Foreword
By Thomas R.
Martin
Senior Vice
President and Director, Corporate Relations ITT Industries, Inc.
ITT Industries
is a classic example of a business to business enterprise. Very few of our products are
sold directly to consumers. The overwhelming majority of our revenue come from products
and services bought by businesses, municipalities, government agencies, and other
organizations. Clearly, this "B2B" marketplace thinks differently, acts
differently and has a different set of communication expectations when compared to the
business to consumer or "B2C" market.
When I first
joined ITT Industries in 1996, the company was faced with a serious identity problem. In
the 1960s and 1970s, the old ITT had personified the cliche of the conglomerate, acquiring
and divesting scores of companies each year in diverse fields, from financial services to
forestry, from insurance to hotels, manufacturing, and telecommunications. In December of
1995, the huge company split into three separate organizations: one focussed on insurance,
one on gaming and hospitality, and finally ITT Industries, a diversified manufacturing
company.
Yet our
customers and investors, even our employees were unsure of exactly what we did. In an
effort to address this confusion, we launched a comprehensive campaign in 1998 aimed at
unifying our many strong product brands under a clarified corporate brand. As part of this
effort, we adopted a new tagline, "Engineered for Life" and began to tell our
stories through the voice of our engineers. Steve Minett and his company have helped us
tell those stories.
In this new
book, Minett skillfully explores the unique selling and communications needs of the B2B
market. As he explains, organizations are motivated by a particular set of market drivers
and a purchasing decision process that is quite different from the consumer market. B2B
purchasing decisions are driven more by needs than wants, more by technological
applications than changing fashion.
As a result, the
B2B marketplace lends itself especially well to the use of case studies, stories of
successful applications and end-use solutions made possible by the products or services
provided by the selling organization. In many ways, these case stories help spark the
imagination of the buyer, presenting a range of new possibilities not always obvious from
a simple description of product features.
Steve Minett's
ideas aren't just interesting theoretical suppositions; they actually work. On behalf of
ITT Industries, Minett Media has, in recent years, placed approximately 350 articles in
the international trade press. In terms of the cost of equivalent advertising space, these
placements represent a value of around $2 million, while the cost of achieving these
results (including the cost of article production) has amounted to less than $150,000,
less than 7.5% of the value. More importantly, this editorial coverage leads to actual
buyer interest and, ultimately, sales.
Trade
publications are eager for material that is of interest to their readers. Minett's
approach in telling interesting stories helps to break through the clutter and connect
with an audience of interested prospects. It may seem glamorous to be featured in Fortune,
Forbes, or BusinessWeek, but articles in these major media rarely lead to
direct sales. Trade coverage, on the other hand, often does.
Minett is
clearly on to something. Anyone trying to sell a product or service in the B2B world will
benefit from his advice. Businesses are more than a sum total of tangible assets; at
heart, organizations represent a collection of imagination, solutions, and ideas. Steve
Minett taps into this imaginative world in a novel and creative way. Enjoy his story.
256 pages