open sales offices in both Germany and Austria.

Gee’s appointment, with responsibility for the UK, Germany and Austria, came at a challenging time for both the company but also for the industry.

Last month he took some time out to talk to CIE and update us on how things were progressing.

Read Article

LED's and their Target Market are changing Rapidly

Emerging LED technologies suitable for commercial and transportation lighting applications are opening up new opportunities for electronics distributors beyond more conventional indication and backlighting. This, in turn, is leading to a larger, yet more fragmented market comprising not just traditional OEM design customers but also ‘end user’ customers with little or no electronics design expertise and ‘intermediate’ organisations who want to keep discrete design to a minimum.

As well as offering a broad portfolio of LEDs and supporting components, distributors wishing to satisfy the needs of all of these target markets must be able to provide real ‘plug-and-play’ solutions backed up by technical support and development tools that ensure trouble-free migration to LED-based technologies.

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EDS: Arrow, NEDA: Distribution Steady, not in Recession

Tuesday, May 6, 2008
EDS: Arrow, NEDA: Distribution steady, not in recession

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It's day two here at EDS and, as expected, the economy is one of the main issues being discussed.

Arrow president Bill Mitchell kicked off the electronics supply chain event here in Las Vegas Monday afternoon to a standing room only crowd. In his presentation, much of which focused on opportunity in Asia-Pac, he said, "I'm absolutely certain that the media is talking us into a recession," when discussing the total US economy.

Mitchell, who noted distributors may not be seeing boom time sales growth, said business and revenues are still healthy and growing for many of the distributors attending the keynote in the Paris hotel convention center.

"This feels nothing like 2001," he said, putting many anxious attendees at ease, "but what's going to happen, I don't know."

NEDA (National Electronic Distributors Association) executive VP Robin Gray echoed Mitchell's statements at this morning's annual NEDA trends breakfast. Gray, who made it clear that his presentation was not a forecast but a report on industry trends, noted recent numbers from the ECA (Electronics Components Association) that showed flat sales, but no hard and true signs of a downturn for distribution.

"We really don't see a downturn in the industry. In fact, I talked to one mid-sized distributor who said they just had the best quarter they ever had in the last quarter. We talk to other distributors and they say that sales are flat, but they don't really see a downturn. But who knows where it's going? I don't, as Mitchell said, he doesn't, and I'm sure you don't. Don't believe the mass media—there isn't a recession going on in our industry, yet."

Both Mitchell and Gray made their statements noting distributor opportunities for growth, like those in the military and lighting markets.

Many of the folks I spoke with post keynote and breakfast were energized by Mitchell's and Gray's words. But aren't we always energized when we are told what we want to hear?

It was extremely wise of Mitchell and Gray to point out that while distribution is not trending downward now, it could in the near future. While we are not in a recession, I continue to maintain that the economy is in a recession-like state, where consumer dollars are being squeezed more and more.

That, of course, means less consumer spending. New construction starts, a potentially large avenue for the lighting market, are also down. While the military market is working hard now to keep up with the war, who knows what our situation will be after November's election. And while business loans are low, getting them isn't so easy, pinching business investment in IT.

Gartner ups 2008 Semi Revenue - but!

Gartner ups 2008 semi revenue estimate, but still has inventory concerns 6/2/2008

While Gartner continues to forecast low single-digit revenue growth of 4.6% for the semiconductor market in 2008, the research company notes the estimate has more to do with supply-side factors than weakness in demand or the economy. "A leading indicator we are concerned about is the level of semiconductor supply chain inventory, which has increased in the past three quarters," says Gartner's Richard Gordon.

2008 Estimate

Microsoft Flashes Brief Glimpse of Windows 7

By Walaika Haskins
TechNewsWorld
05/28/08 1:44 PM PT

Microsoft has been stingier on details about Windows 7 than it was about Windows Vista while that OS was in development. But the company took time at the D: All Things Digital conference Tuesday to show off a few features it intends to include in its next operating system, including multitouch capabilities.

