It's Not About The Technology 198
It's not about the technology | |
author | Raj Karamchedu |
pages | 230 |
publisher | Springer |
rating | 4 |
reviewer | Alex Moskalyuk |
ISBN | 0387233504 |
summary | Developing the craft of thinking for a high-tech corporation |
20 chapters are written from the point of view of tech marketing executive, as Karamchedu tries to answer the question of why some products gain a loyal audience and enjoy commercial success, while the others are simply additions to the dusty shelves of history. Everyone has their favorite comparison, where a technically advanced product does not gain acceptance on the market while a supposedly inferior competitor is rolling in cash. Hey, IBM built an entire theory on how it was safe to let Microsoft sell its not-so-great DOS with IBM PCs in order to push the hardware from the warehouse while the company was preparing the next revision of state-of-the-art OS/2 -- which, of course, everyone will buy on the day of release in order to replace Microsoft's software.
History occasionally teaches tech marketers some curious lessons, and the conclusion that the author comes up is summarized in the book title. The title might sound like an insult to a design engineer, but in most of the cases the success in the market is not guaranteed by superiority of technology. Karamchedu is on the mission to find out why.
The first chapters take us through a conflict inside a company. Seldom will you find a high-tech startup where marketing people do not clash with engineers. Marketers promise the features to the customers in order to adhere to the mantra of "we listen to our customers," only to see feature requests denied by the engineers, since the budgets and deadlines are fixed. Marketers then complain to the executives about lack of response from the engineering staff and their inability to deal with the new features, while engineers fight back, claiming that the product is about to miss the deadline even with existing feature set and overworked staff.
Later, Karamchedu focuses on a second problem, peculiar to high-tech marketers: after being immersed in the technology world for too long, they cannot relate to the customers. Hence grandmas in Best Buy staring at the computer described as "P4 3.0 GHz 256 DDR 40.0 GB DVD/CD-RW" when all she wants to know is whether she can check email and view photos of the grandkids. Marketers forget to empathize with the customers. They spend too much time with engineering, and like to tell customers how the new microprocessor has a much wider front-side bus, or how their new piece of software supports dual-core systems, without really telling the customer how that will improve business processes or increase efficiency.
The third part of the book takes a look at a typical semiconductor company and tries to draw the plan of attack for a starting marketing executive. At this point the book turns into a manual on high-tech marketing, which the author hopes the readers will find useful, as there are no set rules and algorithms for launching successful marketing campaigns in high-tech world.
The book is quite insightful, but one can't help but feel that it is missing something. It will probably prove to be a valuable read to anyone facing the daunting task of marketing a high-tech product, but even though I got to the last page of the book, I found the title to be too terse and dry, lacking concrete examples and not quite coherent as far as the chapter-by-chapter arrangement. The preface and the author's description of the book are available online. It's also strange that in an attempt to write a textbook on high-tech marketing, the author decided to provide no case studies whatsoever. In Search of Stupidity from Apress is a great book about high-tech marketing, since it tells the story of a failed marketing attempt and also tries to figure out the reasons, but in It's Not About the Technology, Karamchedu just tells years of his personal experience, without references to specific companies or projects, which makes the book a compilation of abstractions on high-tech marketing.
In his spare time Alex enjoys reading technology and business titles. He also keeps a collection of free books for readers on a budget." Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Bullsh** detector (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Bullsh** detector (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Bullsh** detector (Score:2)
Re:Bullsh** detector (Score:3, Insightful)
After all, what would you pay for a "problem"? That's exactly what IBM, Microsoft, Sun and all the rest are really selling you: PROBLEMS. High-tech infrastructure is plagued with problems. But no marketin
Re:Bullsh** detector (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Bullsh** detector (Score:2)
Re:Bullsh** detector (Score:2)
Why "solution" is so popular (Score:5, Insightful)
But a solution is often a set or range of products, and in the case of vendors like IBM those products are paired with service. When you sell a product, the assumption is that once you sell it, you want nothing to do with the customer from thereon after. Tech support is offered only for problems. But if you are trying to impress upon customers the notion that the product and the sometimes rather involved, in-depth service associated with it are equally important, the term "solution" makes sense.
