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Expanding Your Product/Service Applications Using Your Web site
M
any engineering companies find themselves with a product or service serving a mature market segment. They are weary of battling entrenched competitors for a few
percentages of market share and are looking for new applications of their
product or service. Let's say you have been building mission-critical
programmable-logic devices long enough to see their unit costs drop as you
grew better at producing them. At some point, yo
u will wonder if the
cost-effectiveness of your design has now allowed you to be competitive
selling devices into applications below the Mil-883B spec. You dispatch
your marketing people to start searching for application fits, but the
possibilities seem endless and each possibility requires cultivating an
entry and an application understanding. Now you can use your Web site to
gather application candidates as easily as you gather customers.
In the service sector, you could have accumulated libraries of device-driver
code for medical instrumentation or simply the experience to program them
well. How can you find the product-design team in Korea with a device-driver problem for an automotive application that would be your next great expansion?
After you master this technique, you will realize why you are unlikely to
read much about other companies employing the technique. Companies reveal
their plans and expansions into new businesses sectors about as easily as
gold-rush prospectors reveal how and where they found their half-pound
nuggets. This is why the closest example we have permission to relate
involves a titanium-casting manufacturer. Perhaps by not being too close to
the trees, you will see the forest.
Williams Titanium Group focuses on the
concept-to-completion of titanium castings. They have design resources that
can transition a stainless-steel part into titanium, foundries that can be
matched to production requirements and even a marketing team that can help
the customer leverage the advantages of titanium. Having spent years
becoming a leader in titanium golf clubs, Williams Titanium Group
successfully expanded into the emerging areas of titanium racing wheels.
"We knew we could apply our expertise to other titanium applications," says
Brad Schmall, President of Williams Titanium Group, "but we didn't have the
resources or the time to explore the many application opportunities."
Williams Titanium Group
be
gan
with a simple but effective Web site
introducing the company and providing an "Ask the Expert" online form
whereby visitors can describe a candidate-application problem for
suitability to titanium. From there, the approach diverged from
conventional Web site designs.
Step one was to brainstorm a list of the possible benefits of titanium from
the obvious corrosion resistance to its unfamiliar bio-compatibility. The
list can begin with bullets on your sales brochures and go to something one
of your engineers heard. Through an analysis removing synonyms and breaking
out multiple benefits hidden under a generality, a list of clear,
standalone benefits emerges. The focus is to use object-oriented thinking
to develop Web pages of product/service benefits that can be mixed and
matched independently to support any titanium application. Each such
benefit page is enhanced with supportive statistics, graphics, test results,
etc.-often over time. The first cut yielded a dozen core benefits and
an
other dozen appropriate only in unusual circumstances.
Step two was to develop a Web-page template for candidate applications.
This began with a page for golf clubs in the unlikely event that there was a
prospect in that mature market that Williams Titanium Group didn't know
about. The core of the template was a bulletized list of relevant titanium
features, a.k.a. benefits, linking to the benefit pages produced in step one.
"How about scuba-diving knives?" an engineer asked. "The strength-to-weight
ratio applies when you consider tired divers swimming with the weight
strapped to their calves."
Going down the list of benefit pages, the engineer added corrosion
resistance to the applicable benefits but not bio-compatibility. Minutes
later, the template yielded a couple of sentences alerting the reader to the
applicability of titanium to scuba-diving knives, four benefit bullets
linking to detailed supporting information, and a link to the "Ask the
Expert" form for visitors with a s
cuba-diving-knife design on their hands.
The first cut yielded about 60 application pages, and a methodology that
can add another just minutes after someone has the idea.
Step three was to place each benefit page into the appropriate section of
the main Web site search directories from Alta Vista to Yahoo. There is a
methodology to obtaining the desired categorization from the various Web site
directories (to be covered in a subsequent article), but the end result was
that an engineer tasked with a scuba-diving-knife design could enter
relevant keywords in a Web site search directory and get a list that included
the matching page from Williams Titanium Group. Such a specialized match
was guaranteed close to the inquiry, and without the need for the user to
navigate down from a general-purpose home page. Of course each benefit page
had a link up to the Williams Titanium Group home page.
"There may be an obstacle to titanium scuba-diving knives that we don't
realize," notes Schmall, "but
what better way to find out than by running
the idea by the millions on the Internet?"
"Consider the alternative," notes Stu Hinrichs, an engineer at Williams
Titanium Group. "I would have to research scuba-diving knives. Our sales
guy would have to find knowledgeable people in the scuba-diving-equipment
business, convince them to consider titanium, and then perhaps be told
they'll give us a shot -maybe next year when there is a redesign window for
the diving knives."
An "Ask the Expert" inquiry can be an end run to the whole process yielding
a dialog with a qualified prospect with a concrete, near-term opportunity to
test the titanium application.
The last step was to produce a page organizing the many benefit and
application pages. Consider that there is no justification to do this from
the home page in the conventional top-down design of most Web sites.
Visitors groping about for titanium-application ideas are likely to be
students or competitors. Customers tend to know what
they want and only
want to know if you can solve their problem. A Web page listing the growing
collection of benefit and application pages by cross-indexed categories is
all that is needed to manage future additions and modifications. A
sample page that lists benefit and application pages is available online
.Williams
Titanium Group employees simply bookmark its page name and review it if they
have an application idea. Traffic reports by benefit and application pages
also provides an indication of which areas justify a more active marketing
effort.
"Are we spamming the Web site directories by listing so many of our
subordinate pages?" asks Schmall. "Or are we improving the effectiveness of
the search directories by connecting their users directly to what they seek
without a home page getting in the way?"
The end result for Williams Titanium Group is that they do more than
prospect for customers on the Web - they also prospect for
ideas.
To view past 'Weaving Your Web' columns
To view other columns
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