Category: Content

13 f^`°n awesome Internet of Things stats

CMO.COM posted a f^`°n awesome list of stats.

1. In 2008, there were already more “things” connected to the Internet than people. By 2020, the amount of Internet-connected things will reach 50 billion, with $19 trillion in profits and cost savings coming from IoT over the next decade.

2. Connected homes will be a huge part of the Internet of Things. By 2019, companies will ship 1.9 billion connected home devices, bringing in about $490 billion in revenue. Google and Samsung are already ahead of the pack. Google bought smart thermostat maker Nest Labs last year for $3.2 billion, and Samsung purchased connected home company SmartThings for $200 million.

3. Right now, most IoT smart devices aren’t in your home or phone; they are in factories, businesses and health care. By 2025, the total global worth of IoT technology could be as much as $6.2 trillion–most of that value coming from devices in health care ($2.5 trillion) and manufacturing ($2.3 trillion).

4. Only 0.06% of things that could be connected to the Internet currently are, which means 10 billion things out of the 1.5 trillion that exist globally are currently connected.

5. By 2020, it’s estimated that 90% of cars will be connected to the Internet as compared to 10% in 2012.

6. The connected kitchen will contribute at least 15% savings in the food and beverage industry by 2020.

7. By equipping street lights with sensors and connecting them to the network, cities can dim lights to save energy, only bringing them to full capacity when the sensors detect motion. This can reduce energy costs by 70% to 80%.

8. GE estimates that convergence of machines, data, and analytics will become a $200 billion global industry over the next three years.

9. More than two-thirds of consumers plan to buy connected technology for their homes by 2019, and nearly half say the same for wearable technology. Smart thermostats are expected to have 43% adoption in the next five years.

10. In 2008, Proteus Digital Health created a pill with a tiny sensor inside of it. The sensor transmits data about when a patient takes his medication and pairs with a wearable device to inform family members if it’s not taken at the right time.

11. A whopping 94% of all businesses have seen a return on their IoT investments.

12. Wearables will becomes a $6 billion market by 2016, with 171 million devices sold, up from $2 billion in 2011 and just 14 million devices sold.

13. Currently, 7% of consumers own a wearable IoT device, and 4% of consumers own an in-home IoT device.

Why Strong Customer Relationships Trump Powerful Brands

 At The Buddy Group, we find ourselves working with new and well established companies as they look to define the stories that matter. Often time, that means evaluating and in some cases overhauling the customer experience to ensure the message, story and characters are properly and authentically aligned.
In this article from HBR, I further my position that the funnel has been annihilated and yet, no one wants to admit it.Move aside silo’d thinking of customer support and brand marketing and welcome in the new collaborative marketing minds of Customer Experience Marketing and Management.
Look for a future post from me on this topic. In the meantime- enjoy the wisdom that is HBR.

Since the birth of e-commerce, marketing experts have disagreed about the future role of brands. Some have predicted that digital technologies will hasten the demise of brands because customers will have ready access to information they need to make purchase decisions, and “brand” will therefore become less relevant. Others have prophesied an increasing importance of brand as a simple way to evaluate choices in an era of information overkill.

To find out which school of thought is more accurate, we looked at the value of brands and customer relationships as revealed by M&A data covering over 6,000 mergers and acquisitions worldwide between 2003 and 2013. The beauty of M&A for examining valuation trends is that M&As reveal the dollar valuations of all assets at the time of the acquisition. Upon acquiring a business, companies have to value the different assets they acquired for their accounts and balance sheet in accordance with accounting and reporting standards. These valuations include – among other assets – brands (trademarks) and customer relationships.

This graph, based on data from the MARKABLES database, represents brand and customer relationship valuations as a percent of total enterprise value. The percentages come from fair value assessments done by purchase price allocation experts according to established accounting standards.

W150409_HANSSENS_DECLININGVALUE (1)

As the graph bracingly shows, brand valuations declined by nearly half (falling from 18% to 10%) while customer relationship values doubled (climbing from 9% to 18%) over a decade. All other categories of intangibles remained stable. These numbers reveal a dramatic shift in the strategic approach to marketing over the last 10 years. Acquirers have decisively moved from investing into businesses with strong brands to businesses with strong customer relationships.

In the past, M&A strategies often concentrated on brands and on growing brands through better brand management and internationalization. Today, such brand growth strategies appear to be either limited (for example, there is limited growth potential in mature markets) or too expensive. Instead, M&A strategies now concentrate more on acquiring firms with strong customer relationships – with all the loyalty and cross-selling benefits that confers.