While the term is applicable to IBM, it's not applicable to many products that simply bill themselves as a solution, when in fact the vendor would rather eat rat poison than provide integrated and thorough support.
Re:Bullsh** detector (Score:4, Funny)
Apparently they haven't yet met "Kosmic Technology Solutions", also based in India, which provides "solutions for a dynamic environment where business and technology strategies converge". Gosh, don't you just love all that convergence?
Re:Bullsh** detector (Score:2, Insightful)
The service sector is being overpopulated with competition as outsourcing increases.
So companies have no choice, but to innovate, and provide a *solution*. This "solution" does a lot more than just a simple service. This is what will drive the service sector in the future
Wouldn't it be better if a software product provided a solution rather than just a service. Your statement is also valid because some companies nowadays say they ar
Re:Bullsh** detector (Score:4, Interesting)
You'd probably enjoy it as much as I did.
Blame M$ (Score:5, Insightful)
Imagine buying a car and it doesn't work until 6 months later when your manufacturer has a recall for you. Commercial hi-tech industry seriously need a good role model.
Re:Blame M$ (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmm, Windows2000 and XP ran just fine for me right out of the box without service packs. Yeah, you needed a good firewall (hardware and software) and you needed to make sure some services weren't running but I really don't consider that to make the "unusuable".
Honestly, I wouldn't run ANY OS without the above mentioned changes being made to the configuration.
Should we say that RedHat is bad because everyone knew that you shouldn't use a RH release before X.3?
Re:Blame M$ (Score:2)
The point you didn't address, however, is that "Microsoft is the cause of this problem". He's dead wrong that "Crappy software from Redmond" is the root cause, but he has the right culprit. Over-Hyped, crappy software from Redmond that came pre-installed on every bloody PC is t
Re:Blame M$ (Score:3, Funny)
All in all, I have used win 95 all the way up - and while they all had their issues - nowhere did I ever call them unuseable (well maybe except ME which stayed on my hard drive only as long as it took me to reformat)...Everything ha
Re:Blame M$ (Score:2)
The integrated, pre-installed, software bundle has been the key to success in the mass market. Connect the cables, switch on the power, and in under ten minutes you are good to go.
Re:Blame M$ (Score:2)
You know, I've got this big monitor sitting on my desk suffering from a cold solder joint somewhere deep inside it's bowels, so sometimes it blinks out, but if I hit it just right, it works fine for another few days. The lid on my laptop won't stay up because it's gettin on in
Re:Blame M$ (Score:2)
"Works for me" doesn't count as a performance metric. In my case, W-XP got a virus/worm (the one that says your system will reboot in 60 seconds) about three minutes after being connected to the outside world. And I still (after more than a year) haven't got my older hardware to work. Things like an Adaptec SCSI card and a Genius scanner, not some obscure, little known, hardware. The least one would expect from a "usable" OS
Re:Blame M$ (Score:2)
XP did ship with an awful PNP security hole too.
Re:Blame M$ (Score:2)
Blame Ourselves! (Score:2, Interesting)
When I was a kid, industry pulled the same crap on housewives by putting the same detergent in a packaging label "new and improved". Media outlets provide crap programming because that's what people will watch, which sells advertising. .Marketers have found equally fertile ground in technology.
If you want better products, quit buying the bullshit. Fewer dollars c
Re:Blame M$ (Score:4, Insightful)
My take on the above is:
Sold: An item is sold to you when you do not have to make any other payments to the manufacturer and you do not have to give it back after a specific period of time.
Lease: An item is leased when you have to make payments based up a daily, weekly, monthly, or yearly time period and, after the lease has expired, the item has to be returned to the manufacturer.
From the above, if you "buy" a copy of Windows and do not have to make any additional payments, then the copy has been sold to you - not leased. If this is true (ie: M$ sold the software to you and did not lease it) then all of the leasing agreements imposed by the EULA are null and void. Further, your rights as a purchaser of a product have just increased ten fold because there are a lot of rules and regulations about items which are sold which do not pertain to items which are leased.