Click on link below

Windows 7

Adobe Acrobat Swings Into Web 2.0

By Erika Morphy
TechNewsWorld
06/02/08 12:00 PM PT

Adobe has released a new version of Acrobat as well as Acrobat.com, a collection of collaborative online tools. Acrobat 9's biggest revision is the inclusion of Flash support, while Acrobat.com offers ways for PDF users to collaborate more closely when creating and working with documents online.

Click on Link Below

WEB 2.0

The Future of Electronics

Date: 03/06/08
The future of electronics – and how it affects your business
Come and join the Electronics Knowledge Transfer Network (EKTN) in Cambridge on Wednesday 2nd July as it takes a critical look at changes in the electronics industry and identifies new opportunities. The event will highlight the region’s insight into plastic electronics, organic semiconductors, microprocessor design and wireless communications.


The Cambridge Network is delivering a series of events in the East of England for the EKTN, to facilitate knowledge transfer between stakeholders in the electronics industry. Come along and learn about the latest trends and opportunities which could impact your business.

The Cambridge event will draw on the region’s special insight into plastic electronics, organic semiconductors, microprocessor design and wireless communications. Talks will be provided by Cambridge Consultants, TTP and Cintelliq.

The event will take place at the Trinity Centre, Cambridge Science Park, starting at 3pm and finishing with a networking drinks reception where you'll have the opportunity to get to know each other.

This event is designed for the widest range of stakeholders in the electronics industry including those involved in components, assembly, products, supply chain, embedded software, environmental impact and standards.

Organisations and individuals interested attending this event will need to join the Electronics Knowledge Transfer Network. Membership is free and can be undertaken when registering to attend this event:

LCD Poised for Significant Growth

LCD market poised for strong growth
By James Carbone -- Purchasing, 5/22/2008 2:06:00 PM

The global large-sized liquid crystal display (LCD) market will expand to $88.9 billion in 2008, up about 20% from $74.1 billion in 2007. Large-size LCD panels measure 10 inches or longer diagonally.

Large-sized TFT-LCD panel revenue is expected to reach $120.7 billion in 2012, maintaining a compound annual growth rate of 10.2%, according to researcher iSuppli.. Televisions, notebook computers and desktop monitors are driving large-sized LCD market growth. Large-sized LCD panel unit shipments in 2008 are projected to rise to 458.9 million units, up 17.7% from 389.8 million in 2007. The large-sized LCD panel market is expected to reach 737.6 million units by 2012, expanding at a CAGR of 13.6% from 2007.

Despite the economic slowdown in the U.S shipments of large-sized LCD panels in the first quarter of 2008 declined by only 2.8% compared to the fourth quarter of 2007. Generally, the first quarter is seasonally slow, but this year there was strong than expected demand in March to offset negative growth in January and February, says iSuppli.

Most panel buyers are expecting the LCD market to be in tight supply in the second and third quarters due to slower capacity expansions in the first half of 2008. However, more capacity will be added in the second half. Panel suppliers are expected to spend about $17 billion in 2008 to increase their capacity at higher-generation fabs.

Having SaaS Your Way

Having SaaS Your Way: Configuration Sophistication
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By Erika Morphy
CRM Buyer
06/02/08 4:00 AM PT

A few years ago, companies that needed highly specialized features would often opt for on-premise software with its attendant implementation and integration headaches instead of considering the relatively primitive on-demand offerings. SaaS has grown up, though -- and the Platform as a Service model allows a level of configurability that early on-demand adopters could only dream about.

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Monday, June 2, 2008

Distributors Supply-Chain Role Grows

Service is key

Component manufacturers are servicing fewer OEMs and EMS providers directly. The manufacturers they do service are very large and most of them have moved manufacturing to Asia or other low-cost areas. Component manufacturers are relying on distributors more to service more of their customers, especially in North America.

“Distributors have become responsible for literally 99% of the customer base,” says Roy Vallee of Avnet Electronics. “Most suppliers we deal with now sell to 50-250 accounts directly. And we are servicing over 100,000 customers.” About five years ago suppliers would service between 1,000-2,000 customers directly, he says.

