Business Growth Strategies For CEOs: Top CMOs On Marketing Strategy Implementations

Hiding the Full Value of an Innovation

Written by Bob Sherlock | Wed, Nov 4, 2020

“If the people don’t want to come out to the ballpark, nobody’s going to stop them.”
-Yogi Berra

A powerful, sales-producing change that most companies can make quickly: Find messaging that is not working very well, and replace it.

This is especially important when marketing an innovation.

My Thesis About Messaging

Clear, simple, relevant messages can speed up decisions and attract more trials and adoptions of innovations.

 

Effective messaging to prospects must communicate:

  • Who the company serves
  • The problem the company solves
  • The outcomes the buyer can expect

It’s fundamental to perceived value that outweighs the risk of adopting an innovation. Yet too few innovative companies communicate effectively on their website home pages, and miss an opportunity to get off on the right foot.

Applying the Thesis

To illustrate some near-term actions that a real company with an innovative offering could take to improve their message, I looked for an example in an emerging sector that’s full of innovators.

 

I searched for a company with these characteristics:

  • Provides some form of artificial intelligence solutions
  • Their customer’s purchase of an innovative product/service solution carries significant business risk
  • Has a website that looks contemporary but is not messaged well

Meet Algorithmia. I have had no dialogue with the company. They’re like an innocent “volunteer” that a magician has called up to the stage.

 

Algorithmia is obviously a cutting edge company with several marquee customers. They’ve raised $38 million in equity, according to Pitchbook.

 

What they don’t seem to have is a website that makes clear just who they’re for and the too-costly-to-leave-unsolved problem that they address.

“MLOps maturity for every business. We help enterprise companies develop an optimal path to machine learning operational maturity. Use our framework to assess your ML roadmap location and we'll chart your path to maturity,” is the lead message on their home page.

That’s pretty abstract and conceptual, even for their techie audience. And if the techies should need management to review and sign off before buying, uh-oh.

 

This early in the product life cycle, their website needs to tilt toward the needs of visitors who don’t know the company (or not well) and may not be familiar with Algorithmia’s solution category or jargon.

 

Would their target prospects look at the home page and immediately think, “Great, I have come to the right place!”?

 

Do their ideal prospects perceive that their biggest problem is machine learning operational immaturity? And if it is, would they express it in those terms?

 

The site goes on to explain, that “Machine learning operations (MLOps) is the discipline of AI model delivery. It is what allows organizations to scale their production capacity to a point of generating significant business value and delivering results.”

 

Is that outcome sharply defined enough that the ideal prospect can’t wait to have that result?

 

If prospects visit the website and it’s not clear about who Algorithmia is for—and the too-costly-to-leave-unsolved problem that the company solves—that’s not good.

 

Do you suspect that Algorithmia’s biggest value is hiding?

 

I do.

The VisibleValue Approach to Clearer Messaging

If I were to work with a company like Algorithmia using VisibleValue® story development services, we would do the following:

  1. Assess their marketing and sales messages, including website and collateral, and compare Algorithmia to their key competitors. Sometimes I find useful clues here to their biggest value.

  2. Discover what key people in the company already know about their ideal customers and the value that Algorithmia creates for those customers.

I find that a small group of customer-facing people collectively know about 75 to 80% of what they need to know to message effectively. But that knowledge is scattered in different people’s heads and isn’t communicated on their website.

 

So I would lead a "deep dive" session using our VisibleValue® story development process to draw out what Algorithmia has learned about the best prospects by segment, their thorny and costly challenges, how Algorithmia solves those, and the outcomes Algorithmia makes possible for customers.

 

All that and more goes into a first-draft Visible Value message summary that unhides the heretofore Hidden Value.

  1. Get Prospects’ Viewpoints. I conduct Voice of the Customer phone interviews with customers and non-customers to get insights that test Algorithmia’s understanding of where they provide customers the greatest value. Based on what we learn, we would enrich the initial Visible Value message summary.

  2. Prepare a plan for implementation of the messaging on the website; in sales presentation content and email templates; and in collateral.

When we’ve completed these four steps, Algorithmia could expect to:

  • Have an enhanced understanding of why prospects make the choices they do, what’s important to them, and what’s changing and challenging in their worlds that can create opportunity for Algorithmia
  • Have messages that reveal the full value of choosing Algorithmia by connecting with what prospects care about the most. The company or their agency can insert these message elements into website copy and into nurturing marcom and selling materials to attract more business.

Changes for Algorithmia

I haven’t gone through this four-step process with the folks at Algorithmia. Yet I can see some things that might help them.

 

Their home page, in the upper above-the-fold section, will work better if it briefly answers these questions—and just these questions—for the prospect, in plain English:

  1. Do you serve customers like me?
  2. Can you solve my problem?
  3. What outcome can I expect?

Maybe the answer to the first question is something like “We support artificial intelligence professionals at major corporations.”

 

For #2, the answer might be, “We solve a big problem: integrating AI models into the company’s software applications with speed and security.”

 

The third answer could be, “You can expect to make better decisions and provide a better customer experience, which means more revenue and more profit.”

 

The rest of the message cascade, where Algorithmia provides more detail and addresses other questions for prospects, should be placed lower on the home page and throughout the website.

Speeding Up the “Yes”

As you know, customers can be excruciatingly slow to adopt innovations. Algorithmia likely needs crisper, more compelling messages to accelerate adoption.

 

How about a business that you know? If you suspect that it takes too long to get a Yes because true value to the customer is hidden in ineffective messaging, please pass this along or schedule a conversation with me.