Showing posts with label Organizational theory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Organizational theory. Show all posts

Friday, January 26, 2024

Product Marketing as a Strategic Tool for Telco Vendors

Those who know me for a long time know that I am a Product Manager by trade. This is how I started my career and little by little, from products, to product lines, to solutions I have come to manage and direct business lines worth several hundred of millions of dollars. Along this path, I have become also a manager and team lead, then moved onto roles with increasing strategic content, from reselling, OEM, deals to buy and sell side acquisitions and integrations.

Throughout this time, I have noticed the increased significance of Product Marketing in the telecoms vendors environment. In a market that has seen (and is still seeing) much concentration, with long sales cycles and risk-adverse customers, being able to intelligently and simply state a product's differentiating factor becomes paramount.

Too often, large companies rely on brand equity and marketing communication to support sales. In a noisy market, large companies have many priorities, which end up diluting the brand promise and provide vague and disconnected messages across somewhat misaligned product and services.

By contrast, start ups and small companies often have much smaller range of products and services, but having less budget, focus in may case on technology and technical illustrations rather than exalting the benefits and value of their offering.

My experience has underscored the pivotal role of product marketing in shaping a company's valuation, whether for fundraising or acquisition purposes. Yet, despite its proven impact, many still regard it as a peripheral activity. The challenge lies in crafting a narrative that resonates—a narrative that not only embodies the company's strategic vision but also encapsulates market trends, technological evolutions, and competitive dynamics. It's about striking a delicate balance, weaving together product capabilities, customer pain points, and the distinct value proposition in a narrative that is both compelling and credible.

Many companies will have marketing communication departments working on product marketing, which often results in either vague and bland positioning or in disconnects between the claims and the true capabilities of the products. This can be very damaging for a company's image when its market claims do not reflect accurately the capabilities of the product or the evolution of the technology. 

Other companies have the product marketing as part of the product management function, whereas the messaging and positioning might be technically accurate, but lack competitive and market awareness to resonate and find a differentiating position that will maximize the value of the offering.

As the telecoms vendors' sector braces for heightened competition and market contraction, with established players fiercely guarding protecting their market share against aggressive newcomers, the role of product marketing becomes increasingly critical. It's an art form that merits recognition, demanding heightened attention and strategic investment. For those poised to navigate this complex terrain, embracing product marketing is not just an option; it's an imperative for sustained relevance and success in challenging market conditions. 


Sunday, February 23, 2020

Telco growth: my objectives, vision, tactics, doctrine at Telefonica




As mentioned in my previous post, telco transformation through innovation and connectivity control requires a strong framework to guide the decision-making process. Here is a list of objectives, vision, strategies, tactics and doctrines that guided me through my time at Telefonica. I believe they can be adapted to many operators’ situation and organization to generate value through successful launch of new connectivity products.

Objectives:

  • Fast creation of new products and services by systematically leveraging economies of scale, reusing modular technical solutions and automation.
  • Creation of a toolbox of technological tools, operating models, best practices, documentation, blueprints, tests and certified solutions...
  • Deliver complete products, not just technology, but also operating model, suppliers value chain and devops teams...
  • Facilitate the transition from innovation to business
  • Systematically evaluate new technologies, suppliers in the laboratory and in the field
  • Fulfill our ambition to transform the industry


Vision:

Create a sustainable commercial growth factory for the company through the systematic research, implementation of services and products that achieve strategic, tactical, commercial, and technological advantages based on the network such as infrastructure or connectivity as a service.

Strategies:

  • Explore and classify services, market trends, competitive and direct and indirect movements and their technological evolution to identify risks and opportunities to create/destroy value for the company based on the network as infrastructure or connectivity as a service.
  • Creation or integration of network and IT technologies to disaggregate and control the cost structure of the purchase, implementation and deployment of connectivity functions and services.
  • Choice and implementation of disruptive connectivity services, products or businesses by designing the E2E value chain
  • Transfer of technological parts, services, products to commercial teams ready for production
  • Systematic identification of differential competitive advantages for the company and strategies to achieve their implementation
  • Implementation of innovative work and development methodologies, especially aimed at creating a DevOps/continuous development/continuous testing model for network technologies and connectivity services


Tactics:

  • Systematic disaggregation of high-level commercial systems and products of network and IT integration to identify manufacturers, intermediaries, sources of savings and their organizational and process impact
  •  Systematic prioritization of open source for MVPs, to learn the state of the art, limitations and development and integration needs
  • Projects, products, technology parts delivered with operating model, manufacturers / integrators / ecosystem developers
  • Identification and implementation of critical paths to deliver to the customer as fast as possible (MVPs, early prototypes deployed in commercial networks)


Doctrine:

  • Customer first
    • Development of services, projects, products with priority to the voice of the customer and the business over technology
  • One size does NOT fit all
    • Resist the model of trying to implement the same technology, solution, manufacturer for all parts of the network and all situations. Specification, design and development of technological and commercial solutions that are infinitely modular. Nothing monolithic, so that we can adapt the solutions to the realities of each market / segment
  • Always open
    • Technological development based on open models (APIs, standard and published interfaces, ...)
    • Open Source, wherever possible
    • Multi manufacturer and no lock-in by design
  • Modular, serverless when possible > micro services > containers > VMs > VNFs > PNF
  • Availability, generosity, active collaboration with commercial teams, third parties and transparency of communication
  • Systematic use from the design of
    • Data science
    • UX
    • Security
  • Agility, speed and results
  • Planning, development, iteration, continuous deliveries
  • Hypotheses, design, development, testing, ... Repeat
  • Pivot fast
  • Take calculated risks
  • Stop activities that fail to meet objectives
  • Organizational flexibility for team members to have diverse and multi-project responsibilities, and can also change during the life cycle of each project
  • Self-management and organizational structures with minimal hierarchy
  • Simple and cheap
  • Systematic simplification of legacy
  • Good enough, cheap > >  over engineered and expensive
  • DevOps
  • Continuous development



If you would like more details, feel free to reach out, I have developed an innovation / transformation workshop to put in practice some of these strategies.
Also available: