Tag: truth

24
Aug

BuzzPhrase Alert: Cloud computing

I just had my first sighting of what I think will be one of those buzz phrases that will get liberally lobbed into PR and marketing material in the weeks and months to come. It was used this morning in the loopy assertion that a central download portal for public service videos was “essentially delivering ‘cloud computing’ for PSAs.”

Well, no.

Cloud computing is mostly known as managed server farms set up under a business and operating model that allows IT people to  increase capacity or add new capabilities pretty much on the fly, without buying iron (servers) or new software, and without adding bodies. The many companies in the DS space who do Software as a Service kinda, sorta do cloud computing, but only kinda, sorta. The SaaS comapnies tend to more be the customers of heavy-duty IT hosting companies that do the work, like Rackspace and ThinkGrid.

The propeller-heads can argue what the real pure definition of cloud computing is, but it is definitely not about simple tasks such as putting up some files in a central spot so people can download them.

Some gentle advice: don’t just throw buzz phrases in to your pitch because they are popular. They should also be appropriate, and your company will come off better if it appears you might actually know what you are going on about.

18
Aug

A press release about a story???

I have pretty much resolved that this blog will not engage in calling out companies for the sport of making them look silly. Names will be withheld even though the companies have rarely earned the “protection of the innocent” pass.

Just as I was about to wave bye-bye to my laptop and fix me and the family some vittles, up pops a Google Alert about a company writing a a little primer story a year ago for a trade show website. To paraphrase, “We had the most popular story of the year in the e-newsletter!!!”

This is worth a press release?

These guys have a good product, and respect in the industry. But this sort of thing just looks goofy, and when a company takes to issuing press releases about pretty much anything, it turns into background noise. Editors see the name pop up and think, “Oh, more noise …” and skip right on by.

There’s an argument to be made for doing whatever is required to just keep your name out there, but I’d argue it’s far more compelling to stick to doing PR when a company actually has something to say.

16
Aug

10 digital signage buzzwords and phrases that need to get shelved … now!

Robin Wauters at TechCrunch did a great piece recently about words he would love to see banned from press releases. It is very Silicon Valley-focused, but much of what he had to write could be applied to this sector.

I thought I would use that for inspiration for my own, DS-centric list. The hype in this space is crazy, and there are entire press releases that don’t say much at all, but have lotsa words and phrases we all read way too often, and that need to go away.

We’ve all read this press release:

Dynamic HyperDigital LLC, a leading global provider of best-in-breed, scalable and cost-effective digital signage solutions, announces the release of its next-generation software platform, ScreenMax 5.2, which revolutionizes the way businesses can manage their screen networks.

A pioneer in digital signage solutions since 2007, Dynamic HyperDigital develops leading-edge … blah, blah, blah

Mere mortals have at this point given up, and still have no idea why they should be interested.

With that buzzword blizzard laid out, here’s the must-go list, in no real order:

1 – CONTENT IS KING

“At XYZ Creative Studios we believe content is king …” Click. Gone. Not reading that thing anymore. The phrase is so old and tired it’s slipped into a coma. Stop! Just stop.

This stuff really is all about what’s on that screen, but the people who STILL drag that phrase out instantly kill their credibility. There are many ways to write or state the same thing.

2 – LEADING

I did a very casual survey once and even built a little word cloud to visually represent ALL the leaders – the industy leaders, the leading providers, the global leaders – in the digital signage sector. There was a PILE of them. As TechCrunch notes, just because everyone else writes that, it doesn’t mean you are breaking some rule by skipping it. When everyone says they are the leader or at least a leader, the term becomes meaningless.

Variants: recognized leader; leading global provider; worldwide leader; world-leading

3 – REVOLUTIONARY

That’s one big, loaded term, and it gets used by companies saying their new bits or baubles will revolutionalize digital out of home media. Or whatever. Revolutionary technology comes along only ever so often, and when it does, everyone knows. The iPhone was revolutionary. Same with the Blackberry. Not so much with the Palm Pre. Use the term with care, otherwise you look goofy.

Variants: revolutionized; groundbreaking; game-changer; disruptive

4 – LEADING EDGE

What does that mean anymore??? New???

Variants: Cutting edge; Taking it to the next level (eeesh)

5 – NEXT-GENERATION

Also noted in TechCrunch, a seriously overused nonsense phrase. It gets used to express the notion that the stuff coming down the pipe is new and cool. Does next-gen mean something 20 years ahead of its time? Or does it mean upgrade?

6 – PIONEER

“So and so, a pioneer in the something or other.”

Honestly, there are a few people who have been banging away at this digital signage thing for 15 years or more. Unless you were around before it was even possible to buy a flat panel, or needed $10K to get one, you’re not an industry pioneer. Nor is your company. Exceptions go to companies that are bringing newer technologies into the space, though pioneer is still a pretty tired handle.

Veteran is OK. It expresses you’ve been around the block and made some mistakes, and learned some stuff.

Variant: “the first!”

7 – TURNKEY SOLUTION

The term is now so liberally used it is impossible to sort out what might really be a turnkey solution. A turnkey solution, properly defined, is one in which “a product or service can be implemented or utilized with no additional work required by the buyer.” So, good luck with that! Most of the guys peddling a turnkey solution aren’t even close to being able to say, “Here ya go buddy, network’s done. Here’s your keys!”

The other problem is the risk of typos. Ask BroadSign, which a few months ago saw a plug for a turnkey solution turn up as a turkey solution.

End-to-end is a a variant, and still a bit of a cliche. But at least it conveys more accurately a sense that a company can work with a client from the start of a project through to inception.

8 –  SCALABLE

Now scalable is meant to convey that a particular technology or service can grow with a client, from 10 to 10,000 if need be. Scalability is indeed important. If you do it right and the platform really is built to scale up, then you should be able to operate a very large network with only a relatively small increases in resources needed. Invest in a platform that’s good for 50 sites but can’t handle 500 connections, and you are for in a world of pain. Problem is, everybody now uses that term, and scalability has lost its meaning. Plain language – just flat saying what your doodad can manage – will do just fine.

9 – COST-EFFECTIVE

This is code for affordable, or justifiable. But when just about every solution out there describes itself as cost-effective, it’s no longer a phrase that’s going to resonate. If you’re selling on price, just point out you have a low-cost solution. People get that.

10 – BEST IN CLASS

Says who? There are no real objective, thorough ratings or reviews in this space, certainly not for the software platforms, so how does a company get to be at the top of the heap? By self-declaration, of course.

So the phrase is empty, and prospective buyers know that. What makes a company top of class is how much business it does and how many clients stay with that client year after year, not to mention how the company behaves.

Variant: Best of breed; best in breed; best in show (OK, never seen that in this context, but it will happen)

16
Aug

DS PR 101: Don't stre-e-e-e-e-t-ch the truth

liarSeems obvious, but it still goes on constantly.

If you are an end-user, just stop and think how many presentations you have seen with a Clients page that includes an iconic golden arches logo. I must have seen a dozen, but the number is probably much higher.

If you really have  a signed agreement to roll out a network or do a significant test program with a major retailer or other corporation, fantastic!!! Shout it from the rooftops if you are allowed (though you probably won’t be).

If you did an install at two locations because you know the local franchisee and she doesn’t give a crap what corporate says, you do not have a deal with that national retailer. So don’t present it that way.

Play it straight. You are active in the sector, working in a major retailer and gaining valuable experience for yourself and the client.  Overplay it and the head office of the big retailer may be in touch, and not in a happy way. Play it straight and maybe they call and say they like what you did in Brainerd, MN, tell us more.