This trend is powerfully reinforced by digital technologies. These allow more direct interactions with customers, bypassing expensive middlemen and reducing the cost of sales and marketing; they allow firms to optimize customer lifecycle management based on detailed data and analysis of customers’ needs; they improve efficiency and quality across the value chain as a result of continuous customer feedback; and, finally, they facilitate the realization of merging two brands into one, or rebranding. As a result, the price of direct engagement with customers relative to traditional branding and media campaigns has dropped while the effectiveness of such marketing efforts has grown.

There is a parallel development on the demand (customer) side. Digitalization makes information, including information about brands, easily accessible. For example, a customer shopping for a new car can now instantly examine and compare the specifications and performance of different car models. Thus, purchasing decisions have become more fact based, and less brand-image based. Customers still value strong brands, but what constitutes a strong brand is now more dependent on customers’ direct experience with an offering, and with their relationship with the firm that produces it.

That suggests that marketing resources now directed at brand building should be more fully integrated with those designed to reinforce relationships. The value of “brand” or “brand image” as an entity distinct from the offering itself, we think, will diminish. However, marketers should be careful not to take this too far and underinvest in classic branding. With brand messages becoming more and more individualized and diverse, brand equity needs to stay strong to perform its overall integrative role. Strong brand communications are and will remain important especially in attracting new customers and in enhancing desirability for higher price premiums.

Finally, our analysis might provide a reality check on some of the gigantic brand values now published by leading brand valuation companies as it reveals that often the lion’s share of value lies in customer relationships. Although closely intertwined, brand equity and customer equity are different concepts that need to be measured and reported separately. The real art of brand management will be to integrate the two concepts without being stymied by friction between the camps that typically manage brands and customer relationships. As Peter Drucker said, well before the advent of the information age, the sole purpose of a business is to create a customer. It’s clear that brand building will only go so far.


Christof Binder is CEO of Trademark Comparables AG / MARKABLES.


Dominique M. Hanssens is the Bud Knapp Professor of Marketing at the UCLA Anderson School of Management.

SOURCE: https://hbr.org/2015/04/why-strong-customer-relationships-trump-powerful-brands?utm_source=Socialflow&utm_medium=Tweet&utm_campaign=Socialflow

Amazon cloud adds on-premises support to its CodeDeploy continuous-delivery tool

Amazon Web Services, the market-leading public cloud, is expanding its CodeDeploy tool to include deployments on companies’ existing data center infrastructure, not just in Amazon’s cloud. That might sound like a small feature announcement, but it’s actually a big deal.

http://venturebeat.com/2015/04/02/amazon-cloud-adds-on-premises-support-to-its-codedeploy-continuous-delivery-tool/

Google puts Chrome OS on your TV with its own HDMI stick

Google has unveiled a whole new type of Chrome device, and it’s one that can fit in your pocket. It’s called the Chromebit, and it’s essentially a Chromebook crammed in a dongle. This tiny little package contains a Rockchip 3288 SoC, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of eMMC memory, a USB 2.0 port, WiFi 802.11 ac support, Bluetooth 4.0, a Smart Ready controller and an ARM Mali 760 quad-core GPU. Just like Intel’s Compute Stick, all you have to do to get the Chromebit working is to attach it to any display with a HDMI port, and voila, you’ve turned it into a computer. Unlike the Intel stick though, the Chromebit’s HDMI end actually swivels around so that the dongle doesn’t stick out in an unsightly way behind a monitor or TV. As for battery life, well, Google says it doesn’t really know that just yet as the product is still in testing. Google promises that the Chromebit — the first is made by ASUS — will retail for less than $100. It’ll be available in either silver, blue or orange and will be out later this summer.

http://www.engadget.com/2015/03/31/google-chromebit/?utm_source=Feed_Classic_Full&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Engadget&?ncid=rss_full

Online Video Surges, As Advertiser Budgets Cut Into TV | AdExchanger

Video ad spend will continue to explode, increasing 29% per year and reaching $23.3 billion by 2017, according to the latest update to ZenithOptimedia’s global ad expenditure forecast.

While 29% is a decline from the 34% growth rate Zenith recorded for online video in 2014, the format is the fastest-growing digital ad category, partially due to mobile.

Zenith predicts mobile ad revenue will grow 39.8% through 2017, while desktop display will grow 4.6%.

http://adexchanger.com/ad-exchange-news/online-video-surges-as-advertiser-budgets-cut-into-tv/

When a consumer becomes the agency’s customer

This Monday marks the official launch of a unique effort, led by The Buddy Group, to change the way healthy food is marketed.

We need your help.

We want to show that whole food can be just as cool, sexy and desirable as junk food if marketed the right way. Aka, let’s stop trying to educate people on why they should eat real food and instead make them want real food because of its inherent coolness!

It only takes a minute. Please share, give support or otherwise help raise awareness of this crowd funding initiative.

Visit http://www.bitetastefully.com/ for more information.

Interested in having your company involved in the campaign?

Contact The Buddy Group’s bryan@thebuddygroup.com (@bboetger)