Suppliers want to reach those hundreds of thousands of customers that distribution services, says Bill Mitchell, chairman and CEO of Arrow Electronics in Melville N.Y. “Our sweet spot is small- and medium-size customers, and suppliers want to partner with us to reach that customer base,” he says.

Many of those companies have between 100-1,000 employees, don't have the purchasing, engineering and logistics staffs or IT capabilities and need a distribution partner to provide those services, according to Mitchell.

fetch Solutions SaaS Benefits to the Strategic Partners

fetch Solutions SaaS Benefiits to the Strategic Partners

Benefits of 'Software as a Service'

Software as a Service (SaaS) is an emergent mechanism of delivering software applications to customers over the Internet. Software as a Service or On Demand software can be implemented rapidly and eliminates the infrastructure and ongoing costs that traditional applications require. cyn.in offers all the following advantages of Software as a Service.
Low cost of entry
As opposed to on premise software, SaaS is delivered to organizations as a subscription model, usually billed on a per user per month basis. This means that the costs are granular in nature and are incurred only as long as benefits are achieved. This does away with the enormously large up front payments and massive annual license fees. cyn.in offers a simple pay as you go pricing with no long term contractual requirements.
Zero Infrastructure - Reduced Overheads
Since the application is hosted by the service provider, investing in expensive infrastructure is no longer required. All large initial investments on hardware, licenses, databases, ongoing overheads of employing and training IT staff, software and hardware maintenance and upgrades are managed by cyn.in. Customers can access and use the application on the Internet through any browser. No local infrastructure meaning; no headache of upgrading aging technology, and a complete protection from unforeseen expense spikes.
Single Instance, Multi-Tenant Efficiency
cyn.in is implements a multi-tenant architecture. This means that the cost of all software, infrastructure and expertise is shared by a large number of customers. This drastically improves implementation speed and cost effectiveness over a standard ASP model.
Cost-effective Infinite Scalability
The pay as you go model of SaaS, gives the customer the freedom to adapt to the changing usage of the software, on demand. For example: You can buy the application for two employees to start with and then after a few months decide to adapt it for a department of 10 people, and on achieving measurable benefits, the software can be provided to the entire organization of say 5,000 users. Software delivered as services provide all of this scalability, without requiring customers to plan for it.
Increased Accessibility and Productivity
Web based applications enable you to save your information on the Internet, hence making it easily accessible from anywhere. Your business knowledge is made accessible to all your knowledge workers increasing collaborative productivity. Geographically separated teams function better with better information availability.
Higher quality offerings at lower costs
SaaS applications that are built to scale pass on potential savings to the customer. As more and more customers are added, the operating cost for each customer continues to drop. This gives the SaaS provider the ability to constantly better the offering while lowering costs.
Easy to implement
Since, the solution is delivered via the Internet; Software as a Service completely eliminates installation and setup at the customer’s end. Users can be up and running very quickly.
Improved Security
Software as a Service providers are in the business of providing uninterrupted reliable services. Vendors understand that data must be backed up religiously, and information security is of fanatic priority. Skilled resources, network redundancies, stand-by power, up-to-date security and intrusion detection are mandatory infrastructure required to provide an enterprise class service. Such level infrastructural investment is usually an overkill for a single organization or team.
Freedom of Choice
The Software as a Service model gives the customer the freedom to easily make the switch from one solution provider to another. This is possible as there has been no locked in investments towards the IT infrastructure of servers, software or security systems. This freedom to easily walk away from a provider, works as a motivator to introduce better features and ensure optimum performance.
Defined Predictable Spends
Service based software operates on agreed pre-defined fixed charges. This enables you to predict the costs and helps you budget for your yearly financial expenses. The low-cost of the package does not drastically affect the figures for unplanned usage of the service.
Platform Independence
SaaS based solutions are hosted centrally with the service provider. No software to be installed at the customer’s premises. The software can be accessed on the Internet via a browser only. On Demand applications can be used by Windows, Linux or Mac users, providing true platform independence.
Focus internal IT initiatives only on direct, line of business technology
SaaS strategy not only eliminates the need for additional IT infrastructure spends, it substantially takes the burden off your internal IT staff. With the SaaS advantage, your staff does not have to manage upgrades, troubleshoot problems for generic software applications. This helps the company to direct limited in-house IT resources towards more business oriented initiatives. These business oriented initiatives are the ones that are usually un-out-source-able and require the focus of internal IT teams.