With the recent decision by a court in California that M$ et al must display the EULA on the outside of the box and/or have it readily available for viewing before a purchase is made - the distinction of whether a piece of software is sold to the end user or leased will become a greater issue in the near future.
Re:Blame M$ (Score:2)
Joe leases his house or his forklift, not his software.
Too old to be assimilated. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Blame M$ (Score:2)
For testing I don't mind but for machine that keep my data, I only trust certian systems.
Re:Blame M$ (Score:2)
So, why don't you explain who you would describe as 'stupid'? Anyone with less skill than a sysadmin?
Who is the customer? (Score:2, Insightful)
Doesn't Joel look a bit silly now? (Score:2, Insightful)
For the first time rather than having three hundred asp/php pages with cut-and-copy disease we had a way to make structured code that could be developed very quickly and maintained easily.
At work we've got loads of legacy ASP and lots of new
I don't
Re:Doesn't Joel look a bit silly now? (Score:2)
Maybe you should check out Zope one day? (Score:3, Insightful)
To say that the current version of the Company X product is so much better than the previous version of the _same company's_ product does not really endorse _either_ version.
Paul B.
Re:Doesn't Joel look a bit silly now? (Score:5, Insightful)
That is highly debatable, but Joel was talking about
Back in 2000, it *WAS* confusing as to what the fuck
Now when people say ".NET" they are usually talking about ASP.NET or the
Re:Doesn't Joel look a bit silly now? (Score:3, Informative)
However, ASP itself wasn't soley responsible for the problems with cut-and-copy disease. It was a problem of developers thinking at page level versus creating an application that handled page generation. The problem could be prevented with ASP, although admittedly it did encourage that style of codi
Re:Doesn't Joel look a bit silly now? (Score:2)
Re:Doesn't Joel look a bit silly now? (Score:2)
And don't get me started on "web projects" in VS2003. A piece of crap if I ever saw one.
Re:Doesn't Joel look a bit silly now? (Score:3, Informative)
I suspect that JSF with a decent component library and good tool support could be as nice, but that doesn't exist yet. Maybe someday.
Re:Doesn't Joel look a bit silly now? (Score:3, Insightful)
I never touch ASP, but if your PHP suffers from "cut-and-copy" you need to take a cattle prod to the developers.
This is a coding practices issue, not a language issue - the legacy code at my current employer is C++ CGI programs that suffer greatly from the use of cut-and-paste rather than code libraries. It's just ab
Re:Doesn't Joel look a bit silly now? (Score:3, Insightful)
Unlike Some, Joel Knows ASP.NET is not .NET (Score:2)
If you scroll down to the bottom of one of Joel's articles from 2004, you will find this quote:
So no, Joel does not have egg on his face. You should give him some credit.
Re:Unlike Some, Joel Knows ASP.NET is not .NET (Score:2)
The quote is from this article:l [joelonsoftware.com]
http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/APIWar.htm
The moral of the story: Pressing the preview button won't save you if you don't actually READ the preview before hitting submit.
Re:Sure, Joel looks silly to those who do odd thin (Score:4, Insightful)
Not true at all. Each "page" is a class and is treated as such in it's implementation from a functional perspective.
A UI developer can make changes to the controls, with out wortying about breaking some server script. In addition it is possible to completely remove SQL code from the presentation tier, this is not possible with out a great deal of engineering and com components with traditional ASP.
ASP.NET simplifies state management on three levels, application, session, and page as well. Page state is something that has traditionally needed to be built by the developer, but this is no longer the case in
Also validation for all forms is simple and easy to implement, taking a fraction of the time to complete, and it's twice as robust (it runs client side, and server side depending on what your browser will support)
At the moment, I'd be hard pressed to find another technology platform for web development that is as flexible as
The revolution was really for the developer - not so much from a product perspective. Have a look at how easy it is to incorporate 3rd party components into web applications. Provided the 3rd party provided designed their component well, it usually "just works". That's more than I can say for similar development platforms.
