Jive Talks

3 Posts tagged with the general tag

Jive Dog and Pony

Posted by Sam Lawrence Dec 24, 2007

In case you haven't checked out BNETa business-centric CNET brand focused on helping managers succeedit's worth taking a look. One of their video programs is called " Dog and Pony," which is a daily interview with folks who share compelling ideas.

 

They invited Jive to participate a few months ago and have just published the interview. They don't provide embed code so you'll have to go directly to the video if you want to watch it.

 

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You use the word "brand" a lot

That word is used so broadly, obscurely and recklessly, it's meaningless to me. Not to mention that it's rarely used in a context I agree with. Leave brand to consumer packaged goods and let's focus on delivering meaningful and remarkable value through the company.

Your market is actually other marketers.

Most marketing people don't know their market at all. Their "market" is what they read in articles, analyst reports and in talking with their agencies. Rarely do I find someone who actually gets out there and has continual conversations with people to truly understand them.

You're guilty of being invisible

Paint by numbers doesn't cut it. Granted, most people haven't had the chance to do brilliant Marketing, but at least be able to tell me how you took a risk and how it paid off.

You think in terms of advertisements

Real ideas come way before you ever communicate them. People focused on advertisements never let the idea bloom. If marketers can't articulate how to notify someone in a compelling way, I don't want to hire them. Advertisements are horrible and all of us have become experts at avoiding them.

 

You don't have your own ideas

We're a creative company with creative products addressing a creative market. Triple the reason to be amazingly relevant with powerful ideas that you know how to pull off.

 

You're not a student

If marketing people aren't voraciously consuming, internalizing and changing their skills they've already given up.

 

You're used to other people doing it

Everyone and no one is doing the work in huge companies. If you haven't owned it, you can't know how to do it or be smart about it.

 

You have no influence

If they can't influence me in their resume or interview, how can I expect them to influence the market?

 

You can't write

Writing is making ideas clear for everyone. Good writers are good marketers.

 

You're scared of change

Marketers' jobs are to change the market. You can't be a good marketer if you can't stand change.

 

You can't say no

Have an opinion. Stand up for yourself. Don't just accept what I say.

 

You can't see what needs to happen

Take a step back. Are you spending your time on things that will make (the right) impact? What is required down the road? Don't drive while contemplating the inside of the car.

 

You don't believe

We have a fantastic product. It changes the way people work with each other. If you can't fall in love with that and market from the heart, we don't need you on our team.

 

You're a good multi-tasker

That's right, I don't want someone that's awesome at keeping 300 things going. People who chase everything get nothing done. I want someone that kicks ass on one thing and then moves on.

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Vanderzand It

Posted by Matt Tucker Aug 6, 2006

Over the past couple months, anytime we want to make a GUI prettier and more functional, you'll hear someone say "Vanderzand it!".  The phrase was coined in honor of Jive's first dedicated web designer/developer (with the unique last name of Vanderzanden). You'll find the latest Vanderzanding below -- a "before" picture of the Wildfire 3.0 setup tool and an "after" shot of the upcoming Wildfire 3.1 setup tool.

 

<a class="tt-flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/50884898@N00/209075750/"><img width="240" height="134" border="0" alt="before" src="http://static.flickr.com/84/209075750_27cba50842_m.jpg" /></a>

 

<a class="tt-flickr" href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/50884898@N00/209075751/"><img width="240" height="139" border="0" alt="after" src="http://static.flickr.com/87/209075751_c770910dbc_m.jpg" /></a>

A good-looking user interface has intrinsic value. It forms the first impression of an application -- before they determine the depth of features or stability, users form an opinion based on looks. The UI also plays a long-term role since users want to keep coming back to apps that are both beautiful and functional.

 

Look out for a lot more Vanderzanding in Wildfire in the near future.

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