What is going on in the other Side of the World?

Taiwan distributors compete by bolstering in-house R&D

( 01 Jun 2008 )

by Catherine Cheng, Editor


ECN Asia spoke to Y.K. Chu, Chairman of Taipei Semiconductor Corporations Association, about the distribution landscape in Taiwan. Excerpts:

What is the situation of component distributors in Taiwan?

The OEM industry’s growth has paved a good way for component distributors in Taiwan.

Distributors here have undergone mergers and acquisitions; the winner-takes-all phenomenon has been settled. On the other hand, the competition caused by globalization brings in a micro-profit era. The distributors have to reflect on their current positions and values in the market to decide how to take the next step. Lately, large distributors are focused on adjusting their business structure to raise profit margin. With strong financial background, Taiwan distributors could lead Asia’s business scope. According to reports, 50 percent of the revenues of Taiwan distributors are generated overseas, especially in Asia.

What is Taiwan distributors’ advantage in the China market?

When the shipment scale increases, the competitive advantages would be products portfolio, shipment capability, technical support, and operation performance – all of the advantages are based on the concept of “Return on Working Capital”. Taiwan-based distributors in China are publicly listed companies, so they have the advantage of raising capital from the stock market. But for China distributors, due to the bank’s requirement for real estate mortgage, the cost of collecting capital is twice bigger than a Taiwan distributor. Aside from providing flexibility in shipment, Taiwan distributors are very familiar with the OEM’s shipping pattern, and this pattern is easy for them to duplicate in China. Therefore, they can build up business in a short time.

Many OEMs and ODMs are now considering to move their manufacturing bases to lower labor cost regions other than China. What will be its impact to Taiwan distributors?

Indeed, China has firmly stood as the “world factory” position. However, with the increase of basic labor wage, some OEMs start to shift part of their manufacturing base to other countries. Some Taiwan distributors are now planning to establish offices in Vietnam. Establishing offices and increasing both manpower and capital investments are crucial. At the very beginning, these distributors tend to allocate shipment through existing offices, such as via Singapore. This trend has two important impacts: one is to bolster Vietnam; and the other is to strengthen distributors’ resources to support Southeast Asia.

How will distributors differentiate their products and local services?

Distributors have to establish their capability to develop products according to local features. Most clients prefer a manufacturing company that has in-house R&D. Fortunately, many Taiwan manufacturers can customize features according to clients’ specification.

What will be the hot application in the Asia market?

Consumer electronics will still take the lead in Asia. Popular consumer electronics will appear in the form of personal applications or digital home. The most important trend is the digital transform of traditional analog products. MP3 is the best digitalized example of the portable cassette player. Moreover, the digitalization of security and surveillance systems will stimulate growth for CMOS sensors, storage, and security software.

HIGHLIGHTS OF THE DISTRIBUTION INDUSTRY

The same as with the development of any industry, the evolution of components distribution market in Taiwan can be divided into three stages: emergence of numerous players, mergers and acquisitions (M&As), and then market maturity. Taiwan has about 11 companies involved in components distribution in 2004; six of them have revenues exceeding $500 million, while the rest, over $350 million. One of the leading distributors is World Peace Industrial Group (WPI Group), with revenues reaching $2.5 billion. The year 2005 is said to be the turning point of Taiwan’s distribution industry. The merger of WPI and Silicon Application Corp. (SAC)— which formed WPG Holdings, said to be the biggest component distributor in Taiwan—has led to a series of M&As in tier two distributors. At present, WPG Holdings is one of the top component distributors worldwide, joining the ranks of Avnet, Arrow and Future Electronics. In Asia, Taiwan currently accounts for 22 percent of the overall components distribution revenue; Hong Kong and mainland China account for 68 percent; and the rest, 10 percent.