Word (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Word (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Word (Score:3, Interesting)
As a former Java developer, it tooks me less than a week to discover that
Re:Word (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Word (Score:2)
Allow me to demonstrate:
Built for multiple language support: nothing to do with making your code look pretty; having multiple languages (currently more than 40) targetting the framework opens up the platform to a wide range of developers who use the right language for the right task.
Delegates: Type safe function pointers, enabling one represent a function as a variable, and integrated true ev
Re:Word (Score:2)
> a set of languages and tools.
It's a floor wax! It's a dessert topping!
Chris mattern
I thought it was SOAP (Score:2)
I wasted way too much time before I found a decent explaination of the different SOAP encoding styles [ibm.com]
audience (Score:5, Interesting)
In many areas, this is a big driver for convergance of different technologies - to be able to provide a "system" that does "something", not pieces that have to be put together. It's true that PCs have very tech centric marketing, but it is quite a bit better than it used to be - now you go out and buy a computer system with keyboard, mouse, printer, camera, monitor, etc etc. That used to not be the case, so I think there has been some level of improvement.
Jerry
http://www.syslog.org/ [syslog.org]
Software is inexcusably bad as released. (Score:3, Interesting)
The reason for this is very simple but to fix it requires people to open their eyes.
It starts with computers being deaf, dumb and blind, gets worse with how we think of information modeling (ask your DBA to model a wall. Its a simple and straight forward request. Bricks & mortar do NOT make a wall.) then we compound this with security that isn't in the least bit secure and it absolutely fall down from there.
Put on the THINK! sign people.
Re:Software is inexcusably bad as released. (Score:2)
It would be helpful if you would define what a "wall" is before turning it over to the DBA to work out the details of modeling aforementioned wall.
Re:Software is inexcusably bad as released. (Score:2)
A while back I bought a cheapo RCA TV from target. After a couple of months the TV started making a high pitched noise. My wife could not hear it but made me insane. I took the TV back to target. They gave me a new TV. Not just a new TV but a better one since that model had been upgraded.
Try doing that with software. I dare you.
Your typical bubba has been conditioned to accept that software is crappy. Everybody at work just shrugs their shoulders w
advertising doesn't tell you anything anymore (Score:4, Insightful)
I was reading some back issues of Pc Magazine from the 80's, the ads told me as much as the articles. Ads would say "The new microsoft compiler has these features... that are better than the last version" I miss those type of ads.
Re:advertising doesn't tell you anything anymore (Score:2)
Re:advertising doesn't tell you anything anymore (Score:2)
Being the most advanced definitely isn't enough (Score:2)
Rise and Fall of the Marketdroids (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Rise and Fall of the Marketdroids (Score:2)
Is that a serious question?
Flashlights: Maglites were a great improvement over the competition back in the 90s, and the new led flashlights are a great improvement on maglights.
Pocket knives: Swiss Army knives pretty much kicked the ass of the junky knives you used to see around when I was a kid -- they offer a huge range of choice, and they all pretty much work
Re:Rise and Fall of the Marketdroids (Score:2)
Victorinox (the original Swiss army knife maker) was founded in late 1884, hardly what I'd call a recent invention.
Coffemakers, it's my (and all other serious coffe drinkers that I've met) experience that the _best_ coffee is made with either Fresh press (Freedom press
teachers' responsibility (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:teachers' responsibility (Score:2)
The REVOLUTIONARY next big thing . (Score:2, Insightful)
The cable companies CAN'T and WONT deliver it. I am talking about higher than 100 megabits/sec.
Imagine a billion HDTV channels and no more installing operating systems.
No more needing to even buy a computer because of distributed networking. You will buy supercomputer time for tough projects.
All this will never occur because municipal fiber to the curb has been killed by stupids in government and their cronies in the private markets.
Re:The REVOLUTIONARY next big thing . (Score:2)
The important features of a computer these days are fixed storage you control, places to plug in devices, removable media, display, and a small amount of low-latency processor powe
Re:The REVOLUTIONARY next big thing . (Score:2)
Your software company would be glad to lease you storage space and applications served remotely. That way, whenever they need a new yacht, they just charge you more. You'd leave for another supplier, except that they own your data, and ev
Re:The REVOLUTIONARY next big thing . (Score:2)
Customers Don't Buy Technology (Score:5, Interesting)
People buy "stuff" that that we can use to do whatever it is that we want to, preferably without breaking a sweat or needing to read a book first. Technical superiority, by itself, isn't much of a sales pitch. Why should I buy something that is "superior" if I know I won't use that "superiority"?
Techies like to say things like "Windows is unusable" (when most of the world uses it) or "corporations put profit above technology" (gee, do you think?). Just shows why a lot of them get along better with hardware than with people.
Actually, some do. (Score:4, Insightful)
He doesn't know how to work them or even why a cell phone that works in Europe won't always work in the US
They have their point of view based upon their requirements / values and have trouble recognizing that other people have different requirements / values which result in different points of view. But part of "Marketing" is making the consumer believe they have a "need" that they weren't aware of before, that can only be supplied by your product.
That "need" can be as esoteric as "I am a rebel against authority" to as mundane as "fast food you like".
Marketing high tech is different from most other markets because newer stuff is constantly being released. The perception of obsolescence is a key factor both in pushing the new stuff (don't be a loser, everyone else is faster) and in resistance to purchasing (why buy now when tomorrow it will be faster and cheaper).
I haven't read the book so I don't know if he covers that in depth.
Re:Actually, some do. (Score:2)
2. Techies who argue "Windows is unusable" -- a palpable untruth --often do so simply to assert their own elitism. They just want us to know that they've defined themselves as too smart to use Windows. Conveniently, then, anyone who does use Windows is stupid. It's just a peacock display.
3. Techies who whine that businesses put profit before technology forget that profit sprea
Possibly. (Score:3, Insightful)
True. But in most cases, "superior" is also "new". Faster proc's are usually the newer ones.
Something gone wrong in Redmond? (Score:2)
Yeah, it's called Microsoft.
Subscription Model (Score:3, Interesting)
Why not have a reasonably fast system, all the software you need, broadband and tech support for "one low monthly fee". Whenever it gets obsolete someone appears and moves everything to a more recent system.
We "buy" cellphones that way, many people lease cars that way... sure it wont be popular here, but it'd work for most people.
Re:Subscription Model (Score:3)
Most software these days is pseudo-subscription based. Some are more obvious about it, such as the Norton products which give you X amount of virus definition file updates before they try to mafia-squeeze money from you. Others are more insideous like Quickbooks charging their customers an arm and a leg for a stupid
Re:Subscription Model (Score:2)
Sounds familiar [redhat.com].
Re:Subscription Model (Score:2)
I've been complaining about this for years (Score:5, Interesting)
Every big announcement in the tech field for years now has been one limp-dicked anticlimax after another. Oooo! A new palm top PC running a ShitpileOS (Windows) variant that never quite does anything in particular very well. Oooo! Another all in one home entertainment system that's overpriced and has to be completely replaced if one part of it wears out. Piles of new tech gadgets constructed from lowest common denominator components. $8000 televisions. Cell phones with games worthy of, oh, the Sega Master System, at best. Seventeen more first person shooters that require $3000 worth of PC upgrades.
It's all just so boring and bland. IMHO, the only neat devices to come out in the past few years are the DVRs (Tivo/Replays/etc) because they really made a common task (watching TeeVee) vastly more efficient, and those tiny USB flash drives which have made shuttling a CD's worth of data quick and easy and tiny. Oh, and I like my iPod. Those are cool.
What I'd like to see is some existing technologies improved. Stop putting cameras and video games into cell phones, for example, and make the system work better. I should not be having dropped calls in a major metropolitan area at this point.
And, oh yean, my usual call for a functional sexbot. I'm telling ya, they will make their inventor $billions. If you happen to be working on one, hire me. I'm one of the best general digital and FPGA hardware designers you could hope for. I'm really bored in my current job. I want a piece of that sexbot action.
Re:I've been complaining about this for years (Score:2)
Oh, God, just what we need! As if cell phones and DVD players were not enough distraction.
"Sorry, officer. I didn't expect the second orgasm, and so I negelected to signal my lane change."
Re:I've been complaining about this for years (Score:2)
In the 'ol days (Score:2)
Re:In the 'ol days (Score:2)
You're obviously much younger than I if you believe that.
In fact, in the 80s there was a prominent software company that ran a promotion, "Find a bug, win a bug" - giving away VWs to anyone who could find a legitimate bug in their product. In the early days of computing, there was a much higher quality and s
Sell the sizzle, not the steak (Score:2)
Why don't marketers care whether grandma can decode "P4 3.0 GHz 256 DDR 40.0 GB DVD/CD-RW"? Because ALL the profit in this low margin business is from people who CAN decode it.
PC specs (Score:5, Insightful)
I hear that at work all day and it drives me nuts. Not that I don't look at specs when I buy a computer, but I have learned never to ask about anyone else's new computer because you get the five minute laundry list of numbers that have no real importance. Do I really need to know if your new Duh-ell PC has an 80G or 100G hard drive? PC specs have replaced dick size and engine displacement as bragging fodder or something.
I overheard the guy in the office next to me last year spend hours on the phone shaving costs of his new PC. $10 here. $5 there. He must have spent 20 hours to save $100. He drives a $45,000 car. Nobody places value on their time. He finally bought the thing and announced it to the bay the next day. Absentmindedly, I asked what kind... D'oh! Nine hours later I could have reverse engineered a schematic of the motherboard based on what this guy told us.
Re:PC specs (Score:3, Interesting)
My last computer purchase was a Sony Vaio, from Best Buy. I use it daily, but I don't know or care what the processor speed is - 2Ghz+, I think. But I just don't care anymore.
I make $65K per year, I'm single. I owe the bank $100K for the house, no car loan, no credit card debt. I no expensive vices. Money is not really a problem for me - I have enough for the things I want to do.
What I don't have enough of is time. I'm not going to waste it dealing with buggy hand built comput
Re:PC specs (Score:2, Interesting)
wow. i would love to have serious technical conversations about PC's where i work. Debating nvidia vs ati and their deviance of 3FPS or sata vs SCSI. that would be sweet. What do I get when I ask people at work about their PC?
"Oh its black and shiney. it has the internet and a picture of a kitten on th
Sentence in the Title (Score:4, Funny)
It's not obvious why it works so well. My working hypothesis is this: The writer had a message so important that even people who don't touch the book should get it. Where to put it? Cram it into the title. The problem is, if it fits in the title, it doesn't need a book, does it? Furthermore, anybody who's that sure his idea is so important is probably wrong about a lot else. Even if the book says more than the title, we have been given a good reason to distrust it before we open it.
From the marketers standpoint (Score:5, Insightful)
Frankly, its disgusting at times because they hurt the credibility of the entire industry (not that we had much with the /. crowd to begin with).
I try to do my part by not misleading people with what I market as I understand that an informed customer that you treat with respect will be a repeat customer who will spread the good word about you. I also inform people of when deceptive marketing/advertising is used and explain why it is bad and meaningless.
I think all of you are familiar with such lies as the "industry leader" claim or the "does more" claim. To those I have to ask "industry leader according to whom? The CEO fo the company? Because legally as long as you have the quote from someone, you are allowed to make that claim", and then I ask "does more? Does more WHAT?! Oh wait, legally that doesn't matter as long as you don't state it. It could ben "does more to line the CEOs wallets" and it would still be legal."
eWeek is a pure example of M$ B/S (Score:2, Interesting)
Once again, Slashdot blows it. (Score:2, Insightful)
Good going guys!
Snake oil sales (Score:4, Interesting)
Hence grandmas in Best Buy staring at the computer described as "P4 3.0 GHz 256 DDR 40.0 GB DVD/CD-RW" when all she wants to know is whether she can check email and view photos of the grandkids. Marketers forget to empathize with the customers.
Tactics like this and others go back as far as I can remember. The only difference in the .com/2000 bubble was that a large group of business people believed it and spent billions on vaporware promises of profits with no fundamentally sound reason. I guess they don't teach MBAs how to calculate profits and do basic business marketing analysis first.
Grandma's in the mean time are looking at sub $500 solutions that does not require the maintenance of Microsoft Windows and with players like SAM's club are now selling alternatives. The real big kick will come from the Chinese as "toaster like" computers come in even cheaper and more reliable.
A very large part of this is due to businesses laying off the older experienced types and promoting those well past their level of experience and capability. We often think this is just a problem in I/T, but in actuality it is a problem in business in general as it is out with the baby boomer and in with the "never had to really work hard for a buck" generation.
This industry of computing is going to continue to evolve, it happened before with IBM and mainframes, now defunct Digital VAX, commodore PET, TRS-80, Apple, Apple II, Mac then PC. Next will be the standards based and open appliance.
Unplug 'N' Prey (Score:3, Insightful)
I do. About two seconds after the words 'high-tech' and 'marketing' were merged in the acorn sized brain of a marketer. Due to their limited storage capacity any relevant technical information was squeezed out and replaced with marketing slogans. He/She/It thus completely divorced from reality was provided with the ability to create a marketing strategy unecumbered by facts.
Re:Unplug 'N' Prey (Score:2)
Everyone knows what .NET is (Score:3, Funny)
It's the next generation fully intergrated high tech state of the art advanced enterprise object commerce cyber solution, revolutionizing cross section functionality and empowering eBusiness to streamline its communications architecture across multiple platform independent management systems, thus enabling a complete competetive cutting edge on demand information infrastructure.
Now, what don't you understand?
Buzzword Bingo (Score:2)
from the very begining (Score:2)
Here's a challenge. Point out any time when the high-tech industry was different in a qualitative way than it is now. I'm not going to slam the marketing industry here, but I think what you see is a natural outcome of several synergistic factors: 1) marketing doesn't understand what they are marketing, 2)
Gee where to start, the list is so damn long (Score:3, Insightful)
Service providers that can't make it work
Customers that don't care if it does
Executives that don't know IF it does
Solutions in search of problem that doesn't exist
Designed to fail, working as designed.
Two computers. (Score:3, Insightful)
1. People who see computers as neat and useful tools, which can be adapted for nearly any purpose. Software or Products which give people additional ways to use their computers - especially tools that improve productivity, either personal, or at work, are generally going to succeed in the market place. The way to sell such products is often referred to as "Pull" Marketing.
2. People who see computers as neat and useful ways of getting consumers to spend money on stuff they wouldn't have otherwise spent it. This is accomplished by pushing crippleware that looks neat on the surface, but is essentially useless to a user until they pay more money to unlock the useful features, or basically, the software ends up being a complicated scam to get someone to sign up for some service with a monthly fee.
These products ultimately fail. This kind of marketing is referred to as "PUSH" Marketing.
At the end of the day, #1 is the correct way of looking at computers, and there are a couple of tennants of business and innovation that prove it:
"Built it, and they will come."
and
"Invent a better mousetrap, and the world will beat a path to your door."
Unfortunately, High Tech Marketing is full of people who want the world to beat a path to their door, without all that costly and complicated mousetrap-inventing stuff.
They spend so much effort trying to find innovative ways to get people to spend more money, rather than innovated ways to make computers more useful tools for people to buy, because their lives are improved.
Apple does this right (Score:2)
Of course it's not about the technology! (Score:2)
Notice how many companies morphed and remorphed as the "technology" changed. This was not because of changing technology or changing demand for actual products. It's because they were always trying to convince their shareholders, or potential shareholders, that their stock would be the one
Re:When did slishdot book reviews jump the shark? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:.NET (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:.NET (Score:5, Interesting)
Visual Basic.Net. A programming language.
Visual Studio Net. An IDE.
These were supposed to be part of a larger ".Net" product strategy, however the term ".Net" was so ill defined that the term became meaningless. So only use that term when referring to a specific product as above.
Re:Who is the target audience for this book? (Score:2)
people